Welcome
again to the Lyndonville News, now the 2005
version. I hope that everyone had a good holiday. It goes without saying
that persons with ME/CFS/FM are going to take a lot longer to recover
from the holidays than healthy persons. Take your time, relax, and remember
that the time and energy spent with family and friends is worth the
relapse.
I
have had good feedback about the definition and name of CFS suggested
in the last newsletter, but many found it confusing. I would hope over
the coming year that there will be mounting evidence for the concept
of post-infectious dysautonomia, evidence like what we will be presenting
in the February conference in Japan. I have a hunch that 2005 is going
to be a very good year. Well, don’t get too excited, I have said
that before.
In
this issue, I would like to visit the subject of sleep difficulties in
CFS. Again, I look forward to your comments via
, and forgive me if I do not answer them all.
Clinical
Notes:
Sleep
Abnormalities in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
Sleep
that does not result in waking refreshed as well as disrupted or fragmented
sleep, hypersomnia, and insomnia constitute a significant part of CFS
symptomatology. However, despite the symptoms of disturbed sleep being
well documented in CFS, important unanswered questions exist. What role
does abnormal sleep, if any, play in the symptomatology of CFS, and
are sleep abnormalities part of the spectrum of CNS nervous system abnormalities
or do they represent a separate, exclusionary condition? In general
the medical literature has struggled with these questions, and under
the current diagnostic guidelines, primary sleep disorders such as narcolepsy
and sleep apnea are exclusionary conditions for the research diagnosis
of chronic fatigue syndrome. Depression, anxiety, pain, immunologic
abnormalities, medication use, autonomic nervous system function, along
with numerous other variables affect sleep quality, and just as these
factors have complicated studies on immune function and emotions, these
factors need to be addressed in the research on sleep disorders in CFS.
From
a clinical standpoint, the medical provider is faced with the dilemma
of what symptoms to treat in an attempt to improve both daily activity
and function as well as the quality of life of the patient with CFS.
Because of difficulties with both definitions and objective measures,
there are few controlled treatment trials in the medical literature
to guide us in our decisions. And, until the many basic questions are
answered, there will continue to be a dearth of treatment studies. In
this brief article I would like to review the role of sleep in CFS as
described in selected articles from the literature, and offer some personal
observations concerning the importance of treating sleep symptoms in
the overall management of CFS.
Published Studies
In
1993, Richard Morriss from the Littlemore Hospital in Oxford and his
co-workers published a case control study of twelve patients with CFS
who did not have major depression by research criteria. Not surprisingly,
CFS patients spent more time in bed (544 min) as compared to controls
(465) but slept less efficiently. They woke more frequently and spent
more time awake. Seven patients with CFS were diagnosed as having a
sleep disorder; four patients had trouble getting to sleep, four had
trouble maintaining sleep, and one had hypersomnia. None of the controls
studied were diagnosed with a sleep disorder. Those patients with CFS
with sleep disorder(s) had greater functional impairment, but no change
in psychiatric scores. Moreover, they noted that shortened REM latency,
characteristic of major depression, was not present in this group of
CFS patients, again suggesting that CFS is distinct from major depression.
The authors suggest that sleep disorders may be important in the etiology
of chronic fatigue syndrome.
In
a 1994 study by Anthony Komaroff and Dedra Buchwald the symptoms of
CFS are reviewed in patients from their clinical practices. It was based
on the authors' experience with two cohorts of approximately 510 patients
with chronic debilitating fatigue. In a separate paper published the
same year, Dr. Buchwald performed polysomnography on 59 patients who
had sleep pathology suggested from a screening questionnaire. Overall,
these patients had an overlap with major depression, but when separated
into those meeting, or not meeting CFS criteria, there was little difference
in the frequency of sleep disorders. Eighty-two percent of those meeting
CFS criteria and 81% not meeting criteria had one or more sleep disorders.
Of the whole group, the type of sleep disorder defined was as follows:
sleep apnea – 44%; idiopathic hypersomnia – 12%; other disorder
of excessive sleepiness – 10%; restless legs – 10%; excessive
daytime sleepiness – 10%; narcolepsy – 5%; and other sleep
disorders – 5%.
In
a paper reviewing immune function in CFS, the relationship between immune
activation and abnormal sleep was discussed by Dr. J. M. Mulligan and
co-workers at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Immune
stimulation is known to affect CNS mediated behaviors such as sleep,
and they note that cytokine elevation is found in sleep deprivation.
Given the complex relationship between CFS and cytokine abnormalities,
a relationship may exist between immune state and degree of sleep abnormalities.
The
pediatric literature also notes significant sleep disturbance as a prominent
symptom. In one paper comparing children with chronic fatigue syndrome
who either met, or did not meet, criteria for primary juvenile fibromyalgia
syndrome, one of the few differences between groups was that those children
meeting criteria for both CFS and fibromyalgia had more severe sleep
symptoms than those children meeting criteria for CFS alone. In a paper
studying forty one adolescents, Akemi Tomoda and coworkers looked at
the relationship between sleep and circadian rhythm disturbances. On
the basis of a daily log of sleep time, all adolescent CFS patients
in this study had one or more of the following sleep abnormalities:
delayed sleep phase syndrome, non-24 hour sleep-wake syndrome, irregular
sleep, or long sleeper. In a study from the Netherlands, Lidewij Knook
and co-workers noted that, despite the symptom of unrefreshing sleep,
melatonin levels were elevated in adolescents with CFS compared to controls.
Teruhyisa
Miike from the department of child development at the Kumamoto Graduate
School in Kumamoto Japan with co-workers have been evaluating CFS in
children with school refusal. They note that 80% of these children have
sleep abnormalities including day/night reversal, decreased NREM and
delayed latency of REM sleep, suggesting “deteriorated quality
of night sleep.”
In
a 2000 study attempting to answer the question of how significant primary
sleep disorders are in CFS, Dr. Le Bon and coworkers emphasized that
sleepiness and fatigue are not the same and attempted to address the
issue with 53 patients from their fatigue clinic in Brussels. They showed
a high incidence of primary sleep disorders, 46% in this patient group,
and sleepiness was present in only one third of cases.
In
a recent study which came as an outgrowth of the Centers for Disease
Control population-based study of CFS, Elizabeth Unger and co-workers
looked at subjective sleep in 339 patients with CFS. As a population
based study, the patients with CFS were identified through telephone
screening in Wichita, Kansas, rather than from self report. 81.4 % of
patients had an abnormality in at least one sleep factor on the questionnaires
utilized. From their data, the authors suggest that CFS patients are
fatigued but not sleepy.
In
a series of recent papers, Dedra Buchwald’s group at the University
of Washington has been examining monozygotic twins discordant for chronic
fatigue syndrome, and these studies may change the views that have been
built up over the past fifteen years. The sleep studies were conducted
for monozygotic twin pairs, one twin healthy, and the other ill with
CFS. The polysomnograms were conducted on the same night, and attention
was paid to medications and other possible variables. The great strength
of these studies is that the healthy twin is able to serve as a perfectly
matched control for age, sex, genetic predisposition and many environmental
influences.
In
an evaluation of sleepiness using the Epworth Sleepiness and Stanford
Sleepiness Scales along with a sleep diary, ill twins were quite different
from their healthy siblings with subjectively poor sleep as would be
expected. Objectively, polysomnograms were followed the next day with
a four-nap multiple sleep latency test. The twenty twin pairs did not
differ in either the presence of objective sleep disorders or the multiple
sleep latency tests. Thus, CFS twins experience more subjective sleepiness
without objective changes suggesting a sleep disorder. The authors offer
the suggestion that there may exist an altered circadian rhythm with
subjective sleepiness. Alternatively, CFS patients may experience a
“heightened perception of sleepiness or may be unable to distinguish
fatigue and sleepiness.”
In
another paper comparing the subjective and objective measures of sleep
the authors note that CFS twins reported that they had slept less hours
and were less well rested despite similar objective measures. The authors
suggest that CFS twins “suffer from an element of sleep-state
misperception.”
In
a study examining objective measures of sleep, also in the co-twin group,
objective measures by polysomnography were examined for sleep latency,
REM latency, sleep efficiency, awakenings, percentages of sleep stages
1 thru 4, percentage of REM sleep, periodic limb movements, leg arousal
index, snoring, apnea-hypopnea index, upper airway resistance, and overall
arousal. Only one CFS patient had a sleep disorder, sleep apnea. While
there were two minor differences, the results of objective measures
were remarkably similar for the healthy and CFS twin. “These results
do not provide strong evidence for a major role for abnormalities in
sleep architecture in CFS.”
Primary
or secondary?
The
question remains: are the symptoms of CFS due to sleep abnormalities,
or are the sleep abnormalities part of the global central nervous system
symptomatology of CFS? As can be seen from the studies cited, clarity
in this area is still lacking. However, as progress creeps along we
can now say a number of things about the relationship between sleep
and CFS. First, it is clearly established that the subjective symptoms
of unrefreshing and fragmented sleep are clearly an important part of
CFS symptomatology. Yet objective measures of sleep pathology are of
uncertain significance. With the current diagnostic guidelines, primary
sleep disorders are exclusionary conditions for the diagnosis for chronic
fatigue syndrome. Yet with some studies showing high frequencies of
sleep disorders diagnosed over time, the question remains, are these
sleep disorders primary or secondary? Does the presence of excessive
daytime sleepiness or sleep apnea on testing that does not respond to
CPAP treatment mean that a person cannot be diagnosed with CFS?
While
it will take more experience for the academic community to come to a
consensus on these issues, I would like to suggest that for the medical
provider, the diagnosis of CFS remain clinical. That is, CFS can be
diagnosed in patients with the pattern of exhaustion, pain and other
symptoms as previously. If during the evaluation, a sleep disorder such
as narcolepsy or sleep apnea is found and treatment for that sleep disorder
removes the debilitating fatigue, the diagnosis of CFS is no longer
valid. But if that treatment does little to improve the overall pattern
of symptoms, the clinical diagnosis of CFS remains. In this latter case,
the presence of a sleep disorder would be similar to the presence of
treated hypothyroidism in that it does not serve to explain the clinical
condition. As such, it should not be considered an exclusion in general
clinical practice.
Clinical Experience
In
general, it has been my experience that aggressive treatment of sleep
disorders in patients with CFS has been disappointing. Yet, I also feel
that it is one of the most important symptoms to aggressively pursue.
The approach is one of common sense. If a patient with CFS identifies
insomnia or unrefreshing sleep as one of the most disturbing symptoms
present, I would treat this symptom aggressively.
Perhaps
the first and most important aspect of treatment is sleep hygiene. Avoidance
of stimulants, relaxing with “wind-down” time in the evening,
and avoidance of television or computer use before bedtime should be
emphasized. The CFS patient should not use the sleeping bed as a place
for daytime resting, reading, watching TV or talking on the telephone.
As with migraine, attempting to establish a consistent, but not rigid,
schedule is also important.
Medications
have a role, and most medical providers are very familiar with them
in the patient with severe insomnia or fragmented sleep. These medications
include tricyclics, trazedone, sedating muscle relaxants, and even benzodiazepines,
all of which can help establish sleep to improve the symptom. Yet it
has been my experience that while the patient may experience much improved
sleep quality, the degree of their activity limitation rarely changes.
Clinically,
the patient with CFS is very sensitive to medications which have a role
in sleep symptomatology. With doxepin or other tricyclics, for example,
the patient will frequently feel drugged in the morning and experience
a hangover. I would not consider this a limiting side effect as reduction
in the dosage often results in good sleep quality. Sometimes the liquid
preparations are useful in that they permit very low doses.
It
is important to differentiate those patients who have light, fractured
sleep from those who have hypersomnia, as the former usually have more
severe activity limitations and are more difficult to treat. Those patients
with daytime somnolence and hypersomnia may respond to medications with
stimulant properties, and the increased activity during the day may
lead to a better quality of sleep at night. However, I no longer even
try stimulant medications in those patients with insomnia. A good rule
of thumb to separate these two groups of patients is their ability to
tolerate coffee.
It
is my feeling that patients with CFS have one or more central nervous
system disturbances that causes the sleep symptomatology. Changing the
diagnosis from ‘CFS’ to ‘sleep disturbance’
because the patient has a disturbance found on a questionnaire or even
polysomnography will artificially lower the number of patients who carry
the diagnosis of CFS but not result in improved quality of care. For
example, in a recent paper on the clinical course of patients with CFS,
at two and three years of follow-up, only 21% of the subjects were classified
as having CFS. If this were entirely due to improvement of the degree
of fatigue and other symptoms, this would be wonderful news. However,
in this study, sleep apnea is listed as one of the more common causes
of re-classification, yet we have no indication of whether the sleep
apnea responded to appropriate treatment. For some clinicians reading
this paper it appears that the original diagnosis of CFS was made in
error, and that CFS is a benign condition - neither of which may be
true. Most clinicians forget that the diagnostic criteria are for research
purposes only.
Sleep
symptoms should be pursued aggressively, and only if there is a good
clinical response should the diagnosis be changed. Too often the patient
with CFS hears the medical provider say, “Aha, we have finally
found the cause of your symptoms,” only to be disappointed when
treatment has little or no effect. This treatment failure then encourages
alienation of the patient from the medical provider and increases both
the frustration and confusion of the patient which, by itself, leads
to greater distress.
Agents for the Sleep Disorder Associated with
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
One
of the reasons for writing the following information on medications
used to treat sleep disorders has been the concern raised about the
chronic usage of some medications. Certainly if a person does not have
symptoms, they should not take medication. On the other hand, if there
are significant or severe symptoms, then taking medications may be a
possible recourse. It should be noted that every medicine has side effects
and this sheet is not meant to be comprehensive in terms of the side
effects with the different medications. This sheet is meant to be informal,
to be used by the patients that I see or to be discussed by patients
with their physicians. Many physicians would disagree with the statements
which I will be making in this information sheet, and this represents
merely my impression of how to approach sleep disorders.
The
first and central aspect of treating sleep disorders is good sleep hygiene.
What this means is having available a comfortable, relaxing place to
sleep which should be used only at the time of going to sleep. For example,
if a person is tired but is not planning to sleep, they should lie down
in a place other than where they go to sleep. This is so that behavioral
associations will be connected between going to sleep and the place
to sleep. Secondly, the lighting should be appropriate to encourage
sleep. Most importantly, people should avoid stimuli for up to two hours
before attempting sleep. This would include medications that are energizing
such as coffee and some types of tea, television shows, computer games
and other activities which tend to make sleep onset more difficult.
For the young persons in my practice with chronic fatigue syndrome,
I would suggest that they get very bored for about an hour prior to
going to sleep.
For
myself, I find that reading a good medical journal frequently will put
me to sleep quite nicely. It is unreasonable to think that medications
can take the place of good sleep hygiene. Moreover, it is particularly
important to establish a regular schedule for sleep, and this is more
important for people with chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia
than for the general public. Particularly if there is a sleep phase
reversal, people need to force themselves to get up at around 8 o'clock
in the morning even if they have to rest thereafter. Exposure to bright
light in the category of 2,500 to 3,000 lux for up to 30 minutes in
the morning is also sometimes effective to help with the sleep disorder.
The consistency of maintaining a standard time to get up and a standard
time to go to bed will sometimes help in the achieving of good sleep.
The following medications are possible adjuncts to sleep hygiene:
1.
Melatonin 3 mg. Melatonin does not require a prescription and
is a hormone which may encourage sleep. Taking it 30 minutes prior to
attempting sleep is perhaps the best.
2.
Diphenhydramine (Benadryl®) 50 mg. This medication is an
antihistamine used for allergies and has sedation as a side effect.
It tends to be most effective approximately half an hour to 45 minutes
after taking it and frequently will initiate sleep without difficulty.
Unfortunately, the soporific effect of this medication tends to wear
off if used on a chronic basis. This medicine also tends to be helpful
if there is congestion, allergies or stuffy nose which interfere with
sleep.
3.
Cyclobenzaprine (Flexeril®) 10 mg. This medication, which
is related to the tricyclic antidepressants is used primarily as a muscle
relaxant, and has no antidepressant activity. Again, there is a sedative
effect which is noted about 45 minutes after taking it and for some
people there will be an excellent degree of both muscle relaxation and
sedation, and it can be very useful as a sleep aid.
4.
Carisoprodol (Soma®) 350 mg. This medication is also a
muscle relaxant but is chemically distinct from cyclobenzaprine mentioned
previously. This should not be used in the children under the age of
12. Like all the medications used to initiate sleep, there are persons
who will have idiosyncratic reactions and the medication may not be
effective.
5.
Amitriptyline (Elavil®) 10-75 mg. This medication, as well
as doxepin, are tricyclic antidepressants which have a prominent sedative
effect. They tend to be useful in helping with sleep and can also have
some effect in reducing pain. The pain effect is more pronounced with
nortriptyline, however. Should these medications be used, they need
to be used in the smallest doses possible, as people tend to experience
a hangover. Should this occur, the dose should be reduced. If people
cannot get to sleep and still get the hangover, these medicines will
be not useful.
6.
Trazodone (Desyrel®) 50-150 mg. Trazodone is one of my
most favorite medications for sleep. Again, some will have a hangover
and the dose needs to be as low as possible. In general, I would start
with a very low dose such as 25 mg and increase it to the point where
it is effective. It should taken approximately one-half hour to two
hours prior to attempting sleep in order for its usage to be maximized.
Some people will get congestion with this medicine which limits its
use.
7.
Clonazepam (Klonopin®) 0.5 mg. This medication is a benzodiazepine
and as such is a controlled substance. Like other benzodiazepines, it
enhances GABA activity which is an inhibitory neurotransmitter, so it
tends to be effective in treating both seizure disorders and panic disorders.
Virtually all people who have chronic fatigue syndrome will have many
of the symptoms of panic disorder and that diagnosis can be implied
with persons with CFS. In general, I do not like most benzodiazepines
for the treatment of sleep. However, Klonopin is very mild and I feel
that it can be used even up to long-term if necessary for the treatment
of the sleep disorder associated with CFS/fibromyalgia. Other benzodiazepines
such as Xanax® and Valium®, I try to avoid. All drugs of this
class have the potential to be habit forming, so clonazepam needs to
be used cautiously and intermittent use is best.
8.
Triazolam (Halcion®) This medication is a very powerful
hypnotic and has been associated with inappropriate behaviors. In general,
I never use this medication or other short acting benzodiazepines.
9.
Zolpidem (Ambien®) 10 mg. This medication is a non-benzodiazepine
which is indicated "for short-term use" of sleep disorders,
primarily because it has never been studied in long term studies. It
is probably safe but should be used with caution. One drawback is that
patients wake at three in the morning with it and are unable to get
back to sleep, so combining it with a long acting agent is useful.
10.
Zaleplon (Sonata®) 10 mg. This is very similar to Ambien.
It is in the pyrazolopyrimidine class of medications if that makes anybody
feel more reassured. Consider it a clone of zolpidem.
11.
Topiramate (Topamax®) 25-100 mg. This medication is an
anti-epileptic drug which has prominent sedative effects. Because of
the sedation it can be effective for initiating sleep. It has as a side
effect the tendency toward weight loss which is a side effect that most
people are not particularly annoyed about. However, many patients with
CFS have difficulty with this drug as it causes cognitive disturbances.
It is finding increased use in the prevention of migraine. In general,
it is not a medication that has proven very useful for initiating sleep
in CFS and it is rarely used for this purpose.
12.
Olanzapine (Zyprexa®) 2.5 mg. This medication is indicated
for psychosis. It is also one of the few medications that has been shown
to increase stage 3 and stage 4 sleep. As a result, it tends to be an
excellent medication to initiate sleep in CFS. It is effective as an
antidepressant as well and may reduce pain, although there are no formal
indications. Weight gain is a serious problem. I rarely use it in CFS.
A
final note about sleep difficulties. It may be good not to worry about
insomnia. You may not need as many hours of sleep as you think you need.
One patient told me that they were very disturbed about waking at three
AM and not being able to get back to sleep. He finally decided to not
worry about it and enjoy the time. He used the hours from three to five
am for rest, prayer, meditation, and listening to music. No one ever
bothered him during these times, and he came to view these hours not
as the nuisance of insomnia, but as constructive time forced upon him
by his illness.
Lyndonville Research Group Report
The
Lyndonville research group is back in business with two new studies.
One is collecting and analyzing data from a follow-up questionnaire
on persons who had the onset of CFS twenty years ago when they were
either children or adolescents. As nearly everyone with CFS knows, this
is not a benign or trivial illness. Fortunately, however, there are
a number of persons who recovered completely and we are happy for them.
The lingering question is why some recover and some do not.
A
second study will be presented as a poster in the conference February
8th in Karawazua, Japan, and it is entitled Muscarinic Acetylcholine
Receptor IgA Antibodies in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. The
study compared 25 patients with CFS with 25 healthy persons and the
laboratory analyses were performed by Dr. Vojdani at Immunoscience Laboratories
for no charge. The results indicate that it is possible to separate
patients and controls by the presence of an autoantibody to an acetylcholine
receptor. More on this to come, maybe lots more.
Another
project is the school nurse education project under the capable leadership
of Emily Saxton. So far we have two school nurse lectures lined up.
Our thought is that if we can educate school nurses about CFS, it will
make the life, and education, of children with CFS much easier.
We
are always looking for help in the Lyndonville research group.
To
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Disclaimer:
Any medical advice that is presented in the Lyndonville News is generic and for general informational
purposes only. ME/CFS/FM is an extremely complex illness and specific
advice may not be appropriate for an individual with this illness. Therefore,
should you be interested or wish to pursue any of the ideas presented
here, please discuss them with your personal physician.