What It's like to Suffer from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
As anyone who has suffered with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) can attest to, it is one of the most debilitating and mysterious disorders to affect a person when at its peak. Because there is no clear cause and no way to test for it, chronic fatigue syndrome is difficult to diagnose, and
sometimes patients are even labeled hypochondriacs by their doctors.
CFS sufferer Kim Covert described the effects of chronic fatigue syndrome best when she told a newspaper reporter for the Mankato Free Press: "Fatigue is such a small word for this. I say it's like wearing a suit of armor and the floor is a magnet." Ms. Covert has had CFS since 1984. Although she now feels like she is in remission, she tells of a time when she was so afflicted that she would go hungry because she didn't have enough energy to even reach to the coffee table for an orange, let alone peel it.
Ms. Covert told Mankato Free Press reporter Amanda Dyslin: "Many doctors don't even believe in it still. I went to a doctor here who told me to exercise more."
Dr. Caroline Baerg, a Mankato, Minn. family doctor, told reporter Dyslin that she isn't comfortable diagnosing a patient with CFS because that means the hunt is over for whatever treatable disease the patient might actually have. "It's a chronic label and something they live with their entire lives," said Baerg. "I better make sure there's nothing that can be treated" in that there are so many disorders and illnesses that can present with or cause extreme fatigue.
In 1988, after suffering mysterious symptoms and debilitating fatigue, Ms. Covert learned about CFS and determined that was what she had. "From then on, for the next 20 years, it became something I just learned to deal with and manage," she said.
CFS sufferer Kim Covert described the effects of chronic fatigue syndrome best when she told a newspaper reporter for the Mankato Free Press: "Fatigue is such a small word for this. I say it's like wearing a suit of armor and the floor is a magnet." Ms. Covert has had CFS since 1984. Although she now feels like she is in remission, she tells of a time when she was so afflicted that she would go hungry because she didn't have enough energy to even reach to the coffee table for an orange, let alone peel it.
Ms. Covert told Mankato Free Press reporter Amanda Dyslin: "Many doctors don't even believe in it still. I went to a doctor here who told me to exercise more."
Dr. Caroline Baerg, a Mankato, Minn. family doctor, told reporter Dyslin that she isn't comfortable diagnosing a patient with CFS because that means the hunt is over for whatever treatable disease the patient might actually have. "It's a chronic label and something they live with their entire lives," said Baerg. "I better make sure there's nothing that can be treated" in that there are so many disorders and illnesses that can present with or cause extreme fatigue.
In 1988, after suffering mysterious symptoms and debilitating fatigue, Ms. Covert learned about CFS and determined that was what she had. "From then on, for the next 20 years, it became something I just learned to deal with and manage," she said.
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M.S.Medina
Posted on 05/18/2007 at 11:05:00 PM