Researchers find link between childhood physical abuse, chronic fatigue syndrome

May 16, 2011 in Psychology & Psychiatry

Childhood physical abuse is associated with significantly elevated rates of functional somatic syndromes such as chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia and multiple chemical sensitivities among women, according to new findings by University of Toronto researchers. The research will be published in this month's issue of the Journal of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma.

"Women who reported they had been physically abused as children have twice the odds of and multiple chemical sensitivities, and 65 per cent higher odds of " says lead investigator Professor Esme Fuller-Thomson, who holds the Sandra Rotman Chair at U of T's Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work and Department of Family and Community Medicine. "These findings persisted even after controlling for potentially confounding factors such as other adverse childhood experiences, age, race, mental health and adult socioeconomic status."

The study examined statistics from a regional subsample of the 2005 Canadian Community Health Survey involving 7,342 women, 10 per cent of whom reported being physically abused as children. A minority of women reported they had been diagnosed by a health professional with chronic fatigue syndrome (1.3%), fibromyalgia (2.5%), or multiple chemical sensitivities (2.7%).

Co-author Joanne Sulman, from the Department of Social Work at Mount Sinai, says the research not only points to an association between childhood physical abuse and these disorders, but also explores the contribution of confounding psychosocial factors such as other childhood adversities, adult health behaviours and mental health.

"But perhaps the most interesting aspects of the research," says Sulman, "are the questions it raises, such as the mechanisms that link to chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia and multiple chemical sensitivities."

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milo_paradiso
May 19, 2011

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"Functional somatic syndrome" is a discriminatory term for a group of illnesses that are poorly understood, and they are poorly understood because scientists, physicians and government choose not to fund and research these illnesses. There is nothing functional about my illness. and i am not inventing my symptms.In fact it is very interesting that millions of us share the exact same symptms (and have not been abused as children).
in fact there is a strong link between ME/CFS and a retrovirus XMRV. all of a sudden, your theory goes in the same line as people calling HIV the gay illness. Just like us, these individuals were discriminaed against and their disease was not funded properly until the epidemics got out of control.
Patients with ME/CFS show symptoms of immune activation, low natural killer cell functon, viral reactivations, autonomic nervous system disturbance or failure, exercise response abnormalities. A recent paper showed over 700 abnormal proteins in the CFS fluid.
milo_paradiso
May 19, 2011

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(cont'd) I want to reiterate that patients with MECFS are discriminated against, are disbelieved and their symptoms ignored. Just a handful of physicians see patients with these diseases exclusively, and treat the immune dysfunction and viral reactivation. it is time that government fund biomedical research, and that the psych lobby stops believng that these diseases are due to body-mind connection.

tjis study has been of huge disservice to the ME/ CFS patient population, and media attention of this kind just shows the influece it can play on whether patients with debilitating illnesses can or cannot have health care.

I hope that professor Fuller-Thompson appologizes and retract her article in due time, and start researchng useful things in the future.
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