Chronic fatigue syndrome associated with maladaptive personality features and personality disorders

This study suggests that chronic fatigue syndrome is associated with an increased prevalence of maladaptive personality features and personality disorders. This might be associated with being noncompliant with treatment suggestions, displaying unhealthy behavioral strategies and lacking a stable social environment.

In the current issue of Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics a study addresses the relationship between chronic fatigue syndrome and personality factors. Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) presents unique diagnostic and management challenges. Personality may be a risk factor for CFS and may contribute to the maintenance of the illness.

In this study,  501 study participants were identified from the general population of Georgia: 113 people with CFS, 264 with unexplained unwellness but not CFS (insufficient fatigue, ISF) and 124 well controls.

The investigators used the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire, 4th edition, to evaluate DSM-IV personality disorders and the NEO Five-Factor Inventory, to assess personality features (neuroticism, extraversion, openness, agreeableness and conscientiousness). The Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory measured 5 dimensions of fatigue, and the Medical Outcomes Survey Short Form 36 measured 8 dimensions of functional impairment. Twenty-nine percent of the CFS cases had at least 1 personality disorder, compared to 28% of the ISF cases and 7% of the well controls. The prevalence of paranoid, schizoid, avoidant, obsessive-compulsive and depressive personality disorders were significantly higher in CFS and ISF compared to the well controls. The CFS cases had significantly higher scores on neuroticism, and significantly lower scores on extraversion than those with ISF or the well controls. Personality features were correlated with selected composite characteristics of fatigue.

The results of this study suggest that CFS is associated with an increased prevalence of maladaptive personality features and personality disorders. This might be associated with being noncompliant with treatment suggestions, displaying unhealthy behavioral strategies and lacking a stable social environment. Since maladaptive personality is not specific to CFS, it might be associated with illness per se rather than with a specific condition.

Source:

Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics

Comments

  1. SC SC United States says:

    This is quite the ground breaking research by the CDC!  On the day that the Science study (Lombardi et al. Oct, 2009) linked CFS to a retrovirus, the director of the CDC's CFS research program stated that he doubted anything would come of the proposed retro-viral link (why would it, this was all psychological).

    On 12/14/2010 the FDA Blood Safety advisory group recommended an indefinite deferral prohibiting anyone diagnosed with CFS from donating blood because of the building evidence that the CDC could not have been more wrong.  Here's the WSJ article on the FDA's decision: online.wsj.com/.../...94004576020321854485688.html

    And what has the CDC done about the increasingly probable threat to the nations health?  Nothing of any consequence.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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