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News Archives 260-280
Title Post Date
261 It is getting worse for vulnerable parents 01/11/2004 14:52:15
262 Indeed, it is getting worse for vulnerable parents 01/11/2004 15:14:29
263 RE: CHILD PROTECTION AND MSBP ALLEGATIONS 01/11/2004 17:45:56
264 CRITICAL CONSIDERATIONS 01/11/2004 23:04:24
265 AACFS CONFERENCE 2004 02/11/2004 08:55:51
266 The Limitations of M.E. Advocacy 02/11/2004 09:59:52
267 Our Advocacy Organizations 02/11/2004 10:14:36
268 M.E. and Political Conflict 02/11/2004 10:45:26
269 Clarification_about_CRITICAL CONSIDERATIONS 02/11/2004 19:24:34
270 PROFORMA LETTER TO UK MPs – CRITICAL CONSIDERATIONS 02/11/2004 19:46:57
271 PACE & FINE Trials - Shepherd <plonk> 03/11/2004 08:58:03
272 UK Allergy Services 03/11/2004 19:06:59
273 LAST CALL: LONDON CONFERENCE 03/11/2004 19:12:18
274 US in U-turn over Gulf war syndrome - New Scientist 04/11/2004 00:44:46
275 Reflections on the US ME/CFS Research Symposium Report 05/11/2004 23:55:53
276 Statement about unfounded allegations - Professor Hooper 07/11/2004 10:53:10
277 RE: Statement about unfouded allegations - CO-CURE 07/11/2004 11:23:18
278 Co-Cure Publishes Statement 07/11/2004 19:42:34
279 Experiences of a candidate - MEA AGM elections, Part Six 07/11/2004 23:18:06
280 A few facts for the record - Ellen Goudsmit 08/11/2004 17:15:48

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The Terminology of ME & CFS
Professor Malcolm Hooper was asked by the Danish ME/CFS Association for this information. He thinks this document might be useful to others also.

The Terminology of ME & CFS

By

Professor Malcolm Hooper

TERMINOLOGY

The term BENIGN MYALGIC ENCEPHALOMYELITIS was first introduced in the UK in 1956 by a former Chief Medical Officer (Sir Donald Acheson) and not by Dr Melvin Ramsay as is sometimes claimed. The word "benign" was used because it was thought at the time that the disorder was not fatal (as poliomyelitis could be, with which it had some similarity), but it was quickly realised by clinicians that ME was not a "benign" condition, as
it has such high morbidity (ie. such a lot of suffering and ill-health),
so by 1988 clinicians had stopped using the word "benign" and referred
to it as ME, the first to do so being Dr Ramsay. However, the ICD still
uses the term "benign" in its classification.

MYO relates to muscle

MYOSITIS = inflammation of muscle

MYALGIA = pain in muscles (pain that is called "myalgic")

MYOPATHY = any disease or disorder of muscle

MYEL (or MYELO) relates to the spinal cord, the main nerve in the body

MYELITIS = inflammation of the spinal cord (N.B. Not to be confused
with the other meaning of myelitis, which = inflammation of the bone
marrow, as in osteomyelitis)

MYELIN SHEATH = a layer of fatty white material that surrounds and
insulates nerve fibres

DEMYELINATION = the loss of this protective insulation round nerve
fibres, as seen in multiple sclerosis and sometimes also in ME

ENCEPHALON = the brain

ENCEPHALO = relating to the brain

"ITIS" on the end of a word = inflammation (e.g. hepatitis =
inflammation of the liver)

SO . . .

ENCEPHALOMYELITIS = inflammation of the brain and spinal cord

BENIGN MYALGIC ENCEPHALOMYELITIS therefore means a non-fatal disorder (inflammation) of the brain and spinal cord, with pain in the muscle

ENCEPHALOPATHY = any non-inflammatory disorder affecting the brain

Despite the claims of some psychiatrists, it is not true that there is
no evidence of inflammation of the brain and spinal cord in ME; there
is, but these psychiatrists ignore or deny that evidence. For example .
. .

1988. In conjunction with the University of Pittsburgh, the US NIAID
held a large research workshop called "Consideration of the Design
Studies of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome". There were participants from the
Centres for Disease Control and from the National Institutes of Health.
One of the presentations was by Dr Sandra Daugherty, who reported that
MRI scans on patients demonstrated abnormalities consistent with
demyelination and cerebral oedema in 57% of patients studied. (It was
at this conference that it was recommended that the term "CFIDS" be used
instead of the term "CFS" on the basis of the immune dysfunction that
had been observed in the disorder).

1989. Detection of Viral-Related Sequences in CFS Patients using
Polymerase Chain Reaction; W John Martin; Nightingale Research
Foundation 1989: 1-5.

1990. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and the Psychiatrist; SE Abbey & PE
Garfinkel; Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 1990:35:7:625-626.

1992. A Chronic Illness Characterised by Fatigue, Neurologic and
Immunologic Disorders, and Active Human Herpesvirus Type 6 Infection; D Buchwald, PR Cheney, R Gallo, AL Komaroff et al; Annals of Internal
Medicine 992:116:2:103. This paper states "Magnetic resonance scans of
the brain showed punctate, subcortical areas of high signal intensity
consistent with oedema or demyelination in 78% of patients".

1994. Detection of Intracranial Abnormalities in Patients with Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome: Comparison of MR Imaging and SPECT; RB Schawrtz & BM Garada; American Journal of Roentgenology 1994:162:935-941.

1995. Pathophysiology of a Central Cause of Post-Polio Fatigue; Richard
Bruno et al; Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
1995:753:257-275.

1997. A 56-year old woman with chronic fatigue syndrome; Anthony J
Komaroff; JAMA 1997:278:14:1179-1184.

It is true that there is no evidence of inflammation of the brain or
spinal cord in states of chronic fatigue or "tiredness".

It is also true that neither the 1991 (Oxford) criteria nor the 1994
(CDC) criteria select those with ME, as they both expressly include
those with somatisation disorders and they expressly exclude those with
any physical signs of disease (as is the case in ME), so by definition,
patients with signs of neurological disease have been excluded from
study.

It is also true that Professor Simon Wessely and his colleagues use the
terms "fatigue", "chronic fatigue", "the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS)"
and "myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME)" as synonymous. Such obfuscation
has greatly hindered research, as pointed out in the 1994 Report of the
National Task Force on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS), Post-Viral
Fatigue Syndrome (PVFS) and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME), published by Westcare, Bristol and supported by the UK Department of Health, which
stated . . .

Chronic fatigue syndromes remain poorly understood. Progress in
understanding them is hampered by -

* the use by researchers of heterogeneous study groups

* the use of study groups which have been selected using different
definitions of CFS

* the invalid comparisons of contradictory research findings stemming from the above "

The Report names psychiatrists Dr Simon Wessely, Dr Peter White and Dr
Michael Sharpe and acknowledged their help, but then makes the point
that "people who gave their help are not necessarily in agreement with
the opinions expressed" (page 87). It was said to be because those
psychiatrists strongly disagreed with the findings of the 1994 Westcare
Report that in 1996 they produced their own report (the Report of the
Joint Royal Colleges on CFS (CR54), which was internationally recognised
as being biased and seriously flawed).

CLASSIFICATION

The WHO was founded in 1948.

The International Classification of Diseases (ICD) comes in two volumes.
Volume I is the Tabular List and is a list of codes plus the name of the
condition which goes with that code. Volume II is the Code Index, which
alphabetically lists all the phrases and names of conditions commonly
used for a condition, together with the appropriate code.

The Tabular List (Volume I) does not list everything which is in the
Code Index (Volume II).

Benign Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME) has been classified in the
International Classification of Diseases (ICD) as a neurological
disorder since 1969, when it was included in ICD-8 at Volume I: code
323: page 158 and in Volume II (the Code Index) on page 173. ICD-8 was
approved in 1965 and published in 1969.

- ends -

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