Toronto
16°C, Sunny with Clouds

 
1
Alison Bested chronic fatigue syndrome

Coping with chronic fatigue syndrome

Viewer

CTV News Video

Canada AM: Dr. Alison Bested, author
manually_insert_alison_bested_070322

A A |  Email ThisEmail  | Print Facebook   

Date: Thu. Mar. 22 2007 12:29 PM ET

Busy Canadians complain about feeling tired on a daily basis. But many of us can't imagine what it feels like to be diagnosed with the condition of chronic fatigue syndrome.

More than one per cent of the population in this country has been diagnosed with chronic fatigue; that's more than 420,000 Canadians. Thousands more likely go undiagnosed.

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a complex disorder marked by profound fatigue that is not improved by bed rest. Patients often report various non-specific symptoms, such as weakness, muscle pain, insomnia, impaired memory or concentration.

The condition most often affects people in their 40s or older, and affects women at four times the rate of men

What makes the syndrome difficult to diagnose is that there is no specific laboratory test for the illness.

"You have to make the diagnosis by excluding every other thing that causes pain and fatigue," says Dr. Alison Bested, the author of Hope and Help for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome & Fibromyaligia.

The severity of symptoms varies from patient to patient and may vary over time for an individual patient, says Bested who has been treating chronic fatigue sufferers for 16 years.

Many sufferers will be able to wake up in the morning, have a coffee and a shower and then find themselves so exhausted, they have to go back to bed.

"Most sufferers have an energy level 50 per cent of normal and many people become chronically disabled from the condition and be unable to work," says Bested.

In some cases, CFS can persist for years. Or it can gradually improve over time, though older sufferers have more trouble.

"A lot of people improve but a lot of people do not recover," says Bested.

The most frustrating aspect of CFS is that cause or causes have not been identified and there is still no specific treatment. But research continues.

"There is a genetic propensity, we know that now," says Bested. "So there is some genetic testing being done and they can show that people with chronic fatigue syndrome are different."

People with CFS have different genes that deal with energy use and the body's ability to cope with stress, such as trauma and infection. Other research has found abnormalities in blood pressure, blood volume to the brain and immune-cell activity in CFS sufferers.

Until a cure or a medication can be found, all that patients can do is to re-arrange their lifestyles and manage each of the symptoms.

"A lot of it is having the patient pace themselves, their activities, to listen to their bodies and not to crash, to get better sleep and to take care of their symptoms such as pain," says Bested.

"I talk about something in my book called sleep hygiene," says Bested.

"It just means getting your sleep space ready for sleep...getting the cat out, going to sleep the same time, dark room, comfortable clothes, etc. I also suggest people try herbal teas, relaxation and meditation."

Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

Canada AM Sleep Special

sleep apnea

Sleep apnea often goes undiagnosed

Many of us wake up tired every day. The problem may be sleep apnea -- a condition many of us don't even know we have.

sleep apnea

Devices, procedures can relieve sleep apnea

Sleep expert Dr. Jeffery Lipsitz says there are a number of effective treatments for sleep apnea

mattresses

Pain-free sleep about more than your mattress

Waking up without pain involves a good mattress, a good pillow, and a morning routine that involves stretching.

Today's Canada AM Stories

Money

Canadians struggling to save money: RBC

More   48 Comments 48    3 Video(s) 3

Robert Pickton is interviewed by police in January 2000 in a video released to the media on Feb. 8, 2012.

Video shows Pickton 2 years before he was caught

More  2 Video(s) 2

Edgar Sulla-Puma, 26, is seen in this undated image. Sulla-Puma was injured in the crash and remains in hospital.

Crash survivors eligible for health care coverage

More   33 Comments 33    15 Video(s) 15