E0 ConsensusPreliminaryPEM not requiredReview-NarrativePeer-reviewedMachine draft
Medically unexplained symptoms and neuropsychological assessment.
Binder, Laurence M, Campbell, Keith A · Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology · 2004 · DOI
Quick Summary
This review examines several long-term illnesses—including ME/CFS—where patients experience real symptoms but standard medical tests don't show an obvious cause. The authors found that some patients do have measurable thinking and memory problems, but these may result from a combination of stress, past trauma, and how the body responds to illness rather than from traditional brain disease alone.
Why It Matters
This work is important because it validates that ME/CFS patients' cognitive complaints may reflect real, measurable impairments while also acknowledging the complex biological-psychological interactions underlying the condition. It challenges the false dichotomy between 'organic' and 'psychological' illness, supporting a more nuanced understanding of ME/CFS pathophysiology.
Observed Findings
- Some ME/CFS patients demonstrate objective cognitive abnormalities on neuropsychological testing despite absence of traditional neurological disease
- Severe stressors and PTSD are associated with measurable immune system dysfunction and neurochemical changes
- Many patients with medically unexplained symptoms underreport or omit histories of severe stressors and psychiatric problems
- The cognitive abnormalities observed in MUS conditions likely result from complex interactions between biological and psychological factors rather than single pathophysiological mechanisms
Inferred Conclusions
- Cognitive abnormalities in ME/CFS and related syndromes are not caused by traditionally defined neurological disease but emerge from biopsychosocial interactions
- The distinction between 'psychological' and 'organic' etiologies is artificial and should be reconceptualized
- Improved diagnostic assessment requires comprehensive evaluation of stress history and psychosocial factors alongside somatic symptoms
Remaining Questions
- What are the specific neurobiological mechanisms linking psychological stressors to immune dysfunction and cognitive impairment in ME/CFS?
- How can clinicians improve history-taking to better identify and integrate stress-related factors in diagnosis?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This review does not identify specific biomarkers or primary causes of ME/CFS cognitive dysfunction, nor does it establish causality between any single factor and disease. It cannot determine whether stress causes the cognitive abnormalities or whether the underlying illness causes both cognitive problems and stress responses. The study's reliance on existing literature means findings are limited by the quality and design of reviewed studies.
Tags
Symptom:Cognitive DysfunctionFatigue
Biomarker:Cytokines
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case Definition
Metadata
- DOI
- 10.1080/13803390490510095
- PMID
- 15512927
- Review status
- Machine draft
- Evidence level
- Established evidence from major reviews, guidelines, or evidence maps
- Last updated
- 8 April 2026
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 →
Spotted an error in this entry? Report it →