Therapists Must Ease Patients’ Fear When Treating Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Study

Therapists Must Ease Patients' Fear When Treating Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Study

WEDNESDAY, Jan. 14, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Easing fears that exercise may worsen symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome is crucial in efforts to prevent disability in people with the condition, a new study says.

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a complex condition, characterized by overwhelming fatigue that is not improved by bed rest, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Treatments are aimed at reducing patients’ fatigue and improving physical function, such as the ability to walk and do everyday tasks.

A previous study found that people with chronic fatigue syndrome benefit from two types of counseling: cognitive behavioral therapy, or graded exercise therapy, a personalized and gradually increasing exercise program.

This new study looked at how the two approaches can help patients. “By identifying the mechanisms whereby some patients benefit from treatment, we hope that this will allow treatments to be developed, improved or optimized,” said study leader Trudie Chalder, a professor of cognitive behavioral psychotherapy at King’s College London in England.

The researchers found that the most important factor was easing patients’ fears that increased exercise or activity will make their symptoms worse. This accounted for up to 60 percent of the therapies’ overall effect on patient outcomes. Exercise therapy reduced such fears more than cognitive behavioral therapy, researchers said.

The study was published Jan. 13 in The Lancet Psychiatry.

“Our results suggest that fearful beliefs can be changed by directly challenging such beliefs [as in cognitive behavior therapy] or by simple behavior change with a graded approach to the avoided activity [as in graded exercise therapy],” Chalder said in a journal news release.

“Clinically, the results suggest that therapists delivering [cognitive behavior therapy] could encourage more physical activities such as walking, which might enhance the effect of [cognitive behavior therapy] and could be more acceptable to patients,” she added.

Other experts came to a somewhat different conclusion.

“We assume that an increase in physical activity is nothing more than a catalyst for the change in [beliefs] about activity and symptoms in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome,” Dr. Hans Knoop and Jan Wiborg, of Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center in the Netherlands, wrote in an accompanying editorial.

“Future studies should focus on how these beliefs can be changed more rapidly and effectively. In our own protocol, we ask patients to gradually increase physical activity and present it as a way to increase your ability to become active,” they added. “Once a patient is convinced that this is possible, irrespective of the actual level of activity, an important step towards recovery is taken.”

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about chronic fatigue syndrome.