Psychosocial correlates of chronic fatigue syndrome in adolescent girls.
Pelcovitz, D, Septimus, A, Friedman, S B et al. · Journal of developmental and behavioral pediatrics : JDBP · 1995
Quick Summary
This study compared 10 teenage girls with ME/CFS to 10 healthy girls and 10 girls who had cancer (now in remission). The researchers found that girls with ME/CFS reported more physical complaints and emotional symptoms like depression compared to the other groups. Parents of ME/CFS girls also noticed more emotional and physical complaints in their daughters, though family relationships and behaviors were similar across all groups.
Why It Matters
Understanding the psychological and emotional experience of adolescents with ME/CFS is important for comprehensive clinical care and validates that these patients experience significant symptom burden. This early study helps demonstrate that ME/CFS in youth involves measurable psychological correlates, supporting the need for holistic treatment approaches that address both physical and emotional wellbeing.
Observed Findings
CFS group reported significantly higher somatic complaint scores than both healthy and cancer-remission comparison groups.
CFS group reported significantly higher internalizing symptoms and depression scores than cancer-remission controls.
Parental reports confirmed higher internalizing and somatic complaint scores in CFS girls versus healthy comparison girls.
No significant differences were found between groups on any family functioning variables.
All three groups showed similar behavioral and family relationship patterns despite differing symptom profiles.
Inferred Conclusions
Adolescent girls with CFS experience elevated psychological distress and somatic symptom reporting that distinguishes them from healthy peers and even from cancer survivors.
Family dynamics and functioning do not appear to be the primary differentiating factor between CFS and comparison groups, suggesting CFS-related distress is not simply attributable to family dysfunction.
Both adolescent self-perception and parental observation converge on elevated emotional and physical symptoms in CFS, providing some consistency across reporting sources.
Remaining Questions
Does the elevated depression and internalizing symptoms precede ME/CFS onset or develop as a consequence of chronic illness and disability?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not establish whether psychological symptoms are a cause or consequence of ME/CFS—it only documents their co-occurrence. The small sample size (10 per group) limits generalizability, and the absence of objective biomarkers or structured clinical diagnostic criteria means findings cannot be extrapolated to all adolescents with ME/CFS. No conclusions can be drawn about causality or treatment efficacy.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Phenotype:Pediatric
Method Flag:PEM Not DefinedWeak Case DefinitionSmall Sample
How do these psychosocial patterns in adolescents compare to CFS in adults, and do they predict long-term outcomes?
What are the underlying biological mechanisms linking somatic complaints and emotional symptoms in ME/CFS?
Would interventions targeting emotional wellbeing improve physical outcomes, or are psychological and physical symptoms independent manifestations of the same disease process?