Chronic fatigue syndrome and the central nervous system.
Chen, R, Liang, F X, Moriya, J et al. · The Journal of international medical research · 2008 · DOI
Quick Summary
This review examined brain imaging studies and blood tests in ME/CFS patients to understand how the illness affects the brain and nervous system. Researchers found evidence that ME/CFS patients show structural and functional differences in their brains, and that certain brain chemicals and immune molecules are abnormal. The authors suggest that future ME/CFS research should focus more on understanding how the central nervous system is involved in this illness.
Why It Matters
This study highlights growing scientific evidence that ME/CFS involves measurable brain changes, helping shift understanding away from purely psychological explanations. By synthesizing multiple lines of neurobiological evidence, it provides support for the biological basis of ME/CFS and advocates for neuroscience-focused research directions that may lead to better diagnostic tools and treatments.
Observed Findings
Neuroimaging studies documented structural abnormalities in ME/CFS patient brains
Functional brain abnormalities were identified through neuroimaging in ME/CFS populations
Abnormalities in neurotrophic factors were found in ME/CFS patients
Neurotransmitter level alterations were observed in ME/CFS patients
Cytokine profile changes were documented in ME/CFS populations
Inferred Conclusions
Central nervous system pathology plays a significant role in ME/CFS pathophysiology
Multiple neurobiological systems (structural, functional, chemical) are involved in ME/CFS abnormalities
Research priorities should shift toward understanding brain-based mechanisms in ME/CFS
Integrated investigation of neuroimaging, neurotrophic factors, neurotransmitters, and cytokines may clarify ME/CFS etiology
Remaining Questions
What are the specific causal mechanisms linking brain abnormalities to ME/CFS symptomatology?
Do neuroimaging abnormalities progress over time or remain stable in ME/CFS patients?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This review does not establish causation—it cannot determine whether brain abnormalities cause ME/CFS symptoms or result from prolonged illness. The review is based on existing literature rather than new experimental data, and individual studies cited may have had small sample sizes or methodological limitations. It does not provide a unified mechanism explaining all ME/CFS cases.