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Old 04-10-05, 05:27 PM
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Debate over chronic fatigue syndrome heats up...

The results of a new study by some British doctors may come as a surprise to experts who were under the impression that chronic fatigue syndrome was mostly a psychological issue.

The scientist discovered that people diagnosed with the condition improved with a placebo only 19.6 percent of the time; that's even lower than the 30 percent rate typically seen with other health issues. Many experts had expected the chronic fatigue rate to approach 50 percent.

The results bring renewed vigor to the debate among medical experts as to whether chronic fatigue syndrome is mostly a psychological or a physical issue. Before this latest study, many experts had assumed the condition was; well, mostly in a patient's head. Be sure to read the related article, Product Review: Fiberzon combines cleansing fiber with medicinal rainforest herbs to offer potent digestive health formula.


* Contrary to conventional wisdom, patients with chronic fatigue syndrome respond to placebos at a lower rate than people with many other illnesses, according to the first systematic review of the topic.
* According to the new analysis by Dr. Hyong Jin Cho of King's College London and colleagues, 19.6 percent of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome improved after receiving inactive treatments, compared with a widely accepted figure of about 30 percent for other conditions.
* Because the placebo effect seems to be strongest in diseases with highly subjective symptoms, some medical professionals believed it could be as high as 50 percent among CFS patients.
* Alternatively, disconnects between how patients and doctors view the illness "may impede development of a collaborative therapeutic relationship," reviewers suggest.
* The study also showed that the placebo response is 24 percent for medical interventions but only 14 percent for psychiatric/psychological treatments.
* The authors say the reason may be that many CFS sufferers seen in specialist settings or self-help groups "have a firm conviction that their illness is of physical origin" and thus would have little faith in psychiatric/psychological treatments.
* According to the review, behavioral therapy and graded exercise therapy have benefits, and if patients were more aware of them, says Cho, they might be "more open, more optimistic, and more collaborative with the professionals, and the overall outcome of the treatments could be enhanced."
* This is true in part, she says, because there is a great deal of variation among patients diagnosed with CFS, and Bateman believes that ultimately CFS may be found to involve more than one disease.
* In the absence of a cure, Bateman has found that the most effective treatment for CFS combines improving symptoms with medication, helping patients retain physical conditioning when possible and using psychological and psychiatric interventions to help patients adapt to living with chronic illness.


http://www.newstarget.com/006625.html
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