Exercise and the Athlete With Infectious Mononucleosis.
Shephard, Roy J · Clinical journal of sport medicine : official journal of the Canadian Academy of Sport Medicine · 2017 · DOI
Quick Summary
This review examines how infectious mononucleosis (a viral illness caused by Epstein-Barr virus) affects young athletes and whether it can lead to chronic fatigue syndrome. The main finding is that with proper diagnosis and a few weeks of rest followed by gradual return to activity, most athletes recover fully within 2-3 months, and serious complications like splenic rupture are rare.
Why It Matters
This study is relevant to ME/CFS patients because it addresses the relationship between infectious mononucleosis and chronic fatigue syndrome, a potential trigger or overlap that affects patient understanding of disease origin and post-viral sequelae. Understanding how post-viral fatigue develops and can be prevented through appropriate activity management has direct implications for ME/CFS risk mitigation and management strategies.
Observed Findings
Spontaneous splenic rupture occurs in 0.1-0.5% of infectious mononucleosis patients, typically signaled by acute abdominal pain.
Clinical diagnosis of infectious mononucleosis is unreliable and requires laboratory confirmation with heterophile antibodies or EBV-specific antigen testing.
Clinical estimates of splenomegaly are fallible; ultrasonography is required for accurate measurement.
Full recovery of athletic performance is usual with 2-3 months of conservative management (3-4 weeks restricted activity followed by graded reconditioning).
The standard deviation of normal splenic values approximates the typical size increase seen in infectious mononucleosis.
Inferred Conclusions
3-4 weeks of restricted activity followed by graded reconditioning prevents progression to chronic fatigue and allows full recovery.
Accurate laboratory diagnosis and appropriate activity management minimize long-term health risks to athletes with infectious mononucleosis.
Splenic rupture risk can be minimized through early, accurate diagnosis and avoidance of intense exercise during acute infection.
Remaining Questions
What patient, viral, or host factors predict progression from acute infectious mononucleosis to chronic fatigue syndrome?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This review does not establish causality between infectious mononucleosis and ME/CFS, only documents that progression can occur. The mechanisms by which some patients develop chronic fatigue following IM while others do not remain unexplained. The study also does not define what constitutes 'progression to chronic fatigue' in objective terms or identify biomarkers that predict which patients will develop ME/CFS.
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 →