Berlin, B · New Jersey medicine : the journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey · 1997
This case report describes a 57-year-old man who experienced severe flu-like symptoms and weight loss, and was initially tested for chronic fatigue syndrome and mononucleosis before eventually being diagnosed with HIV. The story illustrates how HIV infection can present with symptoms similar to other conditions and how important it is for doctors to consider HIV testing when patients have unexplained fatigue and illness. This highlights that conditions causing severe fatigue can have different underlying causes that require proper diagnosis.
This case is relevant to ME/CFS patients because it demonstrates that severe fatigue, flu-like symptoms, and weight loss can result from conditions other than ME/CFS, including treatable infections like HIV. Proper differential diagnosis is crucial, as misidentifying the cause of symptoms can delay appropriate treatment. The study reminds both patients and clinicians of the importance of comprehensive medical evaluation.
This case report does not establish any relationship between ME/CFS and HIV, nor does it prove that ME/CFS patients are at higher risk for HIV. It does not provide data on the prevalence of HIV in ME/CFS populations or demonstrate that HIV testing should be routine in ME/CFS evaluation. The single case cannot establish causation or generalizable patterns.