Ayres, J G, Flint, N, Smith, E G et al. · QJM : monthly journal of the Association of Physicians · 1998 · DOI
This study followed 71 people in the UK who were infected with Q fever (a bacterial infection) in 1989 and compared them to 142 similar people who were not infected. Five years later, the infected group reported significantly more fatigue, sweating, breathlessness, and blurred vision than the control group. About 42% of the infected patients met the diagnostic criteria for chronic fatigue syndrome, suggesting that a single Q fever infection can lead to long-lasting tiredness and related symptoms in some people.
This study is significant because it demonstrates that acute infections can trigger a chronic fatigue syndrome-like condition in a substantial portion of patients, supporting the post-infectious etiology hypothesis central to ME/CFS research. It also provides a historical precedent for studying post-infection fatigue in well-defined, single-exposure cohorts without confounding litigation factors, offering methodological insights for ME/CFS investigations.
This study does not prove that all Q fever infections cause chronic fatigue, nor that the mechanism is identical to idiopathic ME/CFS. It also cannot establish causation with certainty due to its observational design; some symptoms in the exposed group could reflect reporting bias or other unmeasured confounders. The study does not characterize the immunological or pathophysiological mechanisms underlying post-infection fatigue.
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
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