Katherine Rowe’s research while affiliated with The Royal Children's Hospital and other places

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Publications (10)


Hypothalamus Connectivity in Adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
  • Article

October 2024

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23 Reads

Journal of Neuroscience Research

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Marc L Seal

Adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is a disabling illness of unknown etiology. Increasing evidence suggests hypothalamic involvement in ME/CFS pathophysiology, which has rarely been explored using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the condition. This work aimed to use MRI to examine hypothalamus connectivity in adolescents with ME/CFS and explore how this relates to fatigue severity and illness duration. 25 adolescents with ME/CFS and 23 healthy controls completed a neuroimaging protocol consisting of structural and multishell diffusion‐weighted imaging sequences, in addition to the PedsQL Multidimensional Fatigue Scale to assess fatigue severity. Information about illness duration was acquired at diagnosis. Preprocessing and streamlines tractography was performed using QSIPrep combined with a custom parcellation scheme to create structural networks. The number (degree) and weight (strength) of connections between lateralized hypothalamus regions and cortical and subcortical nodes were extracted, and relationships between connectivity measures, fatigue severity, and illness duration were performed using Bayesian regression models. We observed weak‐to‐moderate evidence of increased degree, but not strength, of connections from the bilateral anterior‐inferior (left: pd [%] = 99.18, median [95% CI] = −22.68[−40.96 to 4.45]; right: pd [%] = 99.86, median [95% CI] = −23.35[−38.47 to 8.20]), left anterior‐superior ( pd [%] = 99.33, median [95% CI] = −18.83[−33.45 to 4.07]) and total left hypothalamus ( pd [%] = 99.44, median [95% CI] = −47.18[−83.74 to 11.03]) in the ME/CFS group compared with controls. Conversely, bilateral posterior hypothalamus degree decreased with increasing ME/CFS illness duration (left: pd [%] = 98.13, median [95% CI]: −0.47[−0.89 to 0.03]; right: pd [%] = 98.50, median [95% CI]:‐0.43[−0.82 to 0.05]). Finally, a weak relationship between right intermediate hypothalamus connectivity strength and fatigue severity was identified in the ME/CFS group ( pd [%] = 99.35, median [95% CI] = −0.28[−0.51 to 0.06]), which was absent in controls. These findings suggest changes in hypothalamus connectivity may occur in adolescents with ME/CFS, warranting further investigation.


Sagittal (a), coronal (b) and axial (c) views of an example hypothalamus segmentation obtained from a participant. a Right anterior–superior (dark blue), right anterior-inferior (light blue), right inferior tubular (yellow), right superior tubular (orange) and right posterior (dark orange); b superior tubular (light orange), right inferior tubular (dark yellow), left inferior tubular (blue); c right posterior (dark orange), right superior tubular (light orange), right anterior–inferior (light blue), left anterior–inferior (light yellow), left superior tubular (dark blue), left posterior (turquoise). Coronal and axial images are right–left reversed as per acquisition (R→L)
Jitter plots showing raw (uncorrected) whole left (a) and right (b) hypothalamus volumes for each group and their estimated marginal means with corresponding 95% upper and lower confidence intervals (bars)
a Scatter plot showing relationship between raw (uncorrected) right anterior–superior volumes and Total Fatigue scores by group; b marginal means plot showing relationship and trend lines between corrected right anterior–superior volumes and Total Fatigue by group. Note higher subscale scores indicate fewer symptoms of fatigue
a Jitter plot showing raw (uncorrected) right superior tubular volumes for the ME/CFS group with increasing illness duration, and b plot showing right superior tubular volumes corrected for age, sex and eTIV over illness duration with 95% Credible Interval bars
Hypothalamus volumes in adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS): impact of self-reported fatigue and illness duration
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2023

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123 Reads

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3 Citations

Brain Structure and Function

Adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is a complex illness of unknown aetiology. Emerging theories suggest ME/CFS may reflect a progressive, aberrant state of homeostasis caused by disturbances within the hypothalamus, yet few studies have investigated this using magnetic resonance imaging in adolescents with ME/CFS. We conducted a volumetric analysis to investigate whether whole and regional hypothalamus volumes in adolescents with ME/CFS differed compared to healthy controls, and whether these volumes were associated with fatigue severity and illness duration. 48 adolescents (25 ME/CFS, 23 controls) were recruited. Lateralised whole and regional hypothalamus volumes, including the anterior–superior, superior tubular, posterior, anterior-inferior and inferior tubular subregions, were calculated from T1-weighted images. When controlling for age, sex and intracranial volume, Bayesian linear regression models revealed no evidence for differences in hypothalamus volumes between groups. However, in the ME/CFS group, a weak linear relationship between increased right anterior–superior volumes and fatigue severity was identified, which was absent in controls. In addition, Bayesian quantile regression revealed a likely-positive association between illness duration and right superior tubular volumes in the ME/CFS group. While these findings suggest overall comparability in regional and whole hypothalamus volumes between adolescents with ME/CFS and controls, preliminary evidence was identified to suggest greater fatigue severity and longer illness duration were associated with greater right anterior–superior and superior-tubular volumes, respectively. These regions contain the anterior and superior divisions of the paraventricular nucleus, involved in the neuroendocrine response to stress, suggesting involvement in ME/CFS pathophysiology. However, replication in a larger, longitudinal cohort is required.

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What lies beneath: White matter microstructure in pediatric myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome using diffusion MRI

June 2023

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46 Reads

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3 Citations

Journal of Neuroscience Research

Recent studies in adults with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) suggest that changes in brain white matter microstructural organization may correlate with core ME/CFS symptoms, and represent a potential biomarker of disease. However, this has yet to be investigated in the pediatric ME/CFS population. We examined group differences in macrostructural and microstructural white matter properties, and their relationship with clinical measures, between adolescents recently diagnosed with ME/CFS and healthy controls. Forty-eight adolescents (25 ME/CFS, 23 controls, mean age 16 years) underwent brain diffusion MRI, and a robust multi-analytic approach was used to evaluate white and gray matter volume, regional brain volume, cortical thickness, fractional anisotropy, mean/axial/radial diffusivity, neurite dispersion and density, fiber density, and fiber cross section. From a clinical perspective, adolescents with ME/CFS showed greater fatigue and pain, poorer sleep quality, and poorer performance on cognitive measures of processing speed and sustained attention compared with controls. However, no significant group differences in white matter properties were observed, with the exception of greater white matter fiber cross section of the left inferior longitudinal fasciculus in the ME/CFS group compared with controls, which did not survive correction for intracranial volume. Overall, our findings suggest that white matter abnormalities may not be predominant in pediatric ME/CFS in the early stages following diagnosis. The discrepancy between our null findings and white matter abnormalities identified in the adult ME/CFS literature could suggest that older age and/or longer illness duration influence changes in brain structure and brain-behavior relationships that are not yet established in adolescence.


Fig. 1. Sagittal (a), coronal (b) and axial (c) views of an example hypothalamus segmentation
Fig. 3. (a) Scatter plot showing relationship between raw (uncorrected) right anterior-superior volumes
Hypothalamus volumes in adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Impact of self-reported fatigue and illness duration

May 2023

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77 Reads

Adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is a complex illness of unknown aetiology. Emerging theories suggest ME/CFS may reflect a progressive, aberrant state of homeostasis caused by disturbances within the hypothalamus, yet few studies have investigated this using magnetic resonance imaging in adolescents with ME/CFS. We conducted a volumetric analysis to investigate whether whole and regional hypothalamus volumes in adolescents with ME/CFS differed compared to healthy controls, and whether these volumes were associated with fatigue severity and illness duration. 48 adolescents (25 ME/CFS, 23 controls) were recruited. Lateralised whole and regional hypothalamus volumes, including the anterior superior, superior tubular, posterior, anterior inferior and inferior tubular subregions, were calculated from T1 weighted images. When controlling for age, sex and intracranial volume, Bayesian linear regression revealed no evidence for differences in hypothalamus volumes between groups. However, in the ME/CFS group, a negative linear relationship between right anterior superior volumes and fatigue severity was identified, which was absent in controls. In addition, Bayesian ordinal regression revealed a likely-positive association between illness duration and right superior tubular volumes in the ME/CFS group. While these findings suggest overall comparability in regional and whole hypothalamus volumes between adolescents with ME/CFS and controls, preliminary evidence was identified to suggest greater fatigue and longer illness duration were associated with greater right anterior superior and superior tubular volumes, respectively. These regions contain the anterior and superior divisions of the paraventricular nucleus, involved in the neuroendocrine response to stress, suggesting involvement in ME/CFS pathophysiology. However, replication in a larger, longitudinal cohort is required.


Management of Common Symptoms in ME/CFS
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) in Adolescents: Practical Guidance and Management Challenges

January 2023

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145 Reads

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11 Citations

This paper reviews the current understanding of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), and whether any treatment strategies have been effective. ME/CFS is a condition of as yet unknown etiology that commonly follows an infective process. It includes a new onset of fatigue (of more than 3–6 month duration and not relieved by rest), post-exertional malaise, cognitive difficulties and unrefreshing sleep, and frequently orthostatic intolerance, somatic symptoms and pain. Long COVID has renewed interest in the condition and stimulated research with findings suggestive of a multisystem neuroimmune disease. There are no definitively effective treatments. Despite earlier recommendations regarding graded exercise therapy and cognitive behavior therapy, the current recommendations are managing symptoms, with lifestyle management and supportive care. This paper provides an outline of strategies that young people and their families have reported as helpful in managing a chronic illness that impacts their life socially, physically, emotionally, cognitively and educationally. As the illness frequently occurs at a time of rapid developmental changes, reducing these impacts is reported to be as important as managing the physical symptoms. Young people face a mean duration of 5 years illness (range 1–16 years) with a likely residual 20% having significant restrictions after 10 years. Their feedback has suggested that symptom management, self-management strategies, advocacy and educational liaison have been the most helpful. They value professionals who will listen and take them seriously, and after excluding alternative diagnoses, they explain the diagnosis, are supportive and assist in monitoring their progress. Remaining engaged in education was the best predictor of later functioning. This allowed for social connections, as well as potential independence and fulfilling some aspirations. The need to consider the impact of this chronic illness on all aspects of adolescent development, as part of management, is highlighted.


Figure 1. Estimated mean differences in measures of health and psychological wellbeing over time (baseline vs. follow-up) and between groups (ME/CFS vs controls). * Significant within-group change over time at 0.05 level and moderate to large Cohen's d effect sizes ≥ 0.5.
Health, Wellbeing, and Prognosis of Australian Adolescents with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS): A Case-Controlled Follow-Up Study

August 2021

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87 Reads

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10 Citations

Background: The purpose of this study was to follow-up an Australian cohort of adolescents newly-diagnosed with ME/CFS at a tertiary paediatric ME/CFS clinic and healthy controls over a mean period of two years (range 1-5 years) from diagnosis. Objectives were to (a) examine changes over time in health and psychological wellbeing, (b) track ME/CFS symptomatology and fulfillment of paediatric ME/CFS diagnostic criteria over time, and (c) determine baseline predictors of ME/CFS criteria fulfilment at follow-up. Methods: 34 participants aged 13-18 years (25 ME/CFS, 23 controls) completed standardised questionnaires at diagnosis (baseline) and follow-up assessing fatigue, sleep quality and hygiene, pain, anxiety, depression, and health-related quality of life. ME/CFS symptomatology and diagnostic criteria fulfilment was also recorded. Results: ME/CFS patients showed significant improvement in most health and psychological wellbeing domains over time, compared with controls who remained relatively stable. However, fatigue, pain, and health-related quality of life remained significantly poorer amongst ME/CFS patients compared with controls at follow-up. Sixty-five percent of ME/CFS patients at baseline continued to fulfil ME/CFS diagnostic criteria at follow-up, with pain the most frequently experienced symptom. Eighty-two percent of patients at follow-up self-reported that they still had ME/CFS, with 79% of these patients fulfilling criteria. No significant baseline predictors of ME/CFS criteria fulfilment at follow-up were observed, although pain experienced at baseline was significantly associated with criteria fulfilment at follow-up (R = 0.6, p = 0.02). Conclusions: The majority of Australian adolescents with ME/CFS continue to fulfil diagnostic criteria at follow-up, with fatigue, pain, and health-related quality of life representing domains particularly relevant to perpetuation of ME/CFS symptoms in the early years following diagnosis. This has direct clinical impact for treating clinicians in providing a more realistic prognosis and highlighting the need for intervention with young people with ME/CFS at the initial diagnosis and start of treatment.


Long Term Follow up of Young People With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Attending a Pediatric Outpatient Service

February 2019

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1,070 Reads

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47 Citations

Aim: To determine the reported duration of illness, the functional and educational long-term outcomes, predictive factors for recovery and seek feedback regarding management in pediatric/adolescent myalgic encepahalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). Methods: A cohort observational study of 784 young people, mean age 14.6 (6–18) years, with ME/CFS diagnosed at a specialist pediatric hospital and receiving regular care, was conducted with follow-up for a mean 8 (range 1–21) years after onset. Baseline symptoms, history, depression and anxiety questionnaires were available from 418. The remaining 366, did not have similar standardized baseline information. Questionnaires requested functional rating, persistent symptoms, duration of illness if “recovered,” social engagement and school/work attendance. Feedback was sought regarding management, support services, useful information, helpful interventions or personnel and use of alternative therapies. Reported recovery and function were compared with baseline information and between the two groups. Results: Follow-up data were returned from 81.8%. There was no significant difference in functional score (if reported recovery) or illness duration related to provision of baseline data. The mean duration of illness was 5 (range 1–15) years in the 50% who reported recovery. By 5 years 38% and by 10 years 68% reported recovery. At 10 years the mean functional score was 8/10 (range 2–10) with 5% scoring <6. Depression, anxiety or severity of illness at diagnosis was not predictive of non-recovery. Designing and monitoring their own management plan that included educational, social, physical and enjoyable activities, as well as having symptom management and understanding professionals were highly valued. However, remaining engaged in an education system that flexibly accommodated their illness and aspirations was consistently reported as crucial for long term functioning. Conclusions: ME/CFS in young people has a mean duration of 5 years (1–15) with 68% reporting recovery by 10 years. All improved functionally with 5% remaining very unwell and a further 20% significantly unwell. There were no obvious baseline predictors for recovery. However, depression, anxiety, orthostatic intolerance and to a lesser extent pain at follow up were identified as hampering recovery or function. Supportive professionals, remaining engaged in education and management strategies were identified as helpful.



TABLe 5 | Symptom comparison between depression/anxiety disorders and ME/CFS in children and adolescents. 
TABLe 6 | Comparison between ME/CFS and factitious disorder/Munchausen's syndrome by proxy/fabricated or induced illness. 
TABLe 7 | Medications for sleep. 
TABLe 8 | Medications for headaches. 
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Diagnosis and Management in Young People: A Primer

June 2017

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5,875 Reads

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173 Citations

Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) is a complex disease that affects children and adolescents as well as adults. The etiology has not been established. While many pediatricians and other health-care providers are aware of ME/CFS, they often lack essential knowledge that is necessary for diagnosis and treatment. Many young patients experience symptoms for years before receiving a diagnosis. This primer, written by the International Writing Group for Pediatric ME/CFS, provides information necessary to understand, diagnose, and manage the symptoms of ME/CFS in children and adolescents. ME/CFS is characterized by overwhelming fatigue with a substantial loss of physical and mental stamina. Cardinal features are malaise and a worsening of symptoms following minimal physical or mental exertion. These post-exertional symptoms can persist for hours, days, or weeks and are not relieved by rest or sleep. Other symptoms include cognitive problems, unrefreshing or disturbed sleep, generalized or localized pain, lightheadedness, and additional symptoms in multiple organ systems. While some young patients can attend school, on a full or part-time basis, many others are wheelchair dependent, housebound, or bedbound. Prevalence estimates for pediatric ME/CFS vary from 0.1 to 0.5%. Because there is no diagnostic test for ME/CFS, diagnosis is purely clinical, based on the history and the exclusion of other fatiguing illnesses by physical examination and medical testing. Co-existing medical conditions including orthostatic intolerance (OI) are common. Successful management is based on determining the optimum balance of rest and activity to help prevent post-exertional symptom worsening. Medications are helpful to treat pain, insomnia, OI and other symptoms. The published literature on ME/CFS and specifically that describing the diagnosis and management of pediatric ME/CFS is very limited. Where published studies are lacking, recommendations are based on the clinical observations and practices of the authors.


Measuring quality of life and fatigue in adolescents with chronic fatigue syndrome: estimates of feasibility, internal consistency and parent–adolescent agreement of the PedsQL TM

October 2015

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91 Reads

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17 Citations

Fatigue Biomedicine Health & Behavior

The aim of this study was to investigate the psychometric properties of the Paediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQLTM) in measuring health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and fatigue in adolescents with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), using both adolescent-reported and caregiver proxy ratings. Eighty-four participants (42 adolescents and 42 parent proxies) recruited consecutively through CFS specialist clinics at a tertiary paediatric hospital completed the PedsQLTM Core Generic Module (CGM) and Multidimensional Fatigue Scale (MFS). Overall, feasibility, floor/ceiling effects and internal consistency were found to be acceptable for the PedsQLTM CGM and the MFS according to predetermined criteria. For parent–adolescent agreement, intra-class correlations between adolescent and parent report on the PedsQLTM CGM and MFS were statistically significant and rated as ‘fair’ (range 0.45–0.68). At a group level, statistically significant discrepancies between mean adolescent and parent scores for the PedsQLTM CGM were noted on all scales (except school functioning). On the MFS, there were no significant differences between parent and adolescent mean scores. Bland–Altman plots revealed significant variability in the discrepancies between parent and adolescent reports on the PedsQLTM CGM and MFS. Based on the psychometric properties assessment, findings of this study suggest that the parent and adolescent PedsQLTM CGM and MFS are promising scales for use in adolescents with CFS. Parent and adolescent reports offer unique perspectives on HRQOL and fatigue in adolescents with CFS and ideally, reports should be sought from both parties.

Citations (7)


... These studies provide critical insights into the temporal dynamics of hypothalamic dysfunction, neuroin ammation, and orexinergic system involvement in these conditions. For instance, Byrne et al. [120] Moreover, longitudinal studies can help identify biomarkers correlated with symptom severity and disease progression. Corbitt et al. [75] highlights the importance of cytokine pro les in understanding immune dysregulation in CFS/ME, suggesting that longitudinal designs could clarify the relationship between cytokine levels and clinical outcomes. ...

Reference:

Orexinergic and Hypothalamic Dysfunction in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Mechanistic Framework for Biomarker Discovery and Targeted Therapies
Hypothalamus volumes in adolescent Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS): impact of self-reported fatigue and illness duration

Brain Structure and Function

... Participants 48 participants (25 ME/CFS and 23 controls) were recruited for the study (as previously described in detail in Josev et al. (2020Josev et al. ( , 2021Josev et al. ( , 2023. Inclusion criteria were as follows: (a) adolescents aged 13-18 years diagnosed with ME/CFS through a specialized tertiary hospital ME/CFS Clinic using the Canadian Consensus Criteria adapted for paediatrics (illness duration ≥ 3 months) (Jason et al. 2006), and; (b) healthy adolescent controls aged 13-18 years with no history of ME/CFS or other chronic illnesses. ...

What lies beneath: White matter microstructure in pediatric myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome using diffusion MRI

Journal of Neuroscience Research

... It also highlights the importance of selfmanagement approaches and strategies. 18 Importantly, we find symptom clusters and co-occurrences of symptoms that underscore potential directions for further investigation that may help improve the time to diagnosis and provide key service requirements and associated team members for services for people with both ME/CFS and long covid. Additionally, the survey results indicate that individuals diagnosed with ME/CFS are less likely to have recent interactions with specialists compared with those diagnosed with long COVID. ...

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) in Adolescents: Practical Guidance and Management Challenges

... Methods and analysis This protocol paper outlines a comprehensive, multilevel, longitudinal, observational study in paediatric ME/CFS. ME/CFS patients aged [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19] years and controls will donate biosamples of urine, blood, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells for an in-depth omics profiling analysis (whole-genome sequencing, metabolomics and quantitative proteomics) while being assessed by gold-standard clinical and neuropsychological measures. ME/CFS patients will then be provided with a take-home kit that enables them to collect urine and blood microsamples during an average day and during days when they are experiencing postexertional malaise. ...

Health, Wellbeing, and Prognosis of Australian Adolescents with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS): A Case-Controlled Follow-Up Study

... They may also worry about their future health, which can aggravate emotional problems such as anxiety and depression in them [15]. Such problems can affect the normal pattern of life of these children and teenagers and even cause a change in their hope for life and even their refusal of treatment or irregular follow-up [16,17]. Studies have shown that the QOL of children and adolescents with chronic diseases is lower than the QOL of their peers in normal conditions [17,18]. ...

Long Term Follow up of Young People With Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Attending a Pediatric Outpatient Service

... 12,13 This core symptom, often accompanied by fatigue, cognitive impairment, orthostatic intolerance, and widespread pain, significantly disrupts daily functioning and deteriorates quality of life. 14,15 Consequently, there is an urgent imperative to develop and implement efficacious therapeutic interventions. Emerging non-pharmacological modalities, including mindfulness-based practices and yoga, have demonstrated promising outcomes and cost-effectiveness when juxtaposed with conventional pharmacological approaches. ...

Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Diagnosis and Management in Young People: A Primer

... 37 At baseline, QoL in our study cohort was lower than that of healthy children (83.0 ± 14.8) and children with other chronic illness (77.2 ± 15.5) 22 including those with cerebral palsy (66.9 ± 16.7), cancer (72.2 ± 16.4), and diabetes (80.4 ± 12.9). 21,24,25 QoL scores were similar to those with conditions with overlapping features of POTS such as chronic fatigue syndrome (49.0 ± 15.2) and Ehlers-Danlos and hypermobility (males 67.9 ± 15.5, females 61.1 ± 19.2). [38][39][40][41][42] Following the text message intervention, there was no significant improvement in QoL. ...

Measuring quality of life and fatigue in adolescents with chronic fatigue syndrome: estimates of feasibility, internal consistency and parent–adolescent agreement of the PedsQL TM
  • Citing Article
  • October 2015

Fatigue Biomedicine Health & Behavior