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![]() | This article needs more reliable medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources. (April 2024) | ![]() |
Fatigue | |
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Other names | Exhaustion, weariness, tiredness, lethargy, listlessness |
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Specialty | Primary care ![]() |
Treatment | Avoid known stressors and unhealthy habits (drug use, excessive alcohol consumption, smoking), healthy diet, exercise regularly, medication, hydration, and vitamins |
Fatigue describes a state of tiredness (which is not sleepiness), exhaustion[1] or loss of energy.[2][3]
Fatigue (in the medical sense) is sometimes associated with medical conditions including autoimmune disease, organ failure, chronic pain conditions, mood disorders, heart disease, infectious diseases, and post-infectious-disease states.[4] However fatigue is complex and in up to a third of primary care cases no medical or psychiatric diagnosis is found.[5][6][7]
Fatigue (in the general usage sense of normal tiredness) often follows prolonged physical or mental activity. Physical fatigue results from muscle fatigue brought about by intense physical activity.[8][9][10] Mental fatigue results from prolonged periods of cognitive activity which impairs cognitive ability, can manifest as sleepiness, lethargy, or directed attention fatigue,[11] and can also impair physical performance.[12]
Definition
Fatigue in a medical context is used to cover experiences of low energy that are not caused by normal life.[2][3]
A 2021 review proposed a definition for fatigue as a starting point for discussion: "A multi-dimensional phenomenon in which the biophysiological, cognitive, motivational and emotional state of the body is affected resulting in significant impairment of the individual's ability to function in their normal capacity".[13]
Another definition is that fatigue is "a significant subjective sensation of weariness, increasing sense of effort, mismatch between effort expended and actual performance, or exhaustion independent from medications, chronic pain, physical deconditioning, anaemia, respiratory dysfunction, depression, and sleep disorders".[14]
Terminology
The use of the term "fatigue" in medical contexts may carry inaccurate connotations from the more general usage of the same word. More accurate terminology may also be needed for variants within the umbrella term of fatigue.[15]
Comparison with other terms
Tiredness
Tiredness which is a normal result of work, mental stress, anxiety, overstimulation and understimulation, jet lag, active recreation, boredom, or lack of sleep is not considered medical fatigue. This is the tiredness described in MeSH Descriptor Data.[16]
Sleepiness
Sleepiness refers to a tendency to fall asleep, whereas fatigue refers to an overwhelming sense of tiredness, lack of energy, and a feeling of exhaustion. Sleepiness and fatigue often coexist as a consequence of sleep deprivation.[17] However sleepiness and fatigue may not correlate.[18] Fatigue is generally considered a longer-term condition than sleepiness (somnolence).[19]
Presentation
Common features
Distinguishing features of medical fatigue include
- unpredictability,
- not linking fatigue to an obvious cause, such as a physical exertion,
- variability in severity,
- fatigue being relatively profound/overwhelming, and having extensive impact on daily living,
- lack of improvement with rest,
- where an underlying disease is present, the quantum of fatigue often does not correlate with the severity of the underlying disease.[13][20][21][22]
Differentiating features
Differentiating characteristics of fatigue that may help identify the possible cause of fatigue include
- Post-exertional malaise; a common feature of ME/CFS,[23] and experienced by a significant proportion of people with Long Covid,[24] but not a feature of other fatigues.
![The onset of PEM is usually within two days. Peak PEM occurs within seven, while recovery can take months.](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/91/Timeframe_of_PEM_from_daily_activities.jpg/330px-Timeframe_of_PEM_from_daily_activities.jpg)
- Increased by heat or cold; MS fatigue is in many cases effected in this way.[25][26]
- Remission; MS fatigue may reduce during periods of other MS symptom remission.[27][28] ME/CFS may also have lower periods of activity.[29]
- Cognitive declines; sleep deprivation causes cognitive and neurobehavioral effects including unstable attention and slowing of response times.[30] ME/CFS and MS may cause brain fog over longer timescales.
- Intermittency; Fatigues often vary in how and when they occur. Some fatigues (RA,[31] cancer fatigue[32]) seem to often be continual (24/7) whilst others (MS, Sjögren's, lupus, brain injury[33]) are often intermittent.[34] A 2010 study found that Sjögren's patients reported fatigue after rising, an improvement in mid-morning, and worsening later in the day, whereas lupus (SLE) patients reported lower fatigue after rising followed by increasing fatigue through the day.[35] ME/CFS symptoms can be continual, or can fluctuate during the day, from day to day, and over longer periods.[29]
- The pace of onset may be a related differentiating factor; MS fatigue can have abrupt onset.[36]
- Feeling of weight; some fatigues, including that caused by MS, create a sense of weight or gravity; "I feel like I have lead weights attached to my limbs ... or I am being pulled down by gravity."[37]
Some people may have multiple causes of fatigue.
Causes
Drug use
A 2021 study in a Korean city found that alcohol consumption was the variable with the most correlation with overall fatigue.[38] A 2020 Norway study found that 69% of substance use disorder patients had severe fatigue symptoms, and particularly those with extensive use of benzodiazepines.[39] Causality, as opposed to correlation, were not proven in these studies.[citation needed]
Unknown
In up to a third of fatigue primary care cases no medical or psychiatric diagnosis is found.[5][6][7] Tiredness is a common medically unexplained symptom.[6]
Sleep disturbance
Fatigue can often be traced to poor sleep habits.[40] Sleep deprivation and disruption is associated with subsequent fatigue.[41][42] Sleep disturbances due to disease may impact fatigue.[43][44] Caffeine and alcohol can disrupt sleep, causing fatigue.[45]
Medications
Fatigue may be a side effect of certain medications (e.g., lithium salts, ciprofloxacin); beta blockers, which can induce exercise intolerance, medicines used to treat allergies or coughs[40]) and many cancer treatments, particularly chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Use of benzodiazepines has been found to correlate with higher fatigue.[39]
Association with diseases and illnesses
Fatigue is often associated with diseases and conditions. Some major categories of conditions that often list fatigue as a symptom include physical diseases, substance use illness, mental illnesses, and other diseases and conditions.[citation needed]
Physical diseases
- autoimmune diseases,[46] such as celiac disease, lupus, multiple sclerosis,[47] myasthenia gravis, NMOSD, Sjögren's syndrome,[35] rheumatoid arthritis,[48][49][50][13] spondyloarthropathy and UCTD;[51] this population's primary concern is fatigue;[46][52]
- blood disorders, such as anemia and hemochromatosis;[53][54]
- brain injury;[55][56]
- cancer, in which case it is called cancer fatigue;[57]
- Covid-19 and long Covid;[58]
- developmental disorders such as autism spectrum disorder;[59]
- endocrine diseases or metabolic disorders: diabetes mellitus, hypothyroidism and Addison's disease;[60]
- fibromyalgia;[61]
- heart failure and heart attack;[62]
- HIV;[63]
- inborn errors of metabolism such as fructose malabsorption;[64][65]
- infectious diseases such as infectious mononucleosis or tuberculosis;[60]
- irritable bowel syndrome;[66]
- kidney diseases, e.g., acute renal failure, chronic renal failure;[60]
- leukemia or lymphoma;[medical citation needed]
- liver failure or liver diseases, e.g., hepatitis;[60][21]
- Lyme disease;[medical citation needed]
- myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS);[67]
- neurological disorders such as narcolepsy, Parkinson's disease, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) and post-concussion syndrome;[medical citation needed]
- physical trauma and other pain-causing conditions, such as arthritis;[medical citation needed]
- sleep deprivation or sleep disorders, e.g. sleep apnea;[60]
- stroke;[medical citation needed]
- thyroid disease such as hypothyroidism;[medical citation needed]
Mental illnesses
- anxiety disorders, such as generalized anxiety disorder;[68]
- depression;[69][13]
- eating disorders, which can produce fatigue due to inadequate nutrition;[medical citation needed]
Other
- idiopathic chronic fatigue, a term used to describe chronic fatigue which does not have symptoms of ME/CFS.[70][71] However ICF does not have a dedicated diagnostic code in the World Health Organization's ICD-11 classification.[72]
- Gulf War syndrome;[73]
Primary vs. secondary
In some areas it has been proposed that fatigue be separated into primary fatigue, caused directly by a disease process, and ordinary or secondary fatigue, caused by a range of causes including exertion and also secondary impacts on a person of having a disease (such as disrupted sleep).[74][75][76][77][78][79] The ICD-11 MG22 definition of fatigue[80] captures both types of fatigue; it includes fatigue that "occur in the absence of... exertion... as a symptom of health conditions."[medical citation needed]
Obesity
Obesity correlates with higher fatigue levels and incidence.[81][82][83]
Somatic symptom disorder
In somatic symptom disorder[84] the patient is overfocused on a physical symptom, such as fatigue, that may or may not be explained by a medical condition.[85][86][87]
Adverse life events
Adverse life events have been associated with fatigue.[13]
Scientifically unsupported causes
The concept of adrenal fatigue is often raised in media but no scientific basis has been found for it.[88][89][90]
Mechanismsedit
The mechanisms that cause fatigue are not well understood.[46] Several mechanisms may be in operation within a patient,[91] with the relative contribution of each mechanism differing over time.[13]
Inflammationedit
Inflammation distorts neural chemistry, brain function and functional connectivity across a broad range of brain networks,[92] and has been linked to many types of fatigue.[46][93] Findings implicate neuroinflammation in the etiology of fatigue in autoimmune and related disorders.[13][46] Low-grade inflammation may cause an imbalance between energy availability and expenditure.[94]
Cytokines are small protein molecules that modulate immune responses and inflammation (as well as other functions) and may have causal roles in fatigue.[95][96] However a 2019 review was inconclusive as to whether cytokines play any definitive role in ME/CFS.[97]
The inflammation model may have difficulty in explaining the "unpredictability" and "variability" (i.e. appearing intermittently during the day, and not on all days) of the fatigue associated with inflammatory rheumatic diseases and autoimmune diseases (such as multiple sclerosis).[13]
Reduced brain connectivityedit
Fatigue has been correlated with reductions in structural and functional connectivity in the brain.[98] This has included in post-stroke,[99] MS,[100] NMOSD and MOG,[14] and ME/CFS.[101] This was also found for fatigue after brain injury,[102] including a significant linear correlation between self-reported fatigue and brain functional connectivity.[103]
Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Fatigue_(medical)
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