Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
In some ways this is a very basic question and maybe I should know the answer:
I was talking with an enquirer to an ME/CFS group I volunteer with yesterday who wasn’t sure whether they had ME/CFS and they mentioned that the exhaustion can get so bad that they can barely move an inch, that if the house went on fire, they’re not sure they could move when they dip this low (it’s not a permanent state).
I was just wondering whether that should be able to help with diagnosis? I know fatigue is common in lots of conditions but does it get this bad in many? Is there research that looks at it?
I was talking with an enquirer to an ME/CFS group I volunteer with yesterday who wasn’t sure whether they had ME/CFS and they mentioned that the exhaustion can get so bad that they can barely move an inch, that if the house went on fire, they’re not sure they could move when they dip this low (it’s not a permanent state).
I was just wondering whether that should be able to help with diagnosis? I know fatigue is common in lots of conditions but does it get this bad in many? Is there research that looks at it?