The association of fatigue and pain with cognitive test performance in patients with [ME/CFS], 2025, Oosterman et al

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The association of fatigue and pain with cognitive test performance in patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome

Joukje M. Oosterman, Marieke van der Schaaf, Willemien P.E. de Kleijn, Tanja A. Kuut, Inti A. Brazil, Hans Knoop

Highlights
• Fatigue severity was the strongest predictor of cognitive test performance.
• Pain severity and physical functioning predicted performance independently.
• With increasing age the negative relation between pain and performance is stronger.

Objectives
Patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) typically perform worse on cognitive tasks. The present study explored the independent associations of fatigue and pain symptoms with cognitive performance in a large sample of patients who met CDC criteria of CFS (n = 1375), of whom most also met NICE/ IOM criteria (n = 1072). Moreover, we tested the hypothesis that these associations become stronger with older age and longer symptom duration.

Methods
Questionnaires and diaries were employed assessing fatigue and pain severity, together with the impact of health problems on daily life (using the SF-36 ‘Physical Functioning’ and ‘Bodily Pain’ subscales). Cognitive outcomes consisted of speeded performance measures, namely the Symbol Digit Test, motor speed, simple and choice reaction time (RT), and response inhibition. Categorical regression with lasso penalization was employed to identify relevant correlates of cognitive performance.

Results
Fatigue severity remained as only correlate of response inhibition. For the other cognitive outcomes, fatigue severity consistently emerged together with contributions of pain severity, bodily pain and/or physical functioning. Restricting these analyses to those patients meeting NICE/IOM criteria revealed overall similar results. Age, not symptom duration, moderated several relationships, showing more pronounced associations between cognitive performance and pain severity, physical functioning, and bodily pain with increasing age.

Conclusions
This study highlights that a multidimensional nature of symptoms, including fatigue and pain severity, and the impact on daily-life functioning, relate to lower cognitive performance in patients with ME/CFS. Studies are needed to identify the direction and potential causality of these associations.

Web | PDF | Journal of Psychosomatic Research | Open Access
 
From the 1375 included patients meeting CDC criteria of CFS, 1027 also met the NICE/IOM criteria.

To my skim read, for a paper with Knoop's name, this actually seemed reasonably written, with no glaringly obvious leaps to patient blaming.
 
The discussions of the results seems quite speculative and I’m not sure the simplistic models they mention add anything to the paper.

From personal experience, I have no doubt that both fatigue and pain can affect cognitive performance. But having had a lot of experience with both fatigue and pain before I got ME/CFS, it’s crystal clear that my current cognitive problems have little in common with those I experienced when in pain or fatigued pre-ME/CFS.
 
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