2014
DOI: 10.1037/neu0000025
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Cognitive functioning in people with chronic fatigue syndrome: A comparison between subjective and objective measures.

Abstract: There is little evidence for a relationship between subjective and objective measures of cognitive functioning for both people with CFS and healthy controls, which suggests that they may be capturing different constructs. Problems with memory and attention in everyday life are a significant part of CFS. Depression appears to be related to subjective problems but does not fully explain them.

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Cited by 54 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…However, significant correlations are reported between cognitive failures and performance on ecological measures of attention and memory 19 . Then, cognitive traits may influence cognitive failures in everyday life, yet those cognitive failures not always will be a reflection of the cognitive performance since they are transient, as seen in other studies 20,21 . This is in accordance with our results, where moderate correlations between the flexibility component and the cognitive failures would reflect an association and not a perfect superposition of this cognitive domain with a more complex behavioral concept.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…However, significant correlations are reported between cognitive failures and performance on ecological measures of attention and memory 19 . Then, cognitive traits may influence cognitive failures in everyday life, yet those cognitive failures not always will be a reflection of the cognitive performance since they are transient, as seen in other studies 20,21 . This is in accordance with our results, where moderate correlations between the flexibility component and the cognitive failures would reflect an association and not a perfect superposition of this cognitive domain with a more complex behavioral concept.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 88%
“…The MASQ has been validated by comparing self-reported difficulties with the results of objective neuropsychological tests [21]: Patients with CFS [31] and FM [17] demonstrate cognitive impairments, and the alignment between subjective and objective measures of cognitive problems has been acceptable in patients with FM [17], but has not been robust in patients with CFS [32]. Future research could complement self-report data by the inclusion of neuropsychological testing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If these patients are treated with antibiotics, any benefits might be explained by a placebo effect, 116 or by anciliary effects (such as anti-inflammatory activity) of the antimicrobial drug(s). [117][118][119] The third group have no history of Lyme disease, but their serum is positive for B. burgdorferi antibodies. Such patients should be informed about the low clinical relevance of their seropositivity and, thus, the low likelihood of benefit from antibiotic therapy.…”
Section: Chronic Lyme Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%