Myalgic encephalomyelitis:
International Consensus Criteria: B. M. Carruthers et al.
The Association for the Publication of
the Journal of Internal Medicine 2011
Myalgic encephalomyelitis is an
acquired neurological disease with complex global dysfunctions. Pathological
dysregulation of the nervous, immune and endocrine systems, with impaired
cellular energy metabolism and ion transport are prominent features. Although
signs and symptoms are dynamically interactive and causally connected, the
criteria are grouped by regions of pathophysiology to provide general focus.
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A patient will meet the criteria
for post exertional neuroimmune exhaustion (A), at least one symptom from
three neurological impairment categories (B), at least one symptom from three
immune/gastro-intestinal/genitourinary impairment categories (C), and at
least one symptom from energy metabolism/transport impairments (D).
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A. Post exertional neuroimmune
exhaustion (PENE pen’-e): Compulsory
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This cardinal feature is a
pathological inability to produce sufficient energy on demand with prominent
symptoms primarily in the neuroimmune regions. Characteristics are as
follows:
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1. Marked, rapid physical
and/or cognitive fatigability in response to exertion, which may be
minimal such as activities of daily living or simple mental tasks, can be
debilitating and cause a relapse.
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2. Postexertional symptom
exacerbation:e.g.acute flu-like symptoms, pain and worsening of other
symptoms.
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3. Post exertional
exhaustion may occur immediately after activity or be delayed by hours or
days.
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4. Recovery period is
prolonged, usually taking 24 h or longer. A relapse can last days,
weeks or longer.
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5. Low threshold of
physical and mental fatigability (lack of stamina) results in a substantial
reduction in pre-illness activity level.
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Operational notes: For a diagnosis of ME, symptom severity must
result in a significant reduction of a patient’s premorbid activity level. Mild(an
approximate 50% reduction in pre-illness activity level),moderate(mostly
housebound),severe(mostly bedridden) orvery severe(totally
bedridden and need help with basic functions). There may be marked
fluctuation of symptom severity and hierarchy from day to day or hour to
hour. Consider activity, context and interactive effects.Recovery time:
e.g. Regardless of a patient’s recovery time from reading for ½ hour, it will
take much longer to recover from grocery shopping for ½ hour and even longer
if repeated the next day – if able. Those who rest before an activity or have
adjusted their activity level to their limited energy may have shorter
recovery periods than those who do not pace their activities adequately. Impact:
e.g. An outstanding athlete could have a 50% reduction in his/her pre-illness
activity level and is still more active than a sedentary person.
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B. Neurological impairments
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At least one symptom from three of
the following four symptom categories
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1. Neurocognitive
impairments
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a. Difficulty
processing information: slowed thought, impaired concentration e.g.
confusion, disorientation, cognitive overload, difficulty with making
decisions, slowed speech, acquired or exertional dyslexia
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b. Short-term memory
loss:e.g. difficulty remembering what one wanted to say, what
one was saying, retrieving words, recalling information, poor working
memory
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2. Pain
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a. Headaches:e.g.
chronic, generalized headaches often involve aching of the eyes, behind the
eyes or back of the head that may be associated with cervical muscle tension;
migraine; tension headaches
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b. Significant pain
can be experienced in muscles, muscle-tendon junctions, joints, abdomen or
chest. It is non-inflammatory in nature and often migrates. e.g.
generalized hyperalgesia, widespread pain (may meet fibromyalgia
criteria), myofascial or radiating pain
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3. Sleep disturbance
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a. Disturbed sleep
patterns: e.g. insomnia, prolonged sleep including naps, sleeping most
of the day and being awake most of the night, frequent awakenings, awaking
much earlier than before illness onset, vivid dreams/nightmares
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b. Unrefreshed sleep:e.g.
awaken feeling exhausted regardless of duration of sleep, day-time sleepiness
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4. Neurosensory, perceptual
and motor disturbances
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a. Neurosensory and
perceptual:e.g. inability to focus vision, sensitivity to
light, noise, vibration, odour, taste and touch; impaired depth perception
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b. Motor:e.g.
muscle weakness, twitching, poor coordination, feeling unsteady on feet,
ataxia
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Notes:
Neurocognitive impairments,
reported or observed, become more pronounced with fatigue. Overload
phenomena may be evident when two tasks are performed simultaneously.
Abnormal accommodation responses of the pupils are common.Sleep
disturbances are typically expressed by prolonged sleep, sometimes
extreme, in the acute phase and often evolve into marked sleep reversal in
the chronic stage.Motor disturbances may not be evident in mild or
moderate cases but abnormal tandem gait and positive Romberg test may be
observed in severe cases.
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C. Immune, gastro-intestinal and
genitourinary Impairments
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At least one symptom from three of
the following five symptom categories
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1. Flu-like symptoms may be
recurrent or chronic and typically activate or worsen with exertion .e.g.
sore throat, sinusitis, cervical and/or axillary lymph nodes may enlarge or
be tender on palpitation
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2. Susceptibility to viral
infections with prolonged recovery periods
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3. Gastro-intestinal tract:e.g.
nausea, abdominal pain, bloating, irritable bowel syndrome
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4. Genitourinary: e.g. urinary
urgency or frequency, nocturia
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5. Sensitivities to food,
medications, odours or chemicals
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Notes:Sore throat, tender lymph nodes, and
flu-like symptoms obviously are not specific to ME but their activation in
reaction to exertion is abnormal. The throat may feel sore, dry and scratchy.
Faucial injection and crimson crescents may be seen in the tonsillar fossae,
which are an indication of immune activation.
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D. Energy production/transportation
impairments: At least one symptom
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1. Cardiovascular:e.g.
inability to tolerate an upright position - orthostatic intolerance, neurally
mediated hypotension, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, palpitations
with or without cardiac arrhythmias, light-headedness/dizziness
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2. Respiratory:e.g.
air hunger, laboured breathing, fatigue of chest wall muscles
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3. Loss of thermostatic
stability:e.g. subnormal body temperature, marked diurnal
fluctuations; sweating episodes, recurrent feelings of feverishness with or
without low grade fever, cold extremities
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4. Intolerance of extremes
of temperature
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Notes: Orthostatic intolerance may be delayed by
several minutes. Patients who have orthostatic intolerance may exhibit
mottling of extremities, extreme pallor or Raynaud’s Phenomenon. In the
chronic phase, moons of finger nails may recede.
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Paediatric considerations
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Symptoms may progress more slowly in
children than in teenagers or adults. In addition to post exertional
neuroimmune exhaustion, the most prominent symptoms tend to be neurological:
headaches, cognitive impairments, and sleep disturbances.
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1. Headaches: Severe or
chronic headaches are often debilitating. Migraine may be accompanied by a
rapid drop in temperature, shaking, vomiting, diarrhoea and severe weakness.
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2. Neurocognitive
impairments: Difficulty focusing eyes and reading are common. Children
may become dyslexic, which may only be evident when fatigued. Slow processing
of information makes it difficult to follow auditory instructions or take
notes. All cognitive impairments worsen with physical or mental exertion.
Young people will not be able to maintain a full school programme.
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3. Pain may seem erratic
and migrate quickly. Joint hyper-mobility is common.
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Notes: Fluctuation and severity hierarchy of
numerous prominent symptoms tend to vary more rapidly and dramatically than
in adults.
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Classification
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——— Myalgic encephalomyelitis
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——— Atypical myalgic
encephalomyelitis: meets criteria
for post-exertional neuro-immune exhaustion but has a limit of two less than
required of the remaining criterial symptoms. Pain or sleep disturbance may
be absent in rare cases.
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Exclusions: As in all diagnoses, exclusion of alternate
explanatory diagnoses is achieved by the patient’s history, physical
examination, and laboratory/biomarker testing as indicated. It is possible to
have more than one disease but it is important that each one is identified and
treated. Primary
psychiatric disorders, somatoform disorder and substance abuse are excluded.
Paediatric: ‘primary’
school phobia.
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Comorbid entities: Fibromyalgia, myofascial pain syndrome,
temporom and ibular joint syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial
cystitis, Raynaud’s phenomenon, prolapsed mitral valve, migraines, allergies,
multiple chemical sensitivities, Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, Sicca syndrome,
reactive depression. Migraine and irritable bowel syndrome may precede ME
but then become associated with it. Fibromyalgia overlaps.
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