Wyller, Vegard Bruun, Barbieri, Riccardo, Thaulow, Erik et al. · Annals of noninvasive electrocardiology : the official journal of the International Society for Holter and Noninvasive Electrocardiology, Inc · 2008 · DOI
This study looked at how the nervous system controls heart rate in adolescents with ME/CFS, particularly during mild physical stress (tilting on a table). Researchers found that teenagers with ME/CFS showed an unusual heart rate pattern—their bodies shifted too quickly toward stress-mode responses compared to healthy teens. This suggests their autonomic nervous system, which normally helps regulate heart rate and blood pressure, may not be working properly.
Autonomic dysfunction is a hallmark feature of ME/CFS, and identifying specific patterns of dysregulation during physiological stress could help explain post-exertional malaise and orthostatic symptoms that severely limit patients' functioning. Understanding these mechanisms may eventually lead to targeted diagnostic tests or therapeutic interventions for adolescents with ME/CFS, a population often dismissed or misdiagnosed.
This study does not establish whether enhanced vagal withdrawal is a cause or consequence of ME/CFS, nor does it prove that hypovolemia or reflex abnormalities are the underlying mechanism—only that they are plausible. The small sample size (14 CFS cases) limits generalizability, and cross-sectional design prevents inference about whether these autonomic changes precede disease onset or develop as a result of illness.
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 →
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