A Comparison of Patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis from the United States and Japan.

Elzbieta Wiedbusch, Joseph Cotler, Leonard A Jason
Author Information
  1. Elzbieta Wiedbusch: DePaul University, USA.
  2. Joseph Cotler: DePaul University, USA.
  3. Leonard A Jason: DePaul University, USA.

Abstract

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) are debilitating conditions found globally. Yet, most studies on these illnesses include patients from the United States (U.S) and the United Kingdom (U.K.). The current study compares impairment levels of 124 patients living in Japan with 210 patients from the U.S. All patients are from tertiary-care settings that specialize in ME/CFS. The DePaul Symptom Questionnaire and Medical Outcomes Short-Form 36 were completed and used to assess the participants' symptoms and functional abilities. The U.S. sample showed more impairment in neurocognitive, gastrointestinal and post-exertional malaise symptoms when compared to the Japanese sample. Japanese women demonstrated significantly worse impairment in physical, role-physical, and mental health functioning than Japanese men. Interestingly, Japanese women reported similar functional impairment levels to both men and women in the U.S., despite being less likely to receive disability benefits. These findings may be due to national differences in disability status and gender parity.

References

  1. Psychother Psychosom. 2004 May-Jun;73(3):174-82 [PMID: 15031590]
  2. J Transl Med. 2020 Feb 24;18(1):100 [PMID: 32093722]
  3. Tohoku J Exp Med. 1998 Sep;186(1):33-41 [PMID: 9915105]
  4. Med Care. 1993 Mar;31(3):247-63 [PMID: 8450681]
  5. Lupus. 2018 Mar;27(3):407-416 [PMID: 28795653]
  6. Ann Intern Med. 1994 Dec 15;121(12):953-9 [PMID: 7978722]
  7. Am J Soc Sci Humanit. 2020;5(1):104-115 [PMID: 34109300]
  8. J Ethn Subst Abuse. 2018 Jul-Sep;17(3):223-236 [PMID: 27115986]
  9. Fatigue. 2015 Jan 1;3(1):16-32 [PMID: 26973799]
  10. Front Pediatr. 2018 Nov 06;6:330 [PMID: 30460215]
  11. Med Care. 1992 Jun;30(6):473-83 [PMID: 1593914]
  12. Int J Psychol Behav Sci. 2015;5(2):98-107 [PMID: 26478826]
  13. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 1999 Jul;40(5):809-18 [PMID: 10433414]
  14. Arch Intern Med. 1999 Oct 11;159(18):2129-37 [PMID: 10527290]
  15. Dyn Med. 2008 Apr 08;7:6 [PMID: 18397528]
  16. Fatigue. 2017;5(2):89-102 [PMID: 29062593]
  17. J Clin Epidemiol. 1998 Nov;51(11):1037-44 [PMID: 9817121]
  18. Clin Rheumatol. 2011 Jul;30(7):895-906 [PMID: 21302125]

Grants

  1. R01 AI105781/NIAID NIH HHS

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0UpatientsSimpairmentJapaneseUnitedwomenChronicMyalgicEncephalomyelitisStateslevelsJapansymptomsfunctionalsamplemendisabilityfatiguesyndromeCFSMEdebilitatingconditionsfoundgloballyYetstudiesillnessesincludeKingdomKcurrentstudycompares124living210tertiary-caresettingsspecializeME/CFSDePaulSymptomQuestionnaireMedicalOutcomesShort-Form36completedusedassessparticipants'abilitiesshowedneurocognitivegastrointestinalpost-exertionalmalaisecompareddemonstratedsignificantlyworsephysicalrole-physicalmentalhealthfunctioningInterestinglyreportedsimilardespitelesslikelyreceivebenefitsfindingsmayduenationaldifferencesstatusgenderparityComparisonPatientsFatigueSyndrome

Similar Articles

Cited By