Helping chronic fatigue patients over
fears eases symptoms
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[January 14, 2015]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Helping patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome to overcome their fears that exercise or
activity will make their symptoms worse is one of the most important
factors behind therapies that can make them better, scientists said on
Wednesday.
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Presenting an analysis on a trial showing how cognitive behavior
therapy (CBT) and graded exercise therapy (GET) help reduce fatigue
and improve physical function in people with chronic fatigue
syndrome (CFS), the researchers said misguided but understandable
fears about being active were key.
"You're not going to ask somebody who hasn't been going out or
engaging in any exercise for several years to suddenly get on their
bike -- you would want to do these things very gradually and
carefully," Trudie Chalder of King's College London's Institute of
Psychiatry told a briefing.
"(But) our results suggest that fearful beliefs can be changed by
directly challenging such beliefs, or by simple behavior change with
a graded approach."
CFS, sometimes called myalgic encephalomyelitis or ME, is a
debilitating condition characterized by disabling physical and
mental fatigue, poor concentration and memory, disturbed sleep and
muscle and joint pain.
There is no cure and scientists don't know what causes it, but it
affects around 17 million people worldwide.
Many sufferers say they think their illness started after a viral
infection. But suggested links to a virus known as XMRV were shown
in a scientific paper in 2010 to have been based on contaminated
samples in a lab.
Calder worked on a 2011 study called the PACE trial. It found that
CBT, where a health professional helps patients understand and
change the way they respond to symptoms, and GET, a personalized,
gradually increasing exercise program, helped around 60 percent of
CFS patients improve.
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In this latest study, Calder's team sought to find out how the
treatments worked for some patients, with a view to allowing
therapies to be improved or adapted to help more.
Of all the mediating factors analyzed, the researchers found the
strongest -- accounting for up to 60 percent of the effect -- was
reducing fears that exercise would make symptoms worse, something
they described as "an understandable reaction to having CFS".
Professor Peter White of Queen Mary, University of London, who
worked on Calder's team, stressed that neither this nor the original
PACE study was able to find the root causes of CFS, but only to
analyze how therapies can improve symptoms.
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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