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7/6/2012 1 Fatigue Fatigue July 2012 Wendy Kohatsu MD Director, Integrative Medicine Fellowship Santa Rosa Family Medicine Residency With thanks to Alan McDaniel, MD Patient cases Patient cases 40 yo woman, c/o 6 weeks of debilitating fatigue, memory lapses, mom of 3, 16 mo son “difficult” sleeper, gets up 2-3x/night, h/o HTN since age 25 (before 1 st child) – on labetalol 100 mg BID, heavy menses. Husband laid off. 20 yo woman, h/o fatigue, since age 17, also dx’d with cyclic vomiting d/o, for which she takes vicodin and benzos, reports nl menses, BMI 17 33 yo male, typically high achiever, in stressful residency, finds his energy, exercise tolerance, concentration are not the same. Definitions Definitions 3 components Perception of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity to maintain normal activity Mental fatigue - difficulty with concentration, memory, and emotional stability Clinical approach to fatigue Clinical approach to fatigue 1. Tackle the low-hanging diagnostic “fruit” first Standard tests to r/o known medical disease 2. Address psychologic factors 3. Difficult cases – keep climbing the tree.. Adrenal Thyroid function Hormone balancing Mitochondrial Differential Diagnosis Differential Diagnosis Psychologic Depression Anxiety Somatization d/o Drug addiction/wd Seasonal affective d/o Pharma Hypnotics Antihypertensives Antidepressants Antihistamines Endocrine Hypothyroidism DM Pituitary insufficiency Adrenal insufficiency Chronic renal fx Hepatic fx Heme Anemia Iron deficiency Differential Diagnosis (cont.) Differential Diagnosis (cont.) Cardiopulmonary CHF COPD Sleep apnea Infectious TB HIV Mononucleosis CMV Musculoskeletal Rheumatic dx Chronic pain (inadequately treated) Dental disease “Idiopathic” Chronic fatigue CFS Fibromyalgia
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Page 1: Patient cases Fatigue - Santa Rosa Family Medicine … of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity

7/6/2012

1

FatigueFatigue

July 2012

Wendy Kohatsu MD

Director, Integrative Medicine Fellowship

Santa Rosa Family Medicine Residency

With thanks to Alan McDaniel, MD

Patient casesPatient cases

� 40 yo woman, c/o 6 weeks of debilitating fatigue, memory lapses, mom of 3, 16 mo son “difficult” sleeper, gets up 2-3x/night, h/o HTN since age 25 (before 1st child) – on labetalol 100 mg BID, heavy menses. Husband laid off.

� 20 yo woman, h/o fatigue, since age 17, also dx’dwith cyclic vomiting d/o, for which she takes vicodin and benzos, reports nl menses, BMI 17

� 33 yo male, typically high achiever, in stressful residency, finds his energy, exercise tolerance, concentration are not the same.

DefinitionsDefinitions

� 3 components

◦ Perception of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings

◦ Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity to maintain normal activity

◦ Mental fatigue - difficulty with concentration, memory, and emotional stability

Clinical approach to fatigueClinical approach to fatigue

1. Tackle the low-hanging diagnostic “fruit” first� Standard tests to r/o known medical disease

2. Address psychologic factors

3. Difficult cases – keep climbing the tree..� Adrenal

� Thyroid function

� Hormone balancing

� Mitochondrial

Differential DiagnosisDifferential Diagnosis

� Psychologic

◦ Depression

◦ Anxiety

◦ Somatization d/o

◦ Drug addiction/wd

◦ Seasonal affective d/o

� Pharma

◦ Hypnotics

◦ Antihypertensives

◦ Antidepressants

◦ Antihistamines

� Endocrine

◦ Hypothyroidism

◦ DM

◦ Pituitary insufficiency

◦ Adrenal insufficiency

◦ Chronic renal fx

◦ Hepatic fx

� Heme

◦ Anemia

◦ Iron deficiency

Differential Diagnosis (cont.)Differential Diagnosis (cont.)

� Cardiopulmonary

◦ CHF

◦ COPD

◦ Sleep apnea

� Infectious

◦ TB

◦ HIV

◦ Mononucleosis

◦ CMV

� Musculoskeletal

◦ Rheumatic dx

◦ Chronic pain (inadequately treated)

◦ Dental disease

� “Idiopathic”

◦ Chronic fatigue

◦ CFS

◦ Fibromyalgia

Page 2: Patient cases Fatigue - Santa Rosa Family Medicine … of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity

7/6/2012

2

PsychologicPsychologic factors are important factors are important to addressto address� 60-80 % of patients with chronic fatigue have psychiatric diagnosis – depr, panic attacks, somatization.

� Recent study, only 46% co-presentation

� Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) most effective therapy

� Also internet-based CPT shown to be effective in teens with CFS

Ciba Found Symp. 1993;173:23Psychol Med. 2012 May 9:1-6.Clin Psychol Psychother. 2011 Oct 9Lancet 2012; 379:1412-1418

Cognitive Behavioral TherapyCognitive Behavioral Therapy

� Basically, re-framing your thoughts.

◦ changing maladaptive thinking leads to change in affect and in behavior.

• Replace overgeneralizing, magnifying negatives, and catastrophizing (i.e. “every morning is horrible”)

•With more realistic and effective thoughts, thus decreasing self-defeating feelings and behavior

•Resource: The Feeling Good Handbook, David Burns, MD.

Workup of patient with fatigueWorkup of patient with fatigue

� History, history, history

◦ Including occupation, meds, OTCs, stressors

� Don’t forget ROS� Gyn – menorrhagia, Endo- cold/hot intolerance

� Pulm – snoring.

� Basic labs

◦ CBC, CMP (glucose, lytes, LFTs), TSH

◦ Ferritin

◦ Vitamin D, 25-OH

BMJ. 2003;326(7399):1124.

Why ferritin?Why ferritin?

� Iron deficiency even w/o anemia can impair: ◦ Exercise tolerance◦ School performance – kids with iron deficiency had > 2x risk of scoring below average

� 8.7% iron deficient GIRLS age 12-16, BUT ONLY 1.5% had abnormal RBC values

� Supplement iron in fatigued, non-anemic pt?◦ Study: 144 women , age 18 -55, low/borderline ferritin/ nl RBC. ◦ 80 mg elemental FeS04 vs. placebo x 1 month◦ 29 vs 13 pts had signif improvement

Peds 2001;107:1831Am Fam Phys 2007;75: 671BMJ. 2003;326(7399):1124.

Food sources of ironFood sources of iron

Heme-source Mg Iron

Chicken liver 3 oz 11.0

Oysters 5.7

Lean chuck beef, 3 oz

3.1

Turkey – dark, 3 oz 2.0

Tuna canned light, 3 oz

1.3

NON-heme Mg Iron

Iron-fortified cereal or oatmeal

18.0

Soybeans, boiled, 1 c 8.8

Lentils, boiled 1 c 6.6

*Blackstrap molasses, 1 T 3.6

Black beans, boiled 1 c 3.6

Cooked spinach, ½ c 3.2

Tomato paste, ¼ c 2.0

Raisins, ½ c 1.615-35% absorption

2-20% absorptionImproved with vitamin C and meat proteins

RDA: Adult women = 18 mg/dayAdult men and postmenopausal = 8 mg/day

Page 3: Patient cases Fatigue - Santa Rosa Family Medicine … of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity

7/6/2012

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Outside the allopathic box…Outside the allopathic box…

� Nutrition

◦ Food insecurity

◦ Malabsorption (consider effect of acid suppression)

◦ Avoid caffeine energy swings

◦ Glycemic index/load

◦ Adequate intake of B6, B12, magnesium, EFA’s

14

Outside the allopathic boxOutside the allopathic box… (cont.)… (cont.)

� Exercise

◦ Ask about Post-workout fatigue

◦ LACK of exercise induces symptoms common to chronic fatigue syndrome

� Depression, fatigue, pain

� Reduced cortisol and reduced NK cell activity

◦ Graded exercise therapy

� One of few proven therapies for CFS –(start with walking to tolerance and increase prn)

J BehavTher Exp Psych 2002; 33:203Med J Aust 2004; 180:444J Psychsom Res 2004; 57(4):391

Functional Medicine Functional Medicine –– to address “highto address “high--

hanging” fruithanging” fruit

� Hypothalamic dysfunction– address this first

◦ Disordered Sleep

◦ Hormonal insufficiency

◦ Low body temperature

◦ Neural-mediated hypotension

� Adrenal Insufficiency

� Hypothyroidism ~ functional approach*

� Estrogen/Progesterone/Testosterone

� Mitochondrial dysfunction

Teitelbaum J. in Integrative Medicine, 3rd Ed. 2012 Rakel D, editor

Functional MedicineFunctional Medicine

� Hypothalamic dysfunction– address first◦ Disordered Sleep

◦ Hormonal insufficiency

◦ Low body temperature

◦ Neural-mediated hypotension

� Adrenal Insufficiency

� Hypothyroidism ~ functional approach*

� Estrogen/Progesterone/Testosterone

� Mitochondrial dysfunction

Teitelbaum J. in Integrative Medicine, 3rd Ed. 2012 Rakel D, editor

Hypothalamic dysfunctionHypothalamic dysfunction

� 4 major functions� Sleep/Circadian rhythm

� Hunger & thirst

� Body temperature

� Neurohormones via pituitary

– H.P.A. axis

� Premise: hypothalamus requires proportionally more energy for its function.

� Proper sleep is critical to ‘resetting’ hypothalamus

Page 4: Patient cases Fatigue - Santa Rosa Family Medicine … of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity

7/6/2012

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SLEEPSLEEP

◦ *Sleep history:

� Include shift work

� Hours of sleep, Time to bed/ awakening time

� Trouble going to sleep, or staying asleep

◦ Sleep Rx tips

� 7 -9 hours

� “Early to bed, early to rise”

� BEST SLEEP from 10 pm – 2 am

◦ Sleep resources

� www.srfmr.org� “Sleep Well” sleep hygiene

Sleep RxSleep Rx

� Avoid benzos� Herbal◦ L-theanine 50 -200 mg

� Induces alpha brainwave activity

◦ Valerian 300 -600 mg� Improves sleep quality� Can take 1 -2 weeks� Comparable efx to some benzos

◦ Passionflower 90 mg

� Supplements◦ Magnesium 500 – 1000 mg (clinical trials)/day

� Am J Med Sci 1962;243:758� J Am Coll Nutr 1990; 9:48� Bharadvaj D, 2008, Natural Treatments for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Biol Psychol 2007; 74:39Hadley S., Petry J.J.:Valerian. Am Fam Physician 2003; 67:1755-1758.(Passionflower) Altern Complement Ther 2003.89-92.

Sleep Rx: Sleep Rx: PharmaPharma

� As temporary ‘crutch’

� Slippery slope to chronic use…

� Least disruptive to stage 3-4 sleep:

◦ Zolpidem 5-10 mg qhs

◦ Gabapentin 300 mg 1-2 tabs qhs

◦ Trazodone, 50 mg (esp if + anxiety)

◦ Amitriptyline – low dose, 10 – 50 mg

Role of Adrenal glandsRole of Adrenal glands

� Regulate:

◦ Energy production – controls carb, protein, and fate conversion to blood glucose

◦ Fluid and electrolyte balance

◦ Fat storage

◦ Sex hormone production – esp after menopause/andropause

� ANY major stressor can trigger adrenal fatigue – long period of mental stress, one severe stress, serious illness/infection.

2011 AAEM McDaniel - Adrenal

Maladaptive adrenal Maladaptive adrenal stress responsesstress responses

Chronic Stress:

After weeks of severe situational stress, pituitary gonadotropin production is inhibited:

• Women stop menstruating and

• Men’s testosterone drops.

• PTSD patients have the same low cortisol as over-trained marathon runners (over-trained athlete syndrome).

Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2000 Jan; 25(1):1-35

Adrenal “Fatigue”Adrenal “Fatigue”

� Stuck in vast gray zone between◦ Addison’s disease (adrenal depletion)

◦ Cushing’s Syndrome (adrenal excess)

�When is “normal”, not normal?◦ Postulate there is spectrum of manifestations

� Adaptation to chronic stress (Hans Selye)◦ Phases: Alarm �Resistance �Exhaustion

◦ Sx: Decreased ability to deal with stress, cortisol depletion, early aging

◦ Affects adrenal cortex-

Page 5: Patient cases Fatigue - Santa Rosa Family Medicine … of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity

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2011 AAEM McDaniel - Adrenal

The Adrenal Gland: Normal function The Adrenal Gland: Normal function

Cortisol is the top priority hormone.

• Every human cell has a cortisol receptor.

• The adrenal gland makes a lot of cortisol

- one of the few truly essential hormones.

- 100 to 1,000 times more than aldosterone

•Available to physicians in the early ‘50s.

• First for patients dying of Addison’s disease

•promptly, miraculously restored.

•Oral replacement dose for Addison's disease is 25–30 mg cortisol daily.

Adrenal testingAdrenal testing

� Plasma free cortisol◦ 8:00 am [15-22 mg/dL] usu 2-25

◦ 4:00 pm [10-14 mg/dL]

� Salivary cortisol testing◦ Four point on graph: 8 am, noon, 4 pm, 10 pm

� 24-hour urinary cortisol ◦ Suspect adrenal dysfunction if in lower1/3 of

normal

◦ Expanded profile can detect metabolism errors (but costs ~ $212)

Adrenal Rx:Adrenal Rx:

� Proper nutrition

◦ No caffiene, high quality carbs,

◦ Eat regular meals

� Supplements:

◦ Vitamin C – 2000 gm

◦ B-complex – thiamine, B3, B5, B6, B12

◦ Magnesium – 500 -1000 mg

◦ Omega 3 fish oils – 1-3 gm

Clin Clim Acta 1975; 65:251Altern Med Review 2009; 14(2):114-140 **excellent reviewNutrition 2005;21:705

Adrenal Rx Adrenal Rx -- AdaptogenicAdaptogenic herbsherbs

Rhodiola rosea

� Demonstrated effects in cortex and hypothalamus

� Seems to prevent depletion of adrenal catecholamines.

� Signif improvement in HAM-A, decreased stress-related fatigue, and salivary cortisol

� Physicians on night-duty

� 50 mg bid of standardized extract – improved psychomotor fxn, mental performance and well-being

Med Physiol 1987;40:85Altern Med Review 2009; 14(2):114-140 **excellent reviewJ Altern Complement Med 2008;14:175Phytomedicine 2000; 7:85

Adrenal Rx Adrenal Rx -- AdaptogenicAdaptogenic herbsherbs

◦ Siberian Ginseng (Eleutherococcus senticosis)� Most extensively used in Russia� Review of >2000 pts shows better tolerance to physical and mental stress, and preserved work fxn

◦ Korean ginseng (Panax ginseng spp.)� Animal studies support effect on HPA axis� Limited human studies

◦ Licorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra)� Binds to glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid receptors, weak mimick

� Can spare cortisol by extending its half-life� Dose: 0.7 g/day glycyrrhizic acid

Econ Med Plant Res 1985;1:156-215Drugs Exp Clin Red 1996;22:323Endocrinol Jpn 1967;14:39

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Adrenal RxAdrenal Rx

� Also LAUGHTER

Adrenal glandular RxAdrenal glandular Rx

� Subject of controversy…

� Give adrenal extracts – dried bovine, or porcine adrenal glands (w/o adrenaline = banned substance)

� Why? Theory: give back building blocks needed for repair

� Brands: ◦ MetagenicsAdrenogen®� raw bovine adrenal concentrate + B6+pantothenic acid

� 1-3 tabs q am

◦ CytozymeAD, Biotics

Even more radical… or sane?Even more radical… or sane?

� Give body back cortisol (hydrocortisone)

� NOT prednisone

� 1 mg prednisone = 5 mg hydrocortisone

� Start with LOW DOSE hydrocortisone

◦ 2.5 mg in am

◦ 2.5 mg at noon

JefferiesW.M.: Safe Uses of Cortisol. 2nd ed.. Springfield, IL, Charles C Thomas, 1996.Arch Intern Med. 1967;119(3):265-278.

2011 AAEM McDaniel - Adrenal

The adrenal cortex responds with cortisol.•Increases available energy

- increases blood sugar production

- reduces conversion of amino acids to protein

- mobilizes free fatty acids;

• Increases the metabolism, including

- respiratory rate, - heart rate,

- cardiovascular tone - blood pressure

• Sharpens brain function:

- aroused and more vigilant

• Enhances normal immune function

2011 AAEM McDaniel - Adrenal

The Adrenal Gland: Treatment The Adrenal Gland: Treatment

Criticism of cortisol therapy:

Prior studies of “low-dose” treatment for CFS gave more than physiological dose:

•We make 25–30 mg hydrocortisone daily.

- this equals 5 mg Prednisone.

• “Low-dose” studies gave Prednisone ≥7.5 mg

-That is not a low dose!

Resulting adrenal suppression in 12 of 30.

Functional hypothyroidism**Functional hypothyroidism**

� Pt with fatigue, weight gain, thinning hair, menstrual irregularity, dry skin, mood swings, but “normal” TSH of 2.9.

� Hint:

◦ If classic sx present, treat to low normal TSH range 0.5 – 1.4

◦ Check also free T4, total T3/reverse T3 ratio

Page 7: Patient cases Fatigue - Santa Rosa Family Medicine … of generalized weakness --inability to initiate activity, in the absence of objective findings Easy fatiguability - reduced capacity

7/6/2012

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Patient casesPatient cases

� 40 yo woman, c/o 6 weeks of debilitating fatigue, memory lapses, mom of 3, 16 mo son “difficult” sleeper, gets up 2-3x/night, h/o HTN since age 25 (before 1st child) – on labetalol 100 mg BID, heavy menses. Husband laid off.

� 20 yo woman, h/o fatigue, since age 17, also dx’dwith cyclic vomiting d/o, for which she takes vicodin and benzos, reports nl menses, BMI 17

� 33 yo male, typically high achiever, in stressful residency, finds energy, exercise tolerance, concentration not the same.

Patient casesPatient cases

� 40 yo mom –Rx: cognitive reframing (CBT), reassured with normal labs, TSH 1.03, Hgb 14, 24 urine cortisol – 27 [4 -50 mcg/24º] Still on labetalol, office BP 106-120/60-80.

� 20 yo woman, h/o fatigue, since age 17, also dx’dwith cyclic vomiting d/o… workup in progress.

� 33 yo male, high achieving resident. Started adrenal supplements, did very well with return of energy and function.

Another case…Another case… Mitochondrial dysfunctionMitochondrial dysfunction� Classic sx: Post-exercise fatigue◦ Up to 24 hours after exercise

� Mitochrondrial support – “magic 4” co-factors

1. D-ribose –� Krebs cycle metabolites: ATP, NADP = needs ribose� Rate-limiting compound of ATP production is ribose� Uncontrolled study – showed signif sx improvement� Dose: 5 grams tid to bid

2. Acetyl L-cartinine� Low in patients with CFS� Dose: 1000 mg/day� (body can make carnitine from lysine + vit C + B’s� Controlled study – for fibromyalgia

J Altern Complement Med. 2006 Nov;12(9):857-62.Clin Exp Rheumatol. 2007 Mar-Apr;25(2):182-8.

Mitochondrial dysfunctionMitochondrial dysfunction

Mitochrondrial support – “magic 4”

3. Co-enzyme Q10

� Critical mitochondrial and myocardium substrate

� Dose: 100 -200 mg/day

� Ubiquinol better absorbed than ubiquinone

4. Magnesium

� Critical co-factor for over 200 enzymatic functions in the body, incl. NT synthesis

� Dose: 150 – 500 mg/day

� Chelated form


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