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 7 of 9)
“Most CFS experts would agree that there may be several subcategories of [the disorder]—due to an infectious agent or to stress and so forth,” says Vernon. “I anticipate seeing an underlying gene-expression pattern common to all CFS patients but, in addition, some unique genes expressed that correspond to each subgroup.”
Treatment research has recently focused on two behavioral therapies, one for the mind, another for the body. In graded-exercise therapy, patients, under supervision, are encouraged to gradually increase their activity level—beginning with a two-minute walk, for example, and then lengthening their workouts by a couple of minutes each day. The idea is to increase stamina without risking the overexertion that can be so devastating. Three studies on graded-exercise therapy, all published since 1996, found that many patients participating in exercise programs felt better, and some even regained their former levels of physical activity.
At Johns Hopkins, Rowe noticed that many of his chronic fatigue syndrome patients had unexpected stiffness and a limited range of movement. So on 100 or so of them, he says, he has tried manual therapy in which a physical therapist gently moves a patient’s limbs and body to restore normal movement before encouraging her to resume physical activity. “As the patients’ mobility has increased,” he says, “their symptoms have diminished, and many of them now can even exercise without suffering relapses.”
The other approach is cognitive behavioral therapy—counseling that focuses on the psychological and social problems that patients often develop while trying to cope with the affliction, including depression, frustration, social withdrawal and feelings of helplessness. Cognitive behavioral therapy aims at helping patients gain control over their symptoms.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments