Symptoms
The main symptom of
chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a devastating
tiredness or exhaustion that has lasted at least 6 months and does not improve
much with rest. This fatigue also is so severe that it interferes with your
work, your play, and your social activities. The fatigue and other symptoms
described below may begin suddenly or they may develop gradually over weeks or
months.
Other long-term symptoms include:
- Forgetfulness, memory loss, confusion, or
difficulty concentrating.
- Sore throat.
- Tender
lymph nodes in the neck or armpits.
- Muscle
pain.
- Joint pain without redness or swelling.
- Headaches
that are different from other headaches you have had in the
past.
- Unrefreshing sleep (waking up feeling tired or not rested).
Because CFS is not easily diagnosed, health experts have
established some rules to help them recognize the disease. To be diagnosed with
CFS, you must have fatigue and at least 4 of the symptoms listed above. At
least 4 of your symptoms must have started at the same time as or after your
fatigue began, and they must have lasted for at least 6 months.
However, if you have persistent, unexplained tiredness and other
typical CFS symptoms but do not quite meet these criteria (for instance, if you
have had symptoms for less than 6 months), you may still be presumed to have
CFS, and you may need treatment.
Some people with CFS develop a condition in which their heart rate
increases and their blood pressure drops when they stand or sit up from a
reclining position. This is often described as feeling "light-headed" or
feeling faint or dizzy. This condition is called
orthostatic hypotension.
Depression is common and can make your other symptoms
worse. Antidepressant medicines can help you feel better.
CFS causes symptoms that are the same as many other diseases,
especially early on. For this reason, it can be diagnosed only after a thorough
evaluation has ruled out
other conditions with similar symptoms.