Cathébras, P, Bouchou, K, Charmion, S et al. · La Revue de medecine interne · 1993 · DOI
Quick Summary
ME/CFS is a debilitating condition characterized mainly by extreme tiredness of unknown cause. Current diagnostic criteria don't clearly identify a single uniform group of patients, and no clear infectious or immune cause has been definitively proven, though some viruses and immune changes may play a role in some cases. Treatment options are limited but may include antidepressants and cognitive-behavioral therapy.
Why It Matters
This review highlights critical gaps in ME/CFS understanding and emphasizes the need to identify disease subgroups based on post-infectious etiology and immunological markers. It also raises awareness of the psychiatric comorbidity frequently observed in CFS, which has implications for both research design and clinical management strategies.
Observed Findings
Psychiatric comorbidity (especially depression) is highly prevalent in CFS patients
Mental disorders precede CFS symptom onset in approximately 50% of cases
Current diagnostic criteria do not define a homogeneous patient population
Some patients show evidence of persistent enterovirus or HHV-6 infection
Chronic immune activation may be present in a subset of patients
Inferred Conclusions
No single infectious or immunological cause has been definitively identified for CFS
CFS may represent a heterogeneous condition rather than a single disease entity
CFS shares conceptual similarities with historical neurasthenia and may be partly a social construction
Future research should focus on identifying disease subgroups defined by post-infectious triggers and their immunological and psychological characteristics
Remaining Questions
What immunological and behavioral mechanisms link infection to persistent fatigue in CFS cases?
Which patient subgroups (defined by infection history, immune markers, or other factors) would respond best to different treatments?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This is a critical review, not a primary research study, so it does not present new experimental data or definitive proof of causation. The authors do not establish that psychiatric conditions cause ME/CFS, only that they frequently co-occur. The paper also does not definitively rule out infectious or immune mechanisms—only that none had been conclusively demonstrated by 1993.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Biomarker:Cytokines
Phenotype:Infection-Triggered
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionExploratory Only
Does psychiatric comorbidity represent a causal factor, a consequence, or an independent co-occurring condition in ME/CFS?
How can ME/CFS be distinguished as a biological entity from social/psychological constructs, and what objective biomarkers might support this distinction?