2005
CFS, FM, & such 'In the Media, In the News'
TV, Radio, Newpapers, etc.
(Links updated 2/07)
Selected News - 2005
- Stopping
the Hurt Washington Post, DC - Jan 4, 2005
For Some, Recent Safety Concerns About Pain Relievers Are
Heightening Interest in Drug-Free Treatments, Many of Them Promising
But Still Largely Unproven.
Gwenn Herman knows chronic pain -- the regular
backaches, the stiffness and freezing of her neck after her 1995 car
accident, the pain that didn't respond, or responded inconsistently, to
prescription and nonprescription painkillers. That's why she learned,
long before last month's rash of safety alerts about three commonly
used pain medications, to explore alternative treatments like
meditation, guided imagery and breathing exercises. Today, she teaches
the techniques, all of which she uses daily, to members of support
groups sponsored by the Pain Connection, a Potomac-based nonprofit
organization she runs. "What works for one person doesn't work for
another," said Herman. "The more alternatives, the better." ...
- Smart Ways of
Banishing Fatigue Natural Health Magazine - Feb 2005
- Sensitivity
Workshop: A Retreat in Rural Virginia Thrives on Owners' 'Healthy
House' Standards Washington Post, DC - Jan
20, 2004
- Exercising
Discretion: Weekly Check on Health Care Costs and Coverage
Washington Post - Mar 7, 2005
- A
Patient's Journey with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis British
Medical Journal -
Mar 19, 2005 > For pdf version of complete
article, click
here
- Chronic fatigue patients show lower placebo response
Medscape Medical News - Apr 1 2005
- Is
a Trial For You? Washington Post, DC - Apr
19, 2004
- The
Rewards of Devotion: Three CFS Patients and Their Caregivers
Dallas Morning News - Apr 20, 2005
- The Art
of Surrender: Yoga and Fibromyalgia Yoga
International Magazine - May 2005
- Is
it All in My Head? Psychology Today - May/Jun 2005
- CFS:
From Skepticism to Science San Francisco Chronicle - Jun 5,
2005
After 20 years, chronic fatigue syndrome may finally be getting some respect and cutting-edge science
by Dorothy Wall
- MetroAccess
Service for Disabled Is Troubled Washington
Post, DC - Jun 6, 2005
- Mind
and Body Washington Times - Jun 7, 2005
- Son's
Illness Launches Mom's Crusade Free-Lance Star, VA - Jul 5,
2005
- Support
Group for Rare Disorder Meets in Sterling Loudoun
Times-Mirror, VA -
July 12, 2005
- Sick
and Tired: Dysautonomia is Not Mere Teenage Drama Washington
Examiner, DC- July 12, 2005
- Chronic
Fatigue is Not All in the Mind New Scientist, UK - Jul 21,
2005
> Gene
Pattern Revealed in Pilot Study CFIDSLink - Aug 2005
> For pdf of complete report in
Journal of Clinical Pathology, click
here
- Medical
Mystery: Kids and Chronic Fatigue Fox5 News, DC - Aug 2, 2005
- Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome NBC4.TV, Los Angeles, CA - Aug 4, 2005
- Bone Tired: Sufferers of the Mysterious
Ailment Must Cope with a Host of Challenges NY Daily News, New York - Aug 10, 2005
- On
Pain's Trail, Exploring fibromyalgia's mysteries, researchers look to
the central nervous system, gaining deeper insight into why we suffer.
Los Angeles Times, CA - Aug 22, 2005
Summary:
"The pain of fibromyalgia is not occurring because of some injury or
inflammation of the muscles or joints," said Dr. Daniel Clauw, a
fibromyalgia researcher and director of the Center for the Advancement
of Clinical Research at the University of Michigan. "There is something
wrong with the way the central nervous system is processing pain from
the peripheral tissues. It's over-amplifying the pain." Although
antidepressants that increase just serotonin have been a disappointment
in treating fibromyalgia, a new class of drugs may provide better pain
relief by boosting both serotonin and norepinephrine. The pain and
depression of fibromyalgia are caused by abnormal levels of these
neurotransmitters, doctors now believe, not simply by the inability to
live life normally. "These enigmatic chronic conditions are all
probably central pain syndromes," he said. "People were taught that
there is one kind of pain, a pain that occurs in the area of the body
where people are experiencing pain. But this notion of central pain,
that's where we really need to move."
Quote:
For years doctors had been looking for a cause of fibromyalgia at the
site of the pain: the head, back, hands, neck, gut or elsewhere. And
their treatments focused on soothing pain in these locations. As their
understanding has grown, however, these treatments have begun to change
and new ones are in development.
Fibromyalgia is now thought to
arise from miscommunication among nerve impulses in the central nervous
system, in other words the brain and spinal cord. This "central
sensitization" theory is described in detail this month in a supplement
of the Journal of Rheumatology. The neurons, which send messages to the
brain, become excitable, exaggerating the pain sensation, researchers
have found.
As a result, fibromyalgia patients feel intense pain
when they should feel only mild fatigue or discomfort — such as after
hauling bags of groceries. They sometimes feel pain even when there is
no cause. See also this blog.
- University
of Maryland Medical Director Resigns to Co-Found Fibromyalgia Clinic
Based on New, Unique Treatment Model PRWeb, Washington, DC -
Sept 3, 2005
- Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome: A Little-Understood Disease Baltimore Sun,
MD -
Sept 9, 2005
Review: A slew of research - more than 2,000
scientific papers by some counts - is suggesting that chronic fatigue
is not a psychiatric illness, but a nasty mix of immunological,
neurological and hormonal abnormalities.pers by some counts - is
suggesting that chronic fatigue is not a psychiatric illness, but a
nasty mix of immunological, neurological and hormonal abnormalities.
Summary
Like [Jean Harrison], many people with chronic
fatigue are first told they have depression. But the afflictions are
quite different - for example, depression triggers an increase in the
stress hormone cortisol, while chronic fatigue produces a decline, said
Harvard's [Anthony Komaroff]. While depression gets better with drugs
such as Prozac, the fatigue of CFS does not. Harrison's
perplexing response to exercise is also typical of many chronic fatigue
patients - exercise triggers the release of fatigue- inducing immune
chemicals called cytokines. People with the disease sometimes can
exercise as hard as healthy people, but they feel awful for a day or
two afterward, [William Reeves] said. In research
published last spring, Christopher Snell at the University of the
Pacific in Stockton, Calif., showed that some people with chronic
fatigue syndrome experience a flare-up of symptoms after exercise.
Paradoxically, though, a 2004 analysis of data pooled from five
separate studies showed that very gradual increases in aerobic exercise
can reduce fatigue in some patients.
- Amy Peterson -- Never too old for Olympic gold Minneapolis Star Tribune - Sep 19, '05
She attended a training camp at altitude in Colorado
Springs. There, the chronic fatigue syndrome that hampered her Salt
Lake races returned. ...
- Speedskater Peterson leaves World Cup team Minneapolis Star Tribune - Sep 19, 2005
She is concerned that the arduous World Cup season
could trigger a recurrence of her chronic fatigue syndrome, which
affected her races at the 2002 Salt Lake ...
- Fibromyalgia
- Unique Traditional Chinese & Western Medical Treatment Clinic
Opens Open Press - Sept 21, 2005
- Tackling
mystery of fibromyalgia Miami Herald, FL - Sept 27, 2005
Current &
More
|