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Blood test for chronic fatigue syndrome found to be 91% accurate

Blood test for chronic fatigue syndrome found to be 91% accurate
SCRS differs among different cohorts (n = 98). Averaged Raman spectra of 2,155 single cells obtained from 98 individual subjects, separating into A) three groups of HCs, ME, and MS, or B) five groups of HCs, Mild ME, Moderate ME, Severe ME, and MS. C) Differences between spectra of ME and HC and MS and HC; green line: subtracted HC baseline. Raman spectra from each group were shifted in intensity to aid visualization and the intensity is expressed in arbitrary units (a.u.). D–I) LDA clustering was used to visualize separations among three groups of HC, ME, and MS at the single-cell level and the individual level, four groups of HC and different ME groups (mild, moderate, and severe) at the single-cell level and the individual level, and five groups of HC, different ME groups (mild, moderate, and severe) and MS at the single-cell level and the individual level. Credit: Advanced Science (2023). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202302146

An international team of medical researchers has announced the development of a blood test for chronic fatigue syndrome. The test is reportedly 91% accurate. In their paper published in the journal Advanced Science, the group describes their test, how it works and how well it has fared during initial testing.

Myalgic encephalomyelitis also known as , (ME/CFS), is a in which a person feels abnormally fatigued. Because it is difficult to diagnose, some in the are skeptical that it is a real illness. Over the past decade, more of the medical community has acknowledged it as a real condition and has recognized that it can be debilitating. Still, diagnosis is difficult and can be a lengthy process. In this new effort, the research team developed what appears to be simple test for the condition.

Believing that the root cause of ME/CFS is likely a problem with energy function in cells, the researchers looked for a way to test such a function using existing tools. They narrowed their testing to peripheral blood , which are cells that have a round nucleus—such as T cells, monocytes and lymphocytes.

Prior research has suggested that these cells may play a role in ME/CFS. But because there is no test of such cells that can be used to measure energy function, the team turned to a tool not normally used in medical testing labs—Raman spectroscopy, which is normally used by chemists to identify molecular fingerprints. It works by comparing vibrational modes of molecules.

Thinking that there might be a difference in vibrations of single cells between people who have ME/CFS and those who do not, the team tested from 61 patients with the disorder and 16 without. They found a clear difference. Inspired by their results, they built an AI app for processing the results in large numbers of people and then tested their system on 2,000 cells from 98 patients. They found the system to be 91% accurate. The team plans to continue their work by testing larger samples but feel confident that they have at last found a test for ME/CFS.

More information: Jiabao Xu et al, Developing a Blood Cell‐Based Diagnostic Test for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Using Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells, Advanced Science (2023). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202302146

Journal information: Advanced Science

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Citation: Blood test for chronic fatigue syndrome found to be 91% accurate (2023, September 11) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-09-blood-chronic-fatigue-syndrome-accurate.html
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