Generalized anxiety disorder in chronic fatigue syndrome.
Fischler, B, Cluydts, R, De Gucht, Y et al. · Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica · 1997 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study found that people with ME/CFS have much higher rates of anxiety disorders—particularly generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)—compared to people without ME/CFS. The anxiety often started early and frequently occurred alongside other mental health conditions. The researchers suggest that anxiety may be a risk factor that makes someone more vulnerable to developing ME/CFS, rather than simply being caused by the illness itself.
Why It Matters
Understanding the relationship between anxiety disorders and ME/CFS is crucial for developing more targeted diagnostic and treatment approaches. If anxiety disorders are indeed predisposing factors rather than mere consequences of illness, this could inform prevention and early intervention strategies, and may help clinicians identify at-risk individuals.
Observed Findings
ME/CFS patients showed significantly higher prevalence of both current and lifetime psychiatric disorders compared to medical controls.
Generalized anxiety disorder was unusually prevalent in the ME/CFS group, with early age of onset and high rates of concurrent psychiatric conditions.
Somatization disorder was significantly more common in ME/CFS patients and associated with longer illness duration and greater psychiatric comorbidity.
No marked differences in psychiatric morbidity were found between ME/CFS patients with and without fibromyalgia, except for a higher female-to-male ratio in those with fibromyalgia.
The CFS group demonstrated a higher overall degree of psychiatric comorbidity than controls.
Inferred Conclusions
Generalized anxiety disorder may function as a susceptibility factor for ME/CFS development rather than being solely a consequence of the illness.
CFS patients with concurrent somatization disorder may represent a clinically distinct subgroup requiring differential clinical management.
Psychiatric comorbidity is a significant feature of ME/CFS and should be assessed systematically in clinical evaluation.
Remaining Questions
What is the temporal relationship between anxiety onset and ME/CFS symptom development—does anxiety precede, coincide with, or follow illness onset?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study cannot establish causation—it does not prove that anxiety causes ME/CFS or vice versa. The cross-sectional nature of psychiatric assessment limits conclusions about the temporal sequence of anxiety onset relative to ME/CFS symptom development. The findings apply specifically to the study population and may not generalize to all ME/CFS patients.