Betting on Seabiscuit
Laura Hillenbrand beat the odds to write the hit horse-racing saga while fighting chronic fatigue syndrome, a mysterious disorder starting to reveal its secrets
- By Larry Katzenstein
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2002, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 9)
In nearly two decades of searching for the cause of chronic fatigue syndrome, researchers have turned up no definitive answer; some believe that the disorder has multiple causes, perhaps as heart disease does. But there are leads. The 1980s-era theory that chronic fatigue syndrome was caused directly by the Epstein-Barr virus, the infectious agent behind the fatiguing disorder known as mononucleosis, has turned out to be partially true. That virus and others seem to play an indirect role in the disease. In a study of 250 Londoners with either mononucleosis or an upper respiratory tract infection, 9 percent of the mono patients were diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome six months after first becoming ill, whereas none of the patients with upper respiratory tract infections developed the affliction. The study, led by researchers at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London and published last year in the Lancet, is the first conclusive evidence that a viral infection can trigger chronic fatigue syndrome.
In addition to infectious mononucleosis, studies suggest that two other infectious illnesses—Q fever and RossRiver virus—can lead to chronic fatigue syndrome. To learn more about the risk factors that make people susceptible to chronic fatigue syndrome, the CDC is funding a study that will track patients in the Australian state of New South Wales who contract Q fever, RossRiver virus or infectious mononucleosis.
But infectious agents may not be the only culprits. Peter Rowe, a pediatrician and director of the chronic fatigue syndrome clinic at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, has documented that some young people who developed the syndrome also have a disorder called neurally mediated hypotension; their blood pressure plunges after they’ve been standing for several minutes, leading to dizziness, weakness and, over time, exhaustion. Other medical researchers have failed to find the same link between bouts of low blood pressure and chronic fatigue syndrome, but Rowe remains convinced it’s a factor in some cases and says he has given such patients blood-pressure-regulating drugs with good effect. Likewise, Rowe and other researchers have argued that a heart rate abnormality, postural tachycardia syndrome, in which a racing heart causes light-headedness, may also be involved in chronic fatigue syndrome.
Even though the disorder has been recognized only fairly recently as a clinical entity—the CDC officially defined chronic fatigue syndrome in 1988—it probably isn’t new to humanity. Physicians and historians of medicine say it closely resembles neurasthenia, a so-called nervous exhaustion that was one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions in the United States and Europe in the second half of the 19th century.
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