Scand
J Prim Health Care 2000 Sep;18(3):165-9
"I
could not lift my arm holding the fork...". Living with chronic fatigue
syndrome.
Soderlund
A, Skoge AM, Malterud K
Department
of Public Health and Primary Health Care, University of Bergen, Norway.
[Medline record in process]
OBJECTIVES:
To explore and describe symptoms and their consequences for patients suffering
from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
DESIGN:
Qualitative data from a group interview, written answers to a questionnaire
and a follow-up meeting analysed in accordance with Giorgi's phenomenological
approach.
SUBJECTS:
Purposeful sample of 10 women and 2 men of various ages recruited from
the local self-help patient organisation.
MAIN
OUTCOME MEASURES: Descriptions reflecting the nature, extent and consequences
of symptoms regarded as the most substantial by the informants across the
group.
RESULTS:
Extreme exhaustion exceeding the nature of everyday weariness was reported
as the worst symptom. The informants perceived reduced muscular strength,
continuous weakness and recurrent pain, problems related to memory and
concentration, sleep disturbances and excessive sensitivity towards smell,
light and sound. Learning abilities had deteriorated, and housework, conversation,
reading and watching TV were characterised as exhausting, leading to an
unpredictability of everyday life-disturbing social relations. CONCLUSION:
The extent and nature of symptoms suggest that CSF is an essentially different
and far more serious condition than the strains of everyday life. Our findings
suggest immunological processes affecting
the neuromuscular and central neural system
comparable to the effects of cytostatic medication.
PMID:
11097102, UI: 20546844