FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Suzi
Prokell
(817)
598-1556
SCIENTISTS
FIND VIRAL LINK TO CHRONIC FATIGUE
Fibromyalgia and
Fatigue Centers continue successful treatments despite lack of common cure;
FFC medical director
to appear on “The Dr. Oz Show” to discuss chronic fatigue syndrome
DALLAS (October 20, 2009) – A new study
finds a virus, known as XMRV that has been linked to prostate cancer and AIDS,
appears to play a role in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
Although researchers have not
determined a direct cause and effect link, the Whittemore Peterson Institute in Nevada
found XMRV in the blood of 68 out of 101 CFS patients, but in only eight of 218
healthy people.
“This
study adds more to our understanding of chronic fatigue and I encourage the
researchers’ continued work,” said Dr. Jacob Teitelbaum, medical director for Fibromyalgia and Fatigue Centers,
which has treated more than 8,300 chronic fatigue patients nationwide. Dr. Teitelbaum will appear on “The Dr. Oz Show” on Friday, October 23rd
to discuss chronic fatigue. The show will air in nearly 200 markets across the
country.
CFS impairs the immune system and
causes incapacitating fatigue. Patients often suffer from flu-like symptoms
such as sore throat, joint and muscle pain, sore or swollen lymph nodes as well
as headaches, memory loss and difficulty concentrating.
A study by the Centers for Disease
Control showed that CFS is six to 10 times more common than previously
suspected, with approximately four to seven million people afflicted with
Chronic Fatigue and Immune Dysfunction Syndrome (CFIDS) in the U.S. alone. An
estimated 15 million Americans have fatigue-related issues and exhibit the
symptoms without a diagnosis.
Although the diagnosis of CFS can be
difficult -- a vast number of other diseases and illnesses having similar
contributing factors -- parameters now exist for earlier identification and
intervention, particularly at specialized care facilities such as the
Fibromyalgia and Fatigue Centers (FFC).
“I have often referred to chronic
fatigue as the ‘infection of the month club’ because there are so many opportunistic infections present in
CFS that are rare in those with a healthy immune system,” said Dr. Marcus
Spurlock, assistant medical director of FFC - Dallas. “In our routine testing
of CFS patients, we have found there are multiple infectious ‘hitchhikers’ that
find a way in -- including Chlamydia, pneumonia, intestinal viral infections,
mycoplasma and others.”
Despite the lack of a standard
treatment for CFS as was confirmed by the new study, FFC has developed its own
successful treatment protocol that treats the underlying causes linked to CFS, such
as multiple, chronic infections. The patient-centric, holistic approach --
treating the whole body as opposed to just the symptoms – can be broken down as
follows:
“Some of the underlying issues are important to treat individually,
using a customized and integrative approach, although we find many will resolve
when the overall process is treated with our protocol,” said Spurlock. “This approach
includes many antiviral options and shows a documented 50% improvement rate.”
Spurlock is encouraged by the recent
study because it further establishes the existence of chronic fatigue syndrome,
dismissively referred to by some, even in the medical community, as the “yuppie
flu.”
“Some misguided people
still choose to believe CFS is ‘all in people’s heads.’ This study, along with
dozens of others, simply confirms just how out of touch some in our profession
actually are. Perhaps we’ll someday see widespread acceptance by the medical
community of the disease’s existence and an end to invalidating the physical
nature of the illness and implying people are nuts because they exhibit
symptoms.”
Fibromyalgia & Fatigue Centers,
Inc. develops, operates and manages 14 outpatient “Centers of Excellence” in
the U.S. for the treatment and ongoing care of people diagnosed with
Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue & Immune Dysfunction Syndrome, and
Unrelenting Fatigue. Centers are currently open in Atlanta, Baltimore, Cleveland,
Dallas, Denver, Detroit, Fort Worth, Las Vegas, Norwalk, Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh, Portland, Raleigh, and Seattle with plans for future expansion. For
more information, please visit www.fibroandfatigue.com
or call (866) 443-4276.
###