Oleksak, Filip, Durdik, Peter, Jakusova, Lubica et al. · Advances in respiratory medicine · 2021 · DOI
This case report describes a young patient who was diagnosed with ME/CFS (extreme exhaustion lasting at least six months) but actually had a different, treatable heart and lung condition. The doctors used a special exercise test called cardiopulmonary exercise testing to discover the real cause. This story reminds us that it's important to carefully check for other medical conditions before diagnosing someone with ME/CFS, especially in children and young people.
This study is important because ME/CFS is often diagnosed after other conditions are ruled out, and missing an underlying treatable cause—especially in young patients—could delay appropriate treatment. The case demonstrates that specialized testing like cardiopulmonary exercise testing can reveal unsuspected medical conditions and prevent misdiagnosis of ME/CFS. It reinforces best practices for diagnostic workup in pediatric fatigue cases.
This single case report does not establish how often alternative diagnoses are missed in pediatric ME/CFS populations or what proportion of suspected ME/CFS cases actually represent other conditions. It does not prove that cardiopulmonary exercise testing should be used as a standard screening tool for all suspected ME/CFS cases, nor does it provide evidence about the frequency or severity of cardiopulmonary mimics of ME/CFS. The findings are not generalizable beyond this individual patient.