Andy
Senior Member (Voting rights)
This topic came up recently in some patient representation work of mine, and I thought that sharing my thoughts here might be useful. I understand that some people will have differing views on this subject, this just happens to be my view. This has also taken me at least a couple of weeks to put together, thinking being hard to do at the moment, so I won't be surprised if there are corrections still to be made.
Why I support the use of ME/CFS as opposed to any other name
Both CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) and ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) as names are problematic. While fatigue and muscle pain (myalgia) are part of the range of symptoms of ME/CFS, neither name even hints at the most disabling aspect, PEM. And with no good evidence to show that there is inflammation of the brain and spinal cord (encephalomyelitis) occurring within the ME/CFS patient population, ME is arguably more of a misleading name than CFS is.
SEID (Systemic Exertion Intolerance Disease), as proposed in the IOM report, at least tried to identify PEM as the most important feature, however the problem is that PEM is not exertion intolerance as is more widely understood as an inability or decreased ability to perform physical exercise at the normally expected level. One day CPET studies show that patients are able to perform at expected levels, and that it is only with repeated testing (i.e. two day CPET studies) that issues show up.
So, given that;
I believe that using ME/CFS as a placeholder name is the best, or least worst, way forward, while we wait impatiently for research to determine the core mechanisms of the disease.
There are two central reasons for this, practicality and inclusivity.
Edit: Spelling is hard.
Why I support the use of ME/CFS as opposed to any other name
Both CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) and ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) as names are problematic. While fatigue and muscle pain (myalgia) are part of the range of symptoms of ME/CFS, neither name even hints at the most disabling aspect, PEM. And with no good evidence to show that there is inflammation of the brain and spinal cord (encephalomyelitis) occurring within the ME/CFS patient population, ME is arguably more of a misleading name than CFS is.
SEID (Systemic Exertion Intolerance Disease), as proposed in the IOM report, at least tried to identify PEM as the most important feature, however the problem is that PEM is not exertion intolerance as is more widely understood as an inability or decreased ability to perform physical exercise at the normally expected level. One day CPET studies show that patients are able to perform at expected levels, and that it is only with repeated testing (i.e. two day CPET studies) that issues show up.
So, given that;
- the major institutions such as NICE, CDC and others have adopted ME/CFS
- that the vast majority of patients, at least in the UK, will have been diagnosed with any or all from CFS, CFS/ME, ME or ME/CFS
- and that there being no good evidence that, for the average patient, what name was used indicates a different disease
I believe that using ME/CFS as a placeholder name is the best, or least worst, way forward, while we wait impatiently for research to determine the core mechanisms of the disease.
There are two central reasons for this, practicality and inclusivity.
- As ME, CFS and ME/CFS have all been used to describe the same disease, continuing to use ME/CFS is a practical solution to acknowledge all possible names.
- Choosing to use either CFS or ME sets patients with the other diagnoses as separate for no good reason, and therefore ME/CFS is an inclusive solution for the whole patient population who have suffered a lot of exclusion in other contexts.
Edit: Spelling is hard.
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