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CFSFM: Recent Research Progress

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Title: CFSFM: Recent Research Progress


1
CFS/FMRecent Research Progress
  • Benjamin H. Natelson, MD
  • Professor of Neurosciences,
  • UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School

2
CDC CFS case definition
  • CFS subset of prolonged fatigue 1 month duration

Onset of fatigue
DX CFS
3
1988 1994 CFS Case Definitions
  • 1988 - ? in activity by at least 50
  • 1994 substantial decrease in activity
  • Minor symptoms
  • Rheumatological infectious neuropsychiatric
  • Exclusions
  • Obesity any medical cause of fatigue
  • Bipolar eating disorder schizophreniform
    alcohol or drug abuse
  • 1994 Prevalence 0.4 of general population FM

4
Minor Criteria to Diagnose CFS
  • 1994
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • ?
  • no
  • no
  • 1988
  • sore throat
  • tender lymph glands
  • myalgia
  • arthralgia
  • unrefreshing sleep
  • headache
  • cognitive problems
  • ? Sx after exertion
  • weakness
  • fever/chills

5
Pathophysiological Possibilities
  • Forme fruste of depression or somatization
  • Endocrinopathy
  • Viral or immunological
  • Chronobiological disorder
  • Subtle encephalopathy
  • Cardiovascular

6
Comparing Case Definitions
  • 45 patients fulfilling both 1988 and 1994 case
    definitions by self report
  • 26 patients fulfilling 1994 but not 1988
  • Age and gender not different
  • Sudden onset 84 vs 58 1988 more
  • ? activity 70 vs 54 1988 worse
  • Duration 55 vs 36 mo 1994 longer

7
Clinical profile of 94 vs 88 CFS
  • Percent reporting each symptom

1994 1988
Memory-concentration 92 96
Unrefreshing sleep 89 100
Post-exertional fatigue 81 98
Muscle pain 77 100
Weakness 69 96
Headache 46 89
Joint pain 39 87
Swollen lymph nodes 31 87
Sore throat 23 89
Feverishness 23 89
8
Tentative Conclusion
  • Patients with milder CFS (i.e., 94 but not 88)
    appear to be less likely to have had an
    infectious trigger and/or a continuing
    immunological problem.
  • Brimacombe et al. J Clin Psychol Med Settings,
    9309, 2002

9
Unexplained Illness
  • Diagnosis given to patients varies with referral
    process. Flu-like malaise is CFS. Diffuse pain
    is FM. Sensitivity to odors is MCS. Bowel
    complaints are IBS. All these OVERLAP!

10
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11
Widespread Pain and Multiple Tender Points
  • Primary FM there are no exclusions so
    prevalence is much higher than in CFS
  • 5 compared to 0.4 FM
  • Secondary FM rates are higher yet ? 20
  • The widespread pain is still medically
    unex-plained but is presumed to be on an organic
    basis
  • Allows one to design a study comparing 1 to 2
    FM to determine risk factors

12
CFSFM is Worse than CFS only
13
Exercise Capacity
14
Rate of Axis I Diagnoses (163 consecutive female
patients with CFS)
CFS CFS/MCS CFS/FM CFS/FM/MC
S Axis I Dx 0 35/62
(56) 14/31 (45) 17/44 (39) 4/26
(15) 1 18/62 (29) 4/31 (13
) 13/44 (30) 8/26 (31)
1 9/62 (15) 13/31 (42)
14/44 (32) 14/26 (54) Ciccone et al. Ps
ychosom Med, 65268, 2003


15
Rate of Diagnosis of IBS (Subset of women for wh
om we had data)
CFS CFS/MCS CFS/FM CFS/FM/MCS
4/26 (15) 2/11 (18)
12/32 (38) 10/18 (56)
16
What does this mean (suggest)?
  • CFS without other medically unexplained illnesses
    may be a different process than CFS with comorbid
    illness syndromes.
  • Critical to repeat with an FM alone group

17
Stratification Strategies to Reduce Heterogeneity
  • Sudden vs gradual
  • No psychiatric diagnosis vs diagnosis after
    illness onset (usually depression)
  • With or without other illnesses such as FM
  • Cognitive impairment vs normal cognition
  • Very severe vs less severe
  • Severity is the best stratifier
  • Twice as much FM, n-p impairment and psych Dx

18
Dates of Onset for Sudden GroupZhang et al.
Chronobiology International, 1795-100, 2000
19
Post Exertional Fatigue
  • One argument is that CFS is a variant of
    depression. However, post-exertional fatigue,
    although common in CFS, is not seen in depression.

20
Pre- and Post-treadmill Average Activity
CFS HEALTHY
Pre-treadmill Post-treadmill
Pre-treadmill Post-treadmill
Sisto et al. QJM, 91365, 1998
21
Hormonal Responses to Exercise
Ottenweller et al., Neuropsychobiol 4334, 2001.
22
Symbol Digit Modalities Test(Mean SEM)
LaManca et al. AJM 10559S, 1998
23
Cardiovascular Stress Reactivity
LaManca et al. Psychosom Med., 63756, 2001
24
Poor Reactivity Predicts Symptom Burden
25
Suggests a relation between ability to react to
stress and magnitude of symptoms
  • Could be responsible in part for post-exertional
    symptom worsening.
  • Could aggregate over entire day to produce longer
    lasting symptoms.

26
Baroreflex plays a role
Peckerman et al. Psychosom Med 65889, 2003
27
A Different Question
  • Could CFS be a chronobiological disorder i.e.,
    chronic internal desynchronization or a disorder
    of entrainment?

28
Negative Evidence
  • Dutch actigraph data collected for 12 consecutive
    days
  • Analysis drops first and last days
  • Data collected every 10 minutes
  • 19 CFS
  • 10 with markedly diminished activity
  • 9 with relatively normal activity
  • 8 healthy controls

29
Circadian period and acrophase
Pwith t-test (variance controlled) for the mean a
nd F-test for the S.D..
30
Mean Circadian Period ? variability
Ohashi et al. Physiol Behav. 7739, 2002
31
Mean Circadian Period ? variability
Ohashi et al. Physiol. Behav. 7739, 2002
32
Interpretation
  • Sleep is further disturbed by vigorous exertion
    to alter circadian phase

33
New RO1 on Sleep Cytokines
  • About 75 of CFS patients have poor sleep
    efficiency
  • Ho Sleep disrupting cytokines (IL-4, IL10) are
    increased while sleep producing cytokines (TNF-a,
    INF-?) decrease
  • Compare cytokines of sleep-matched controls to
    CFS
  • Same after exercise
  • Same after sleep deprivation

34
Ultradian Cytokine Secretion in a Normal
35
How About Depression as a Cause?
36
Compare CFS-Dep to DEP on BDI
Johnson et al. J. Affective Dis 3921, 1996
37
Conclusion
  • CFS is probably not a variant of major depression

38
Overlap with Sjögrens Syndrome
  • Complaints of sicca common in CFS
  • May in part be due to use of TCAs
  • Presence of Sjögrens antibodies very rare
  • Lip biopsy is definitive way to Dx Sjögrens
  • We inquired about sicca, did Schirmers tests,
    and biopsied 18 healthy controls and 25 CFS

39
Overlap with Sjögrens Syndrome
25 CFS Subjects
18 Controls
Symptom of Mucosal Dryness
Symptom of Mucosal Dryness
Symptom of Mucosal Dryness
Gland Pathol Score
Low Schirmer
Low Schirmer
Low Schirmer
Normal Schirmer
Normal Schirmer
Normal Schirmer
0
0
0
Normal
0
0
1
2
3
0
12
1
16
8
0
0
0
0
0
?1
Sirois et al. J Rheum 28126, 2001
40
Viral/Immunological Hypotheses of CFS
  • Some persistent or reactivated viral infection
    causes the symptom profile of CFS
  • Some process (perhaps an original viral
    infection) triggers a persistent immuno-logical
    response which remains ongoing and produces the
    symptoms of CFS

41
Data are not Confirmatory
  • No evidence for herpesvirus reactivation in CFS1

  • No consistent evidence for immune dysfunction in
    blood with exception of reduced NK cell count
    and/or activity2
  • May reflect inactivity rather than illness

1Wallace et al. CDLI 6216, 1999
2Natelson et al. CDLI 9747, 2002

42
The Question
  • The symptoms of fatigue, unrefreshing sleep and
    cognitive problems point to a central neural
    origin to CFS
  • One major polemic dividing the field is the
    argument that CFS is somatization
  • An exaggeration of normal human feelings
  • One alternative explanation is that some CFS
    patients have a neurological disease

43
Is CFS Somatization Disorder?
  • Prevalence rates for SD in CFS vary from 0 to 98
    depending on whether symptoms are coded as being
    due to physical or psychiatric cause
  • Incidence of SD is 2.3 when strict DSM III-R or
    IV criteria are utilized
  • Johnson et al., Psychosom Med 5850,1996

44
Just What is Somatisation?
  • The same as neurasthenia
  • A word that carries the connotation of the
    illness being functional
  • Psychiatric nosology for medically unexplained
    illness
  • Driven by belief rather than data

45
Consider the alternative hypothesis
  • Some CFS patients may have an occult
    encephalopathy despite having no neurological
    findings other than occasional balance problems

46
DeLuca et al. Arch Neurol 50301, 1993
47
Neuropsychological Function
  • CFS patients function worse than controls on
    complex attentional tasks
  • Stratification strategy
  • Those with Axis I similar to controls
  • Those without Axis I most impaired
  • This group could have underlying encephalopathy

48
If this dysfunction were relevant to the symptom
complex of CFS, it should relate to functional
status. If it is an epiphenomon, its presence
should not relate to functional status
  • PLAN Evaluate relation between presence of
    neuropsych abnormalities and physical function on
    the SF-36

49
Days of General Inactivity in CFS patients who
failed zero (n 19), one (n 20), or two or
more (n 14) cognitive tests

0 1 2 Numbe
r of Failing Test Scores JNNP, 64431,
1998
50
Brain MRIs in CFS
  • Do MRIs on CFS and sedentary controls
  • Test hypothesis that the patients with no Axis I
    pathology will be the group with the highest
    frequency of brain MRI abnormalities

51
Percent of subjects with brain MRI abnormalities
Lange et al. J. Neurol. Sci.1713-7, 1999.
52
If these lesions were relevant to the symptom
complex of CFS, they should relate to functional
status. If they are epiphenoma, their presence
should not affect functional status
  • PLAN Evaluate relation between presence of
    abnormalities and physical function on the SF-36

53
Cook et al. Intl J Neurosci. 1071-6, 2001
Cook et al. Intl J Neurosci. 1071-6, 2001
54
NJ Case Definition for Severe CFS (Modification
of 1988 CDC case definition)
  • Insert an intensity dimension
  • - Uses a 0-5 Likert scale
  • (3 substantial, 4 severe, 5 very
    severe)
  • Patients must report severities of 3 or
  • greater for at least 7 Sx in the prior month

Natelson et al. Clin. Infec. Dis. 211204-10, 1995
55
CFS Severity and Ventric Volume
56
Conclusions
  • Stratification of CFS subjects is important to
    understand pathophysiology of illness
  • CFS subjects without concurrent Axis I
    psychiatric disorder show significantly more
  • small abnormal MRI signal changes
  • in subcortical white matter of frontal lobes
  • CFS patients in severe category have biggest
    ventricles
  • Supports conclusion that some CFS patients may
    have underlying encephalopathy

57
Where to go from here?
  • Examination of spinal fluid

58
  • We reasoned that we would find abnormal-ities of
    spinal fluid in some CFS patients
  • Those with no co-morbid depression more than in
    those with no psychopathology
  • In those with the most marked cognitive impairment

59
Results
  • LPs successfully done on 13 controls
  • None had protein 40 or 3 WBCs/HPF
  • LPs were successfully done on 44 CFS
  • 8 had elevated protein ( 45 mg/dl)
  • 4 had increased numbers of WBCs ( 5/HPF)
  • 1 had both elevated protein and increased cells
  • Thus 30 of taps were outside of nl range!!

Natelson et al. CDLI, 1253, 2005
60
Cognitive function not different in high
protein group
61
CFS Abnormality Psychopath
  • Rates of current depression
  • 0 in those with abnormal CSF
  • 27 in those with normal CSF
  • p .04 one tailed
  • Rates of lifetime depression
  • 46 in those with abnormal CSF
  • 48 in those with normal CSF

62
CSF IL-10, a pro-inflammatory cytokine
63
CSF IL-8
64
Conclusion
  • 30 of all CFS patients tapped had spinal fluids
    outside of laboratory norms
  • Supports our inference that some patients with
    CFS have an occult encephalopathy
  • Could relate to elevated levels of IL-10
  • One confounding variable may be drugs -- ???
  • We again found most CFS abnormalities in the
    group with no psychopathology
  • Continues to support our stratification strategy
  • We did not find a relation with n-p impairment

65
Use fMRI to Assess Brain Activity
  • fMRI assesses Hb-O2/Hb ratios to provide an
    indirect measure of neuronal activity
  • This technique allows one to see the brain
    during various tasks and states
  • Study 1 Brain activation during warm and painful
    stimuli
  • FM and controls
  • Study 2 Brain activation during PASAT, a
    complex attentional task
  • CFS and controls with normal cognitive function

66
Warm non-painful stimulus
FM Group
Control Group
Cook et al., J. Rheumatology, in press.
67
Information Processing Task
Lange et al, JNNP, in press.
68
What These Studies Tell Us
  • FM patients feel warm as if it were hot
  • CFS patients process information as if it were
    substantially harder than it really is
  • The two studies suggest that CFS/FM brain
    requires additional neural resources to deal with
    mental processes that we take for granted
  • Is this the process responsible for mental
    fatigue?











69
A primary brain problem or not?
  • Look at the heart and determine if abnormalities
    exist and, if present, if they relate to any
    index of brain dysfunction

70
Non-Invasive CV Evaluation
  • Assessed heart rate, blood pressure, and stroke
    volume in 17 CFS patients and 24 sedentary
    controls while supine, standing, and sitting
  • Used impedance cardiography used to measure
    stroke volume -- an index of cardiac blood flow

71
Cardiac Output in CFS
Peckerman et al. Am J Med Sci, 32655, 2003
72
CO and postexertional fatigue
Peckerman et al. Am J Med Sci, 32655, 2003
73
Suggests Problem with Cardiac Output for Severe
CFS Patients
  • Do radionucleid MUGA study to evaluate cardiac
    function during exercise stress EF should
    increase

74
Ejection Fraction and CFS Severity
75
Suggests that cardiac function is not normal at
least in the most severely affected patients
76
Research Question
  • Are CNS lesions secondary to perfusion problem or
    primary?

77
New Experiment
  • Determine resting cardiac output (Q)
  • Use functional neuro-imaging to determine
    cerebral blood flow during orthostatic challenge
    via LBNP
  • Research questions
  • What is resting CBF in patients vs controls
  • What is relation between Q and CBF at rest
  • How does CFS severity fit in
  • How does orthostatic challenge affect this
    relation

78
LBNP in the magnet
79
Conclusion
  • Data collected to this point supports our major
    hypothesis that CFS is for some a neurological
    disorder the pathophysiological role of the
    heart is under active investigation

80
Please refer potential study patients to the
CFS/FM Center
  • (973) 395-7900
  • or
  • www.umdnj.edu//cfs

81
CFS/FM Center Researchers
  • Dr. Kyoko Ahashi
  • Dr. Michael Brimacombe
  • Dr. Kim Busichio
  • Dr. Don Ciccone
  • Dr. Helena Chandler
  • Dr. Neil Cherniack
  • Dr. Dane Cook
  • Dr. John DeLuca
  • Dr. Drew Helmer
  • Dr. Susan Johnson
  • Dr. Gudrun Lange
  • Dr. John LaManca
  • Dr. John Ottenweller
  • Dr. Arnold Peckerman
  • Dr. Karen Quigley
  • Dr. Rick Servatius
  • Dr. SueAnn Sisto
  • Dr. Lana Tiersky
  • Dr. Chin-Lin Tseng
  • Dr. Yoshi Yamamoto
  • Dr. Kazu Yoshiuchi
  • Dr. Shelley Weaver
  • Dr. Quan Wu Zhang

82
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85
Rate of Diagnosis of IBS (Subset of women for wh
om we had data)
CFS CFS/MCS CFS/FM CFS/FM/MCS
4/26 (15) 2/11 (18)
12/32 (38) 10/18 (56)
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