Kalliope
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Healio - Primary Care: Most kids, teens with chronic fatigue syndrome are undiagnosed
Dr. Esther Crawley, who serves as an unpaid medical advisor for the ME / CFS society of Sussex and Kent, explains that pediatric chronic fatigue syndrome is an important disease, since it is relatively common and also very disabling with a wide range of impacts on the child, family and health care systems.
“Children and adolescents with CFS have severe disabling fatigue that lasts at least 3 months. They have additional symptoms, including headaches, sleep problems, cognitive problems, sore throat, muscle aches and pains, nausea and dizziness. Post-effort discomfort is a central symptom and the most useful when making a diagnosis. Children experience an increase in fatigue, malaise and symptoms after an increase in effort. For many, this means that they attend 1 or 2 days of school, before feeling too bad to attend school, ”explains Crawley.
From the page 8 of the paper, https://sci-hub.se/10.1007/s10566-019-09543-3
The prevalence of ME/CFS was calculated using the formula cited in Jason et al. (2012). This formula takes into account the actual number of participants who had ME/CFS as well as those who had a chance of diagnosis based on screening positive in Stage 1 but may not have participated in Stage 2, yielding a more encompassing prevalence estimate. The total number of respondents screened in Stage 1 is represented by N. The proportion of screened positives over the total number of screens in Stage 1 is represented by PI, and the proportion of screened negatives over the total number of screens in Stage 1 is represented by 1−PI. The proportion of screened positives who were evaluated in Stage 2 and diagnosed with ME/CFS is represented by L1 and the proportion of screened negatives who were evaluated in Stage 2 and diagnosed with ME/CFS is represented by L2.
This information was then used in the following formula to obtain the Prevalence P: P=L1 *PI+L2*(1−PI). Chi square analyses were used to examine group diferences between screen positive participants and screen positive non-participants frst to determine whether there were any signifcant diferences in gender, age, and race/ethnicity and whether equal prevalence could be assumed. Second, descriptive statistics, Chi square analyses, and t tests were used to examine diferences in prevalence rates among groups and symptom endorsement between those diagnosed with ME/CFS and screen negative control participants.
Results Table 1 presents frequency data for screen positive and screen negative participants as well as fnal diagnoses for ME/CFS. There were no signifcant diferences between the screen positive subjects and screen negative controls in terms of gender, race/ethnicity, and age, as expected, as test negative control participants were invited to participate based on a demographic-matching process. Prevalence rates, using the formula delineated above, classifed ME/CFS if youth met the Fukuda et al. (1994), IOM (2015), and Pediatric (Jason et al. 2006) case defnitions.
Table 1
Data on participant selection and completion of the study
Number of participants
[Numbers are for] Screened positive [and] Screened negative
Completed phase one screen 865 / 9254
Selected for phase two of evaluation 298 / 243
Completed phase two of evaluation (physician review) 165 / 42
Final diagnosis of ME/CFS 42 / 0
P = (42∕165) ∗ (298∕10, 119) + (0∕42) ∗ (1 − 298∕10, 119)
P = (0.2545 ∗ 0.0294) + 0
P = 0.0075 = 750∕100, 000
Thus, the prevalence for ME/CFS in this community-based pediatric population was found to be 0.75% (95% confdence interval, 0.54–0.96%), or 750 per 100,000.
A simpler version (not in the paper):Thank you Andy! I am not sure I that I will be able to understand it - but it is good that there is an explanation.![]()
The first stage of the study involved calling households in the greater Chicago area. Phone numbers and addresses were obtained from InfoUSA. Postcards were sent to the home addresses provided, with information about the study and contact information if those who received the postcards were interested in participating.
full article hereWhat most people don’t know about DePaul’s College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences is the hidden gem that lies on the third floor of the 990 W. Fullerton academic building in the Lincoln Park campus.
The Center for Community Research, which was founded and directed by psychology professor Leonard Jason in 2001, is dedicated to “reducing stigma, empower citizens and better understand the systemic and environmental barriers to full participation in community life,” according to the Center’s website.
Jason works quietly in a warmly-lit study with his degrees and accolades lining the walls of his office. His most recent research study, which he worked on in that very office for seven years, screened 10,000 children and teenagers in the Chicago area for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS).
If this can be extrapolated to adults, we'd have 500,000 sick people with ME in the UK!
I find it perplexing because I would assume that when people have ME/CFS and can no longer function, that they search for doctors, books and online resources to try to figure out what's wrong. I would think that somewhere along that quest they would stumble upon ME/CFS as a likely diagnosis.
Don' get me wrong can see how it could go wrong for a lot of people (for example not having the financial resources to see a lot of doctors), in not getting the right diagnosis, but 95% that's hard for me to comprehend.
I would be interesting to see the cases of those patients who remained undiagnosed: how were they doing, they did have an alternative diagnosis or did they simply tried to ignore their symptoms etc.
Basically none, about the same situation as with ME, those may as well not exist or the chances of being referred to the right person is almost nil. You can find them, but they are not working with standard guidelines, same as with ME. If you find one that will even listen it's likely because they've had personal experience with it from family or friends.How many physicians (cardiologists)/clinics in Canada can properly diagnose the several different variants of dysautonomia? POTS has been around for centuries and has only been well-defined in the last 25 years. This can markedly impair quality of life, especially because it is not widely understood in the medical world.
https://hqlo.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1477-7525-1-49
https://hqlo.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1477-7525-1-49/tables/5
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These are called "temporary" exclusions because these were people who had previously been diagnosed with CFS; they were then followed up for up to three years. If at one stage they had any of the above, they weren't
counted as CFS cases. However they were eligible to be invited back the following year.
Looking at now, I'm not sure that hypertension should be an exclusion either.