Title: Four Points: Fatigue
1Four PointsFatigue
- George E. Taffet, M.D.
- Baylor College of Medicine
- The Methodist Hospital
- Houston, Texas
2Outline
- Definition of Fatigue Issues
- Ergoreceptors
- AMPK
- Mitochondrial diseases
3Fatigue?
- A broad array of clinical conditions is
associated with extreme levels of fatigue. - chronic renal failure
- congestive heart failure
- cancer
- musculoskeletal diseases
- chronic fatigue syndrome
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- HIV/AIDs
4Fatigue is Very Common in Older Persons with CHF
Fatigue Correlated with Perceived High Symptom
Burden
Barnes S, etal. J Pain Symptom Manage 2006
5What Might Fatigue Be?
- Tiredness at rest
- Easy fatiguabilty with exertion
- Inability to maintain same level of performance
with continued exertion
6Mitchell and Berger Definition
- fatigue is a multifaceted condition
characterized by diminished energy and an
increased need to rest, disproportionate to any
recent change in activity level, and accompanied
by a range of other characteristics, including
generalized weakness, diminished mental
concentration, insomnia or hypersomnia, and
emotional reactivity. - Curt GA. Impact of fatigue on quality of life in
oncology patients. - Semin Hematol 20003714-17.
Cancer J 12374-87, 2006
7Mock Definition
- persistent and subjective sense of tiredness
that interferes with usual functioning. - Fatigue may represent a final common pathway to
which many predisposing or etiologic factors
contribute. - Mock V. Fatigue management evidence and
guidelines for practice. Cancer 2001921699-1707.
8Bill Evans Operational Definition
- Fatigue is physical and/or mental weariness
resulting from exertion, that is, an inability to
continue exercise at the same intensity with a
resultant deterioration in performance.
9ICD-10 Criteria for (Cancer-Related) Fatigue
- The following symptoms have been present every
day or nearly every day during the same 2-week
period in the past month - Significant fatigue, diminished energy, or
increased need to rest, disproportionate to any
recent change in activity level, plus five or
more of the following - Complaints of generalized weakness, limb
heaviness. - Diminished concentration or attention.
- Decreased motivation or interest to engage in
usual activities. - Insomnia or hypersomnia.
- Experience of sleep as unrefreshing or
nonrestorative. - Perceived need to struggle to overcome
inactivity. - Marked emotional reactivity (e.g., sadness,
frustration, or irritability) to feeling
fatigued. - Difficulty completing daily tasks attributed to
feeling fatigued. - Perceived problems with short-term memory.
- Postexertional fatigue lasting several hours.
- The symptoms cause distress or impair social,
occupational, or other function. - There is evidence from the history, physical
examination, or laboratory findings that the
symptoms are a consequence of cancer or cancer
therapy. - The symptoms are not primarily a consequence of
comorbid psychiatric disorders such as major
depression, somatization disorder, somatoform
disorder, or delirium.
10Scored 0, 1 or 2 by the patient so range is 0 to
26
Scored 0, 1 or 2 by the patient so range is 0 to
16 for physical scale and 0 to 10 for mental
scale
Wessley and Powell, 1989
11What Might Fatigue Be?
- Tiredness at rest
- Easy fatiguabilty with exertion
- Inability to maintain same level of performance
with continued exertion - or my definition
- Inability to maintain level of performance with
the same perceived level of exertion.
12Holding a 20 contraction becomes Harder with time
10
Slope Young 0.6 0.2/min Slope Old 0.3
0.1/min plt0.05
0
Yoon,T etal. Muscle Nerve 37457, 2008
13Older Men May Perceive Greater Effort above 50
MVC
Allman, BL and Rice CL Perceived exertion is
elevated in old age during an isometric fatigue
task. Eur J Appl Physiol (2003) 89 191197
14Sensing Fatigue?
- Presumably to achieve the necessary force for a
particular activity, the brain must increase the
firing rate or activate more motor units for a
particular muscle and interprets this information
as weakness (or fatigue), even though the muscle
may show no decrement in force - Implicit in this conceptualization is that you
cannot be fatigued at rest.
Allen, DG. etal. Physiol Rev 88 287332, 2008
15An Extended Model of Energetic Frailty
MVO2max
Post-Prandial and Other Thermogenesis
Physical and Cognitive Activities (Walking,
Talking, Watching, Thinking, etc.)
Fatigue
Extra Energy for Unstable Homeostasis (Homeostatic
Effort)
Theoretical Minimum Energy Requirement For
Homeostasis (Age, Sex, Body Composition and
Physical Activity)
With thanks to Dr. Ferucci
16Fatigue is Very Common in Older Persons with CHF
Fatigue Correlated with Perceived High Symptom
Burden
Barnes S, etal. J Pain Symptom Manage 2006
17Clark BMJ
- A unifying hypothesis, then, is that skeletal
muscle becomes abnormal in chronic heart
failure..In turn, this leads to abnormal muscle
performance during exercise, objectively seen as
reduced strength and endurance and subjectively
felt as the sensation of fatigue.
18There is a Receptor that Assesses Work/Fatigue
(ErgoReceptor)
Handgrip dynamometer exercise to exhaustion
finishes at the beginning of the shaded panel. A
cuff is either inflated around the exercising arm
at peak exercise (filled symbols) or not (open
symbols). The cuff is deflated after three
minutes (end of shaded panel).
Ventilation (L/min)
Piepoli et al. Circulation 1996
19ErgoReceptor May Be HyperActive in Heart Failure
Piepoli et al. Circulation 1996
20Ergoreceptors
CNS? Substance P Tachykinin
Williams CA, Brain Res 94419 2002
21ErgoReceptor Stimulation May Produce Fatigue
Clark, A L Origin of symptoms in chronic heart
failure Heart 2006921216.
22What Triggers the ErgoReceptor Hyperresponsiveness
?
- Inactivity
- Activation of Renin/Angiotensin
- Activation of Sympathetic Nervous System
- Inadequate Nutrient Blood Flow
- Cytokines TNF-a, IL-6, etc..
- Myocardial Infarction
- Other potential mechanisms
23Fatigue Breathlessness??
- Cycle based exercise led to patients and controls
stopping exercise more frequently because of
fatigue rather than breathlessness (15 v 7 for
cycle and 10 v 12 for treadmill, p , 0.05). - Does weight-bearing during treadmill exercise
causes greater ergoreflex activation or the
amount of muscle being used?
Witte KKA etal. Heart 91225, 2005
24Training Desensitizes ErgoReceptors
Piepoli et al. Circulation 1996
25Summary
- Ergoreceptors sense work performed by muscle
- Ergoreceptors are hyper-responsive in CHF leading
to augmented responses to very modest efforts
including exaggerated perception of effort - Ergoreceptor normalization via training or drugs
may be a beneficial approach to improving quality
of life including fatigue in people with heart
failure - Are ergoreceptors potential targets to ameliorate
fatigue?
26An Extended Model of Energetic Frailty
MVO2max
Post-Prandial and Other Thermogenesis
Physical and Cognitive Activities (Walking,
Talking, Watching, Thinking, etc.)
Fatigue
Extra Energy for Unstable Homeostasis (Homeostatic
Effort)
Theoretical Minimum Energy Requirement For
Homeostasis (Age, Sex, Body Composition and
Physical Activity)
With thanks to Dr. Ferucci
27An Extended Model of Energetic Frailty
MVO2max
Post-Prandial and Other Thermogenesis
Physical and Cognitive Activities (Walking,
Talking, Watching, Thinking, etc.)
Fatigue
Extra Energy for Unstable Homeostasis (Homeostatic
Effort)
Theoretical Minimum Energy Requirement For
Homeostasis (Age, Sex, Body Composition and
Physical Activity)
With thanks to Dr. Ferucci
28AMP-Activated Protein KinaseAMPKAn Energy
Charge Sensor
29AMPKs are
- Heterotrimeric complex of a catalytic, a-subunit
(a1 or a2), a ß-(scaffold) subunit (ß 1, ß 2, ß
3) and a regulatory ?-subunit (? 1, ? 2 or ?
3). - AMPK may control whole body metabolic homeostasis
- fuel gauge or cellular energy sensor
- Key glucose and fatty acid metabolic role
- AMPK implicated in control
- fatty acid release from adipocytes
- pancreatic-cell function
- hypothalamic satiety centers involved in the
control of feeding - concurrently decreasing cellular energy-consuming
anabolic processes - Also activated by metformin and TZDs and
regulated by TGF- ß-activated kinase-1 (TAK1)
Rutter, G.A., Leclerc, I., The AMP-regulated
kinase family. Mol. Cell. Endocrinol.
(2008) Hardie, DG. AMP-Activated Protein
KinaseMed. Sci. Sports Exerc.,36 2834, 2004.
30AMPK Regulates Energy State
Jorgensen SB etal. J Physiol 2006
Glucose Uptake
31AMPK
- Data obtained in the a1- or a2-AMPK knockout
models, in which ex vivo contraction-stimulated
glucose uptake and force production is normal. - a2-KO mouse has a disturbed muscle energy balance
during more prolonged exercise with reduced ATP
content and a comparable increase in IMP. - Activation of AMPK decreases protein synthesis
- Especially myofibrillar protein
- Good short term adaptation, bad long term?
32AICAR in the Mouse
- 5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide riboside (AICAR)
is an adenosine analogue that can activate AMPK - if both a1- and a2-AMPK activity are markedly
decreased then contraction-(or AICAR) induced
glucose uptake is diminished - Activation of AMPK by AICAR increases plasma
membrane content of GLUT4 - Activation of AMPK increased endurance (AICAR
(500 mg/kg/day, 4 weeks), but inhibits mTOR
pathway of protein synthesis - No way to assess fatigue in these mice
Narkar, VA etal., AMPK and PPARd Agonists Are
Exercise Mimetics Cell 134 405415, 2008
33Mitochondrial Diseases
34Johns, DR. NEJM 1995
35Persons with Mitochondiral Mutations have
Exercise Intolerance
Jeppsen TD etal., J Neurol (2007) 2542937
36Mito Diseases
- Mitochondrial disease may present with any
symptom in any organ at any age - Primary mitochondrial disease caused by
mutations in nDNA or mtDNA directly impacts the
composition and function of the electron
transport chain and impairs mitochondrial
oxidative phosphorylation and production of ATP. - Isolated myopathic or cardiomyopathy
presentations, frequently with exercise
intolerance, are common in teenagers and young
adults. (the more severe the metabolic disorder,
the earlier it presents in life) - Australian group combined adult prevalence
figures with childhood figures to estimate a
birth prevalence of 1 in 7634 live births or a
lifetime risk of developing mitochondrial disease
of 1 in 5000 live births.
37DiMauro S, Schon EA. Mitochondrial
respiratory-chain diseases. N Engl J Med 2003
348 265668.
38Lindholm H, etal. Clin Physiol Funct Imaging
(2004) 24109115
39(No Transcript)
40Treatment for mitochondrial disorders
- P L A I N L A N G U A G E S U M M A R Y
- No clear evidence from randomised trials for the
use of any intervention in mitochondrial
disorders
Chinnery P, Majamaa K, Turnbull D, Thorburn
D Cochrane Systematic Reviews
41DiMauro S, Schon EA. Mitochondrial
respiratory-chain diseases. N Engl J Med 2003
348 265668.
4266 Centenarians (32 active, 34 placebo) given 2 g
L-Carnitine daily for 6 mos. Mean age 101 for
both groups Reduced fatigue Also Reduced Fatigue
Serverity Score Increased 6 min walk (from
Department of Senescence, Urological, and
Neurological Sciences, University of Catania,
Catania, Italy). 3 Positive Open Label studies
for Cancer Related Fatigue 1 Positive Open Label
in 80 year olds 4 weeks of 2 g BID Carnitine
deficiency (free carnitine lt35 for males or lt25
microM/L for females, or acyl/free carnitine
ratio gt0.4),
Am J Clin Nutr 200786173844.
43Scored 0, 1 or 2 by the patient so range is 0 to
16 for physical scale and 0 to 10 for mental
scale
Wessley and Powell, 1989
44