Long term outcome in patients with Functional Neurological Disorders, 2022, Siafaka

Dolphin

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Might be slightly less of a complete waste of time and effort if they gave any indication of how long "long-term follow-up" actually was. From the case illustrations, I'm guessing it was 3-5 years.
 
Was the CFS defined as fatigue, or as per IOM/CCC/ICC?

With these studies, if you can't see how they defined CFS, you never know if there is any relevance to ME/CFS or the authors are just using CFS to mean that the patient had bad fatigue.
 
Was the CFS defined as fatigue, or as per IOM/CCC/ICC?

With these studies, if you can't see how they defined CFS, you never know if there is any relevance to ME/CFS or the authors are just using CFS to mean that the patient had bad fatigue.
Bristol Children's Hospital (BCH) is part of the same Medical School as Esther Crawley - senior author of the FND poster is also a Bristol Medical School lecturer and, while proximatey doesn't imply familiarity, Crawley's office is just down the hill from BCH. I think it's a safe bet on how CFS in these patients was defined.
 
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