ABSTRACT

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CPS) has emerged as a public health concern over the past decade. A working case definition was created in 1988 and revised in 1994, and this has been used to establish prevalence estimates using physician-based surveillance and an a random digit dial telephone survey. Although CPS has some characteristics of an infectious disease, so far no infectious agent has been associated with the illness. Studies of immune function in CPS patients failed to detect differences between cases and healthy controls. However, when cases were subgrouped according to whether they had a sudden or gradual onset, differences in immunologic markers were detected between cases and their matched controls.