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Index Taken from the MEssenger by M.R.
Hiller, Special to the Guardian dated May 1997. Very little is known about the clinical
course of CFS. It is among the most important areas of CFS research by
both CDC and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The course of this
illness differs widely among patients. Some patients recover completely
with time, while others seem to get progressively worse. Often, the illness
follows a cyclical course, alternating between periods of illness and relatively
good health. Some patients improve to a certain extent but never fully
recover. In July 1991, a CFS patient organization
called CACTUS(which stands for CFIDS Action Campaign for the United States)
compared the amount of federal research money spent to study various immune
system illnesses. Positive Prognosis but there is still danger CFS is rarely if ever fatal. That knowledge may help you meet the challenge. Most get better in time, and many recover. Dr. Anthony Komaroff noted: "Not one patient that we have seen out of the hundreds that we have studied has had a chronic, progressive downhill course where they have gotten worse and worse and worse over time. No one has had that. So unlike some other illnesses that progress inexorably, this illness is quite different." In confirmation, Dr. Andrew Lloyd, a leading CFS researcher in Australia, said: "When recovery occurs, and we believe that happens commonly, that recovery is complete. . . . That, therefore, implies that whatever this process is that produces this fatigue state is completely reversible." Apparently patients have no detectable damage to body organs after recovering. Deborah, who had regularly prayed to die because she felt so sick, finally improved. She feels like her old self and said recently that she plans to rejoin her husband in the full-time ministry. Others have enjoyed similar recoveries. Yet, there is need for caution. Why? Keith, who suffered a relapse, warned: "It's very important not to underestimate this problem, not to be too quick to think it has passed." When feeling well again, Keith reentered the full-time ministry and resumed his athletic activity, regularly running and lifting weights. But, tragically, the illness returned, and he was bedridden again! This is the insidious nature of
the illness; relapses are common. Yet, they are difficult to avoid. As
Elizabeth explained: "It is so hard not to try to make up for lost
time when you begin feeling better. You so badly want to forget about sickness
you want to do things." All content © 1998
- 2003 by Lady Care.
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