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Safety Of Hydrocortisone As CFS Treatment Questioned

CHICAGO, IL -- Sept. 22, 1998 -- Low-dose hydrocortisone may be an

effective treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), but patients

experience a potentially-dangerous side effect, according to an article

in the Sept. 23/30 issue of The Journal of the American Medical

Association.

Robin McKenzie, M.D., of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda,

MD., and colleagues studied the effect of low-dose hydrocortisone as a

treatment for CFS. Participants who received low-dose hydrocortisone

reported feeling better than participants who only received a placebo

treatment.

The study used a wellness score that rated overall health using a scale

with zero representing the worst the participant had ever felt and 100

representing the best they had ever felt.

" The percentages of patients recording improvement of at least five, 10

or 15 points on the wellness scale were greater for hydrocortisone than

placebo recipients [five points, 53 percent versus 29 percent; 10

points, 33 percent versus 14 percent; and 15 points, 20 percent versus

six percent], " the researchers said. " The mean improvement on treatment

in the hydrocortisone group was 6.3 points, being higher than the mean

improvement of 1.7 points for the placebo group. "

Although these results were promising, the study also found that

patients who received hydrocortisone experienced significant adrenal

suppression. It was previously believed that low doses of

corticosteroids were relatively safe and would not cause this type of

suppression.

" Although steps were taken to avert serious or potentially

life-threatening adrenal insufficiency in the face of emergent stress,

the fact that it could happen with less cautious widespread use

precludes the present regimen of hydrocortisone or comparable doses of

other systemic corticosteroids as acceptable choices for the prolonged

treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome, " they said.

The researchers have been exploring the possible connection between the

endocrine system (especially the hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal axis)

and CFS. Corticosteroid hormones are an important part of making

nutrients and energy available to the body. The adrenal glands are the

source of natural production of corticosteroid hormones, such as

cortisol, commonly known as hydrocortisone.

The researchers tested the amount of hydrocortisone in patients with CFS

and found that they had on average about 30 percent less hydrocortisone

than healthy controls. This led the researchers to consider low-dose

supplementation with hydrocortisone to possibly correct the imbalance.

The researchers used the more complex 1988 Centers for Disease Control

and Prevention criteria to define the cases to be included in the study.

The 1988 case definition requires debilitating fatigue and eight or more

of 11 signs and symptoms occurring for at least six months. The patients

also met the 1994 CDC criteria. The eight symptoms are memory or

concentration complaints, sore throat, tender lymph nodes, muscle pain,

multi-joint pain, a new pattern of headaches, unrefreshing sleep and

malaise after exertion that lasts more than 24 hours.

The researchers conclude that though this is the first study, to their

knowledge, to show an improvement in CFS due to a drug treatment, the

low-dose hydrocortisone treatment probably is not viable in a clinical

setting.

" What little improvement might be attributable to hydrocortisone

treatment was achieved at the expense of significant adrenal

suppression, " they explained.

Lyn

Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and

conscientious stupidity.( Luther King)

http://home.talkcity.com/spiritcir/lynmari/index.html

And go to onelist.com and join rheumathritis and be an arthritis

warrior!!

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