Annotation: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in children and adolescents.
Garralda, M Elena, Rangel, Luiza · Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines · 2002 · DOI
Quick Summary
This review looked at studies of ME/CFS (chronic fatigue syndrome) in children and teenagers over 20 years. The main symptom is severe tiredness along with other physical symptoms that stop children from doing normal activities. Most cases seem to start after an infection, and many children also have mood problems like depression. Treatment involving family support, gradual increases in activity, and help with mood disorders showed promise, with over two-thirds of children improving.
Why It Matters
This review establishes that childhood ME/CFS is a recognized, distinctly impairing condition worthy of clinical attention and further research investment. Understanding the high prevalence of mood co-morbidities and documenting positive treatment responses provides important clinical guidance for pediatricians and informs family-centered care approaches.
Observed Findings
Fatigue is the main symptom, occurring alongside various physical symptoms with marked and prolonged functional impairment
Co-morbid psychiatric disorders (usually mood disorders) are present in at least 50% of childhood CFS cases
CFS is commonly reported as being triggered by acute infections
Recovery was documented in over two-thirds of cases reviewed
Inferred Conclusions
CFS presents as a distinct disorder in childhood with severity comparable to adult forms
Personality factors and health attitudes may contribute to disease onset and maintenance
Integrated treatment addressing both functional rehabilitation and psychiatric co-morbidity is clinically effective
Most children with CFS can expect significant improvement or recovery with appropriate intervention
Remaining Questions
What is the actual prevalence and presentation of CFS in community and primary care settings, beyond specialist clinic populations?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This review does not establish causation—the reported association between infections and CFS onset, or between personality factors and CFS persistence, remains correlational. The review cannot determine prevalence or true epidemiology since it focused on clinic-attending children; the actual burden in the broader community remains unknown. Recovery rates cited (>2/3) apply mainly to more severely affected children already engaging with specialist services and may not reflect outcomes in milder cases.
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 →
Which specific treatment components (graded activity, family intervention, psychiatric treatment) are most effective, and what are optimal dosing/timing parameters?
What factors differentiate children who recover from those with persistent symptoms?
What is the natural history and long-term outcomes of milder, uncomplicated forms of childhood CFS?