Frequency and characteristics of CFS and MS patients at a university hospital in Eastern Saudi Arabia, 2024, AlAmri et al

Mij

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Frequency and characteristics of CFS and MS patients at a university hospital in Eastern Saudi Arabia, 2024, AlAmri, Abdullah S et al
BACKGROUND:
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, inflammatory demyelinating disease that affects various parts of the central nervous system. Fatigue, a common symptom, transient, prolonged, or chronic experienced by individuals with MS, can significantly impact daily functioning. It can be associated with underlying pathological processes or can have an idiopathic cause, such as chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). The study aimed to assess the presence and etiology of fatigue in MS patients and its relationship with CFS.

MATERIALS AND METHODS:
This cross-sectional study was conducted in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia. Data were collected using a questionnaire from a sample of 225 MS patients receiving care at our university hospital. The questionnaire included the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria for diagnosing CFS and the Expanded Disability Status Scale to evaluate fatigue in MS patients.

RESULTS:
Of the total of 225 MS patients who participated in this study, 87.1% were diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS, 6.7% with primary progressive MS, 3.6% with clinically isolated syndrome, and 2.7% with secondary progressive MS. About 53% had experienced fatigue that persisted for over 6 months. Analysis of CFS diagnosis revealed that 7.3% of patients met both CDC criteria and self-reported answers while 17.5% reported having CFS despite not meeting the CDC criteria. These findings highlight a significant lack of agreement between patient-reported diagnoses and established criteria, indicating poor agreement (P = 0.028).

CONCLUSION:
The study found an association between CFS and MS, and a significant impact on daily functioning. The study revealed lack of agreement between patient-reported diagnoses and established criteria for CFS. This emphasizes the need for a standardized approach to diagnosis and evaluation of fatigue in MS patients.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/38406222/
 
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This looks intriguing just from reading what is here but haven’t the function to look at paper yet.

I wasn’t aware medics would think cfs was a likely comorbid diagnosis

although from a personal perspective I wouldn’t be surprised historically in the Uk if that was a dumping pot first in the past (I say but not sure of the will to change from using ‘any old MUS type name like cfs’ and really just mean the shimmy definition of fatigue they infer is tackleable with healthy peoples self-help that is counter productive for ME/CFS)

I don’t know about Saudi Arabia or if the sample were all diagnosed with cfs there.

I would be interested if this is flagging how poor the conceptualisation of fatigue that has been perhaps attached to eg old cfs ideas and other Mus stuff is getting noticed from other angles for its ‘poor fit/usefulness’
 
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