E2 ModeratePreliminaryPEM not requiredCross-SectionalPeer-reviewedMachine draft
Standard · 3 min
Chronic fatigue syndrome in psychiatric patients: lifetime and premorbid personal history of physical health.
Endicott, N A · Psychosomatic medicine · 1998 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study compared 46 ME/CFS patients with two groups of psychiatric patients without ME/CFS to see if there were differences in their past physical health histories. Researchers found that ME/CFS patients reported more lifetime infections (including repeated mono-like illnesses), irritable bowel syndrome, and allergies before developing ME/CFS than the comparison groups. This suggests that a pattern of poor overall physical health earlier in life may play a role in developing ME/CFS.
Why It Matters
This study provides evidence that people who develop ME/CFS often have a history of recurring infections and chronic physical conditions before symptom onset, suggesting ME/CFS may develop in individuals with underlying susceptibility to illness. Understanding the premorbid health patterns of ME/CFS patients may help identify risk factors and inform prevention or early intervention strategies.
Observed Findings
CFS patients had significantly higher lifetime prevalence of irritable bowel syndrome compared to controls
CFS patients reported more infectious mononucleosis-like syndromes, including multiple episodes, than controls
CFS patients had higher rates of herpes infections (non-genital, non-oral) than controls
CFS patients showed higher incidence of allergic rhinitis or asthma than combined control groups
Independent raters judged CFS patients' premorbid physical health as significantly more impaired than relatively healthy psychiatric controls
Inferred Conclusions
A general health factor or constitutional predisposition to physical illness may be involved in the pathogenesis of ME/CFS in some cases
Individuals with recurrent infections and chronic somatic conditions may be at higher risk for developing ME/CFS
Premorbid physical health status differs significantly between future CFS patients and psychiatric controls
Remaining Questions
Do specific infectious agents (e.g., EBV, other herpesviruses) play a causal role, or is recurrent infection merely a marker of underlying immune susceptibility?
What mechanisms connect premorbid health conditions (IBS, allergies, recurrent infections) to ME/CFS development?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that past infections or poor health *cause* ME/CFS—it only shows they are more common in people who develop it. The cross-sectional, retrospective design cannot establish temporal relationships or rule out recall bias. Correlation between premorbid health and CFS development does not establish a causal mechanism.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Phenotype:Infection-Triggered
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionSmall SampleMixed Cohort
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 →