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The Mystery of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Chronic fatigue syndrome is more than just feeling tired. Here’s an
explanation of this serious condition and how nutritional therapy can
improve patients ' health.
by Jeffrey S. Bland, Ph.D.
Each month at the HealthComm Research center in Gig Harbor, Washington,
I see dozens of patients who suffer from extreme fatigue to the point
where they're functionally incapacitated and can no longer engage in
normal work. Most have symptoms that have lasted more than two years,
including chills or mild fever, recurrent sore throat, painful or swollen
lymph glands, unexplained muscle weakness, headaches, joint pain without
swelling or redness, and central nervous system problems including
forgetfulness, excessive irritability, confusion, inability to
concentrate, depression and disturbed sleep.
Some of these symptoms may have been mistaken for clinical depression,
and in the past these individuals may also have sought psychiatric or
psychological help. Over the past ten years, however, a new understanding
of this complex array of symptoms has emerged, and the illness has been
given a name—Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS).
This condition was first identified in the United States in the early
1980s when Paul Cheney, M.D., and Daniel Peterson, M.D., at Incline
Village, Nevada, treated a number of patients who shared similar symptoms
following a serious winter flu season. Because these patients had all
suffered from an infection of a herpes-like virus similar to that which
produces mononucleosis, the condition was at the time called post-viral
fatigue syndrome.
Since the 1980s, chronic fatigue syndrome has been the subject of
considerable research. This condition is not a simple viral infection but
rather a complicated syndrome related to metabolic poisoning and
physiological energy deficiency.
The one symptom that distinguishes CFS from other conditions is poor
exercise tolerance. Formerly enjoyable physical activities become
exhausting, and even after modest exercise the individual with CFS is
fatigued for more than a day. This poor exercise tolerance, which has been
identified as a disturbance in energy production and utilization by the
body, is related to defects in the energy producing machinery of cells in
the brain, muscles and other tissues.
Poor cellular energy production may also explain why chronic fatigue
sufferers experience nervous system problems. CFS patients have poor
cognitive function, can't concentrate on tasks and have brain biochemical
disturbances that are revealed by SPECT scan.
Physiologists and medical scientists who have studied CFS find that the
muscle cell mitochondria (the cells' energy furnace) of the individual
with CFS are changed in shape and function from those of people who don't
have this illness. CFS sufferers' mitochondria are swollen and have less
energy-production ability, which may explain their fatigue and poor
exercise tolerance.
Physiologists and medical scientists who have studied CFS find
that the muscle cell mitochondria (the cells' energy furnace) of the
individual with CFS are changed in shape and function from those of people
who don't have this illness.
In essence, a person who suffers from CFS is unable to support aerobic
metabolism (metabolism in the presence of oxygen) effectively. His or her
cells, after even minor stress, begin to produce energy in the absence of
oxygen. Called anaerobic metabolism, this condition builds up acid debris
in the cells, causing cells to become "poisoned" and reducing energy
efficiency and function of the tissue or organ.
One body system that's highly dependent upon proper energy production
and utilization is the immune system, the set of specialized cells which
help the body defend against disease.
The white blood cells of the immune system are active metabolizers, and
debilitation of their mitochondria by conditions such as poisoning can
result in poor immune function. Poisoning of the white blood cells'
mitochondria may account for the immune abnormalities in the CFS
patient.
Chronic fatigue sufferers also have a magnesium deficiency inside their
cells, which also cause toxicity.
Magnesium helps neutralize toxins and promotes the uptake of nutrients
into cells and the release of waste products from cells. When a cell is
deficient in magnesium, it's less able to utilize nutrients and is more
likely to accumulate toxic by-products, thereby possibly reducing the
cells' energy functions.
Some time ago, clinicians found they could alleviate CFS symptoms by
giving large doses of magnesium intravenously. More recent research
indicates magnesium insufficiency in cells may be caused not by a lack of
magnesium in the diet but by what's called "magnesium wasting." This
condition may occur as a consequence of the debilitation of the cells'
energy production ability due to poisoning. Poisoned cells can't
effectively pump magnesium across the cellular membrane.
The uptake of magnesium into cells requires a substance called
adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which is produced in the cells'
mitochondria. When cells don't function properly, either because of
toxicity or serious viral infection, and can't process nutrients into
energy, ATP levels drop, and the cells' ability to absorb magnesium and
other nutrients is reduced.
New Treatment
Building upon this new understanding of the importance of maintaining
or restoring effective cellular energy production, Scott Rigden, M.D., a
practitioner in Tempe, Arizona. pioneered a new treatment program based
upon metabolic detoxification. He uses nutritional intervention to
reactivate mitochondrial energy production in chronic fatigue sufferers.
In just three or four weeks on this nutrition program, a number of
patients who had been debilitated for two or more years have improved
dramatically.
In his mitochondrial restoration program, Rigden uses a hypoallergenic
diet augmented with nutrients which improve the functional integrity of
the mitochondrial enzyme systems and prevent the production of damaging
free radicals generated by the body as a result of toxicity.
The success of this program is evident in a number of dramatic cases.
One woman, an elementary school principal who had been unable to work for
over a year, was able to return to work in restored health after only two
months of therapy. Another, an accountant who owned a small business, was
in serious jeopardy of losing her business because the mental impairment
which accompanied her CFS rendered her incapable of working with numbers.
After just a few months of using this new therapy, her health improved,
and she was able to resume her job.
When cells don't function properly, either because of
toxicity or serious viral infection, and can't process nutrients into
energy, ATP levels drop, and the cells' ability to absorb magnesium and
other nutrients is reduced.
In the past, a patient suffering from chronic fatigue was advised to
get more rest, drink plenty of fluids, improve his or her nutrition and
refrain from abusive lifestyle habits. While these are all good
suggestions, they don't provide the complete answer for CFS sufferers. The
use of various drugs and immune-stimulating agents has provided relief to
some CFS patients. However, the new metabolic approach toward
mitochondrial restoration has opened clinical doors for the improvement of
function in CFS sufferers looking for a more permanent therapeutic
approach.
Reprinted with permission from Delicious Magazine, March 1994
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