Precipitating factors for the chronic fatigue syndrome.
Salit, I E · Journal of psychiatric research · 1997 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study looked at what triggered ME/CFS in 134 patients by asking them about their medical history, infections, and life events. While many patients reported an illness before ME/CFS started, actual proof of a specific infection was rare. Importantly, the researchers found that stressful life events in the year before ME/CFS onset were very common in patients but uncommon in healthy people, suggesting multiple different factors may trigger the illness rather than one single cause.
Why It Matters
This study challenges the assumption that ME/CFS is always triggered by infection, suggesting instead that stress and multiple different factors may play important roles in disease onset. Understanding diverse precipitating factors helps patients and clinicians recognize that ME/CFS development is complex and may inform prevention and early intervention strategies.
Observed Findings
85% of CFS patients reported stressful events in the year before onset versus only 6% of controls (p<0.0001)
72% of patients reported an apparently infectious illness at onset, but confirmed infection was found in only 7% of these cases
28% of patients had no apparent infectious trigger; of these, 40% had non-infectious precipitants (trauma, allergy, surgery) and 61% had no identifiable precipitating event
Immunization was not a significant precipitating factor in this population
Inferred Conclusions
ME/CFS likely has multiple different precipitating factors rather than a single infectious cause
Stressful life events are significantly associated with ME/CFS onset and may be an important triggering factor
No single infectious agent has been consistently identified as causing ME/CFS
Both infectious and non-infectious precipitants, as well as unknown factors, may contribute to disease development
Remaining Questions
Why do most people who experience stress or infection not develop ME/CFS? What protective or risk factors determine individual susceptibility?
How do stress and infection interact biologically to trigger ME/CFS in some individuals?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that stress causes ME/CFS—finding stress before illness does not establish causation. The reliance on patient recall of events from the past makes the findings vulnerable to memory bias. The study also cannot explain why most people experiencing stress or infection do not develop ME/CFS, indicating other individual factors must be involved.
Tags
Symptom:Fatigue
Biomarker:Blood Biomarker
Phenotype:Infection-TriggeredGradual Onset
Method Flag:Weak Case DefinitionSmall SampleExploratory Only