Review Association of multiple sclerosis with [CFS], restless leg syndrome, and various sleep disorders along with the recent updates, 2023, Prajjwal et al

Sly Saint

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Abstract


Multiple sclerosis (MS) and Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME)/chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) share the symptom of fatigue, and might even coexist together. Specifically focusing on genetics, pathophysiology, and neuroimaging data, we discuss an overview of the parallels, correlation, and differences in fatigue between MS and ME/CFS along with ME/CFS presence in MS.

Studies have revealed that the prefrontal cortex and basal ganglia regions, which are involved in fatigue regulation, have similar neuroimaging findings in the brains of people with both MS and ME/CFS. Additionally, in both conditions, genetic factors have been implicated, with particular genes known to enhance susceptibility to MS and CFS. Management approaches for fatigue in MS and ME/CFS differ based on the underlying factors contributing to fatigue.

We also focus on the recent updates and the relationship between MS and sleep disorders, restless leg syndrome, focusing on pathophysiology and therapeutic approaches. Latest therapeutic approaches like supervised physical activity and moderate-intensity exercises have shown better outcomes.

https://journals.lww.com/annals-of-...n_of_multiple_sclerosis_with_chronic.657.aspx
 
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From the study: "....similar neuroimaging findings in the brains of people with both MS and ME/CFS." ( my bolding)

Does the above sentence mean the researchers looked at people who had both diseases at the same time?

At first it looked like this was a comparison between people, one group with MS, and another with ME. But the word "both" has muddied this a bit.

They do seem to be looking at these conditions when coexisting. Probably more is explained in the full article.

Why not just compare two groups, one with MS, and one with ME?
 
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