@Jonathan Edwards, does this phenomenon tend to occur in rheumatological or other diseases? I don't mean relief when a flare settles down, I mean improvements that can't really be explained by treatment or management.
Struggling to get my foggy brain around whether this is a meaningless way of looking at it because it doesn't compare like with like. There's no tissue damage in ME/CFS that could potentially heal, and conditions like psoriasis might remit or go away but they don't improve.
Well now, that got me thinking more about co-morbidities. I’ve had psoriasis for 50 years. I have plaque, scalp, nail, and crease psoriasis. In the acute phase I was treated with coal tar preparations, phototherapy, antihistamines, it was everywhere head to toe. Still have nail, elbows, inside the ears and a small patch behind the ears, but that’s all.
I’ve used a prescribed topical steroid for decades which I use daily. I have never had a period completely free of psoriasis, but it has been stable. That’s been the case for the last 40 years.
I’m a maximum of 16 years with ME/CFS. Absolutely, no flare up of psoriasis during that entire period, even when I was hospitalized with malnutrition or sectioned, nor even now. Mine does not fluctuate with flare up of ME/CFS or the two periods of prolonged relapse which took me from mild/moderate to severe, and severe/very severe, but it is constantly present.
Have had two separate problems with my blood though in the last 16 years, one which is ongoing. I’m currently entering my 6th week with a streaming cold, a usual pattern for me.
So I’ve updated my knowledge on current thinking about psoriasis.
This is the NHS info.
Psoriasis - NHS with a link to the Psoriasis Association which I was aware of.
About psoriasis
I was a little surprised to find this on The Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis Alliance website 1993-2025, but then my last contact with any intensive treatment was back in the 1970s early 80s when absolutely none of this was discussed.
My Psoriasis never prevented any activity. I did not experience any of these fatigue symptoms at the time of the acute phase nor since, and I had a full working life right up to the age of 50 years old when I had my first collapse. I’m 66.
Up ‘til that point no-one would describe me as lazy or lacking in energy, nor do I recall any of the other symptoms as being part of my 50 year experience of all levels of psoriasis.
The first time I experienced unfreshing sleep was with ME/CFS and I wouldn’t have been able to do the jobs I did with cognitive difficulties or if symptoms were “made worse by physical or mental exertion”. But that’s just my own experience, it seems to be different for others these days. I certainly wasn’t sectioned because I have psoriasis!
Psoriatic fatigue: Why do I feel so tired?
“Is it normal to feel fatigued in psoriatic disease?
It is normal to feel tired after exertion, insufficient sleep or at the end of the day; this tiredness is usually relieved by rest or sleep. With fatigue, the symptoms often go beyond normal tiredness and can include decreased or lack of energy with accompanying physical or mental exhaustion. These symptoms usually persist even after a good night’s sleep.
In the UK, 10-20% of the population report being tired for a month or longer, with 1.5% feeling a need to see their GP. The symptoms often include difficulty sleeping; muscle or joint pain; headaches; painful lymph nodes; sore throat; cognitive dysfunction; symptoms made worse by physical or mental exertion; flu-like symptoms; dizziness; nausea; or palpitations.
What causes fatigue?
As described above, inflammation appears to be part of the process of feeling fatigued, but researchers do not know exactly what the link is, or how increased levels of inflammatory substances in the body influence fatigue.
Myths and misconceptions
There are many myths and misconceptions about fatigue. People are sometimes wrongly viewed as being “lazy” by their work colleagues and sometimes by their own family members.
The reason that the person affected by fatigue is unable to carry out basic everyday tasks is the inflammatory process taking place in their body. People often think that caffeine will help wake them up. As caffeine is a stimulant, the effects are short-lived; people often feel more tired once the initial effect wears off. Caffeine is typically found in coffee, tea, cola and energy drinks. Caffeine is also a diuretic, causing dehydration, which will also have a negative effect. In some instances people may resort to the use of alcohol, under the misapprehension that it will relieve the symptoms. However, alcohol is likely to make people drowsier, depressed and can affect sleep, which will also contribute to fatigue.”
New drug is gamechanger in psoriasis treatment Manchester University 2021 BE SURE and BE RADIANT trials. Bimekizumab treatment now being offered by Dermatologists as far as I can see from the NHS site, and the Psoriasis Association targeting IL17A and IL17F.
“This drug sets a new bar for psoriasis treatment and we are hopeful that trials in treating other diseases triggered by over active Interleukin 17A and Interleukin 17F will also lead to improvements in patient care .”
The current NICE Guideline CG153 for Psoriasis is September 2017 so does not mention Bimekizumab.
Recommendations | Psoriasis: assessment and management | Guidance | NICE
ETA: link to trials
Safety and efficacy of bimekizumab through 2 years in patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis: longer-term results from the BE SURE randomized controlled trial and the open-label extension from the BE BRIGHT trial - PubMed