Guest guest Posted October 14, 1999 Report Share Posted October 14, 1999 http://www.radio.cbc.ca/programs/ideas/shows/bacteria/bacttext.html THE BACTERIA REVOLUTION Friday, May 28 & June 4, 1999 IDEAS: Diagnosis and Treatment of Chronic Infections in Chronic Fatigue > Syndrome, Fibromyalgia Syndrome and Rheumatoid Arthritis > ----------------------------------------------------------------- > Bron: The Fibromyalgia Society of Canada (1998) > > Prof. Garth L. Nicolson > The Institute for Molecular Medicine > 15162 Triton Lane, Huntington Beach, CA 92649-1401 > > Patients with chronic illnesses Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ME (CFS/ME), > Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS), Gulf War Syndrome or Gulf War Illnesses > (GWI) and some Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) usually have overlapping, > complex, multi-organ chronic signs and symptoms . These include chronic > fatigue, headaches, memory loss, muscle pain, nausea, gastrointestinal > problems, joint pain, lymph node pain, memory loss, and other signs and > symptoms. Often included in this complex clinical picture are increased > sensitivities to various environmental agents and enhanced allergic > responses. Although these syndromes have been known for several years, > most patients with CFS/ME, FMS, GWI or RA have had few options when it > comes to effective treatments. This may be due to the imprecise nature > of their diagnoses, which are often based on clinical observations > rather than laboratory tests that could identify an underlying cause for > their illnesses. > > The signs and symptoms of CFS/ME and FMS overlap with those found in > GWI, suggesting that these are not a separate syndromes, they are all > CFS/ME-like disorders.(1) The main distinguishing characteristic of FMS > is severe muscle pain and soreness, and this can also be seen in many > FMS, RA and GWI patients. In some cases, these illnesses have > apparently spread to immediate family members. In the case of GWI, over > 100,000 veterans of the Persian Gulf War in 1991 have been found to have > this disorder, not including immediate family members. According to > one government study, GWI has spread to family members, (2) and it is > likely that it has also spread in the workplace. Although this U.S. > Senate committee study was incomplete, investigators found after > surveying approximately 1,200 GWI families that 77% of spouses and a > majority of children born after the war had the signs and symptoms of > GWI. (2) Notwithstanding the official position of Department of > Defense remains that family members have not contracted GWI, this U. S. > Senate study indicates that at least a subset of GWI patients have a > transmittable illness. (2) Similarly, some CFS/ME patients have > complained that their immediate family members now show some of the > signs and symptoms of CFS/ME. > > Does Stress affect CFS/ME, FMS, GWI or RA? > ------------------------------------------ > > Can stress affect chronic illnesses? Most researchers would agree that > it can, especially by affecting the immune system, but the notion that > stress is the cause of chronic illnesses like CFS/ME, FMS, GWI and RA > is, in my opinion, far fetched. Patients with CFS/ME, FMS, GWI and > sometimes RA often have cognitive problems, such as short term memory > loss, problems concentrating and other psychological problems. In > fact, psychologists or psychiatrists who examine CFS/ME, FMS or GWI > patients often find psychological or psychiatric problems in these > patients and decide in the absence of contrary laboratory findings that > these conditions are somatoform disorders. That means that these > practitioners decide that these illnesses are caused solely by > psychological or psychiatric problems, not medical problems that can be > treated with medicines or treatments that are not specific for the > Central Nervous System. Stress is often mentioned as an important > factor or the important factor in these disorders. In particular, GWI > patients are often diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) > in veterans=92 and military hospitals. (4) The evidence that physicians > have offered as proof that stress or PTSD is the source of most GWI > sickness is the assumption that most veterans must have suffered from > stress by virtue of the stressful environment in which they found > themselves during the Gulf War. (4) In fact, veterans themselves do not > feel that stress-related diagnoses are an accurate portrayal of their > illnesses. Most testimony to the U. S. House of Representatives > Committee on Government Reform and Oversight studying the origins of GWI > refutes the notion that stress is the major cause of GWI. (4) The > General Accounting Office (GAO), the investigation arm of the U.S. > Congress, after studying government and civilian data on the subject > concluded that while stress can induce some physical illness, the > statement that stress is the causes of GWI has not been established. (5) > Similarly, evidence is lacking that stress can cause CFS/ME, FMS or RA. > > The main effect of stress appears to be that it can exacerbate chronic > illnesses and suppress immune systems. But most military personnel that > we interviewed, including highly disciplined U. S. Special Forces and > Navy SEALS, indicated that the Gulf War was not a particularly stressful > war, and they strongly disagreed that stress was the origin of their > illnesses. (6) However, in the absence of physical or laboratory tests > that can identify possible origins of CFS/ME, FMS or GWI, many > physicians accept that stress is the cause of these chronic illnesses. > It was only recently that other causes have been seriously considered, > including chemical and biological exposures. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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