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Ohio woman with epilepsy finds safety with her service dog: ‘Our bond is set in stone’

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Ohio woman with epilepsy finds safety with her service dog: ‘Our bond is set in stone’

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For the more than three million people in the U.S. who are living with epilepsy, the uncertainty of the next seizure’s appearance can create dangerous situations.

Now, for many people with the neurological disorder, specially trained service dogs have helped provide safety and peace of mind. 

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In a recent study published in Neurology, service dogs were found to reduce seizure frequency by 31% while also dramatically improving mental health and quality of life.

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Channing Seideman, 30, is one of those patients whose life has been changed by a dedicated service dog.

Born and raised in Aspen, Colorado, Seideman — who now lives in Milford, Ohio — was just 10 years old when she received her epilepsy diagnosis after having two major seizures.

Channing Seideman, pictured with her service dog, Bishop, said he’s given her peace of mind amid her daily epileptic seizures. (Channing Seideman)

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“Like any kid, I had big dreams of what I wanted to be when I grew up,” she said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

“I wanted to be a doctor, and I wanted to go to the Olympics and ride horses — and then I got diagnosed and life took a turn.”

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Dealing with epilepsy during middle school was a struggle, Seideman said.

Having always been a straight-A student, Seideman said she saw her grades plummet to straight Fs.

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“Middle school is kind of a blur, to be honest — we were just starting the medication combinations, and my seizures were becoming more and more frequent,” she recalled.

“At the time, I wanted nothing to do with epilepsy, so the idea of having a service dog next to my side wearing a vest that said ‘epilepsy’ … was kind of scary.”

High school was also a challenge, she said.

“Finding my place was difficult. So I really leaned hard on sports, horseback riding in particular, and animals.”

New best friend

Given Seideman’s love of animals, her parents thought she might be interested in a service dog — but at age 15, she was hesitant at first.

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“At the time, I wanted nothing to do with epilepsy, so the idea of having a service dog next to my side wearing a vest that said ‘epilepsy’ — making this disease visible — was kind of scary for me.”

Bishop, pictured here with his owner, is Seideman’s second service dog. “It was smooth sailing,” she said of the process. (Channing Seideman)

Her parents convinced her to put her name on the list, since there was a long wait time.

In Nov. 2010, Seideman was selected for a service dog. 

The family traveled to Canine Assistants in Alpharetta, Georgia, to take part in a training “boot camp” with Seideman’s first service dog, Georgie.

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Canine Assistants places service dogs with people who have a variety of conditions, primarily epilepsy.

“Nobody cares about the epilepsy. They just really like my dog.”

Thanks to a long-running partnership with UCB — a Belgian biopharmaceutical company committed to helping those living with epilepsy and rare seizure disorders — Canine Assistants is able to place dogs at no cost to the patients. 

“Two weeks later, Georgie was on the flight home with us, and a couple of days later, she was at school with me,” Seideman said.

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“I was wondering, ‘Is this going to make this disease more visible, or is it going to be a life-saver?’ And it turned out to be a life-saver.”

Seideman’s fears of the disease being magnified were unfounded.

“It became, ‘Channing who?’” she joked. “Now it was all about this cute and amazing dog.”

Jennifer Arnold, founder of Canine Assistants in Georgia, has been pairing patients with service dogs for 32 years. She said earlier is better: “There’s really no reason to wait.” (Canine Assistants)

Jennifer Arnold, the founder of Canine Assistants in Georgia, said there is often a hesitation among young people to get a service dog, as “nobody really wants to stand out.”

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Said Arnold, “You just want to fit in, and it feels like the dog’s going to make you not fit in.”

She has been working with service dogs for over 30 years, she told Fox News Digital.

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“But as Channing said, ‘Nobody cares about the epilepsy. They just really like my dog.’ The attention that she was getting was completely positive.”

When it comes to introducing service dogs to their owners, Arnold said, earlier is better.

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“There’s really no reason to wait,” she said.

“Bishop goes absolutely everywhere with me,” said Seideman, pictured here with her current service dog. When he needs to, he alerts her by placing his paws on her and looking intently at her face, she said. (Channing Seideman)

The dog’s mere presence changes the dynamics in a family for the better, according to Arnold.

Even so, the sensing of oncoming seizures and alerting an owner is the most important part of the service dog’s job.

Service dogs were found to reduce seizure frequency by 31% in a recent study.

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“Some dogs wake up at night and check on their people while they sleep,” Arnold said.

“They get nervous — they just want to be sure their owner is OK.”

Having a service dog also lowers the owner’s stress level, Arnold noted.

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“This results in a significant reduction in the number of seizures that patients have, because stress is a trigger,” she said.

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“So just having the dog with you reduces the number of seizures you have, which is pretty magical in itself.”

The dog can also help by protecting its owner during a seizure if it occurs in public, and going to find help if needed.

‘The dogs pick the people’

The team at Canine Assistants is skilled at determining which dog will likely do well with which person, Arnold said.

“But the bottom line is, people think they’re going to get to pick their dog, but it’s the exact opposite,” she said. 

“The dogs pick the people.”

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“People think they’re going to get to pick their dog, but it’s the exact opposite,” said Jennifer Arnold, the founder of Canine Assistants in Georgia. (Canine Assistants)

In a typical scenario, Arnold said, Canine Assistants may have four dogs in a camp that have the skills needed for a particular individual.

“The first three might greet the person politely, but the fourth dog might run in, like, ‘Where have you been? I’ve been waiting for you for so long,’” Arnold said.

“That’s what we call ‘a tab A in a slot B,’” she said. “You see it and it’s just done.”

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After Seideman’s first dog passed away, there was a nine-month period before she was matched with another dog.

During that time, she said, she and her parents realized how much they’d come to rely on Georgie.

“My parents were back to feeling panicked, listening for the ‘thud alert,’” she said. “If they heard a thud upstairs, they would worry it was me falling.”

Seideman, added, “They didn’t realize how much that extra set of ears, extra set of paws, had been doing.”

“In addition to bringing peace of mind, the dogs make epilepsy approachable to the public,” said Seideman, pictured with her service dog, Bishop. (Channing Seideman)

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It was a big relief when Seideman was placed with her current dog, Bishop. 

“It was pretty much smooth sailing,” she said. “Now, Bishop goes absolutely everywhere with me. Our bond is set in stone.”

To anyone considering getting a service dog, Seideman said she highly recommends it.

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“In addition to bringing peace of mind, the dogs make epilepsy approachable to the public,” she said.

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Epilepsy tends to carry a stigma, Seideman said — which is rooted in fear and misunderstandings.

“For example, one of the myths is that there’s only one type of seizure — the big, scary kind where you go unconscious, turn blue, convulse and foam at the mouth,” she said.

“In addition to bringing peace of mind, the dogs make epilepsy approachable to the public.”

Another myth, Arnold added, is that people should put something between the teeth of the person having a seizure to prevent them from swallowing their tongue.

“It is a very bad thing to do,” she warned — and it “could have significantly damaging consequences.”

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Having the dog with the person helps to provide a sense of comfort, Seideman said — “something that people can ask questions about, something they can approach. It makes the public comfortable.”

‘He lets me know’

These days, Seideman said she continues to have seizures daily.

Although she has had about 60-70 of the more major episodes — known as tonic-clonic seizures — since her diagnosis, most of them are smaller.

“I have seizures where I may kind of space out and daydream, which is an absence seizure,” she said. 

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“I also have seizures where I may have a jerk in the face, a mild clonic jerk, which can be scary if I’m crossing a street.”

That’s where Bishop comes into play, she said, as he senses what’s happening and stops her from crossing into the street.

“Some people get warnings before a seizure, like an aura,” Seideman said. “I don’t get that warning. I get Bishop. He lets me know.”

Seideman, who lives on a farm in Ohio, enjoys riding horses as her service dog monitors her and helps keep her safe. (Channing Seideman )

On the family’s 100-acre farm, while Seideman is caring for her horses, Bishop may suddenly come running to check on her, seeming to sense that something is amiss.

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“He has this instinct, and will stop whatever he is doing to check on me.”

Bishop alerts Seideman by jumping up and placing his paws on her — “It’s almost like he’s standing, so we’re face to face.”

                          

“It’s as if he’s saying, ‘Something’s going on. Pay attention to me.’”

She said, “I may not be having any seizures that I know about, but I could be having subclinical seizures that are only detected by a machine. So I always take Bishop’s word, because Bishop knows — he doesn’t make mistakes.”

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Although the wait list for service dogs is long, Arnold of Canine Assistants encourages people to apply.

“He has this instinct, and will stop whatever he is doing to check on me.”

“It’s not just first come, first serve,” she said. “Every applicant is evaluated based on how much the dog can do physically, socially, emotionally and medically, and how appropriate the placement is for the dog.”

She added, “Those factors are equally weighted with how much the dog can do to help.”

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Canine Assistants has also started testing a new in-home education program, called Handle With Care, that helps people raise and train their own service dogs.

“We’ve cracked the code and we know how to do this, so it’s crazy for people not to have the help they need.”

“The need is just tremendous,” Arnold emphasized. “And I can’t imagine being a mother whose child needs a dog but isn’t able to get one.”

The best part of Arnold’s job, she said, is when she gets to call a family and tell them they’ve been selected.

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“As soon as the people answer, I start crying because I’m so excited for them,” she said.

“Those are wonderful calls to make, and I wish we could make a lot more of them.”

Health

Frequent heartburn may be a warning sign of a more dangerous condition, doctor says

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Frequent heartburn may be a warning sign of a more dangerous condition, doctor says

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For most people, heartburn is an occasional annoyance and source of temporary discomfort. But for some, chronic heartburn can lead to more dangerous conditions — potentially even pre-cancerous ones.

About 10% of people with chronic gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) will develop Barrett’s esophagus, a condition where the lining of the lower esophagus is replaced with abnormal cells that are more prone to cancer, according to medical experts.

Some studies have shown that among those with Barrett’s esophagus, between 3% and 13% will go on to develop cancer, but most will not.

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When acid reflux becomes dangerous

“Your stomach is designed to handle acid. Your esophagus is not,” Dr. Daryl Gioffre, a Florida-based gut health specialist and certified nutritionist, told Fox News Digital.

About 10% of people with chronic acid reflux will develop Barrett’s esophagus, a condition where the lining of the lower esophagus is replaced with abnormal cells that are more prone to cancer. (iStock)

“With reflux, the danger is not the burn in the chest or throat — the real danger is the constant backflow of acid traveling the wrong way.”

In most people, the lower esophageal sphincter — which Gioffre refers to as the “acid gate” — keeps acid in the stomach, which is lined with thick mucus and specialized cells designed to protect it.

“With reflux, the danger is not the burn in the chest or throat — the real danger is the constant backflow of acid traveling the wrong way.”

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“But when the gate gets weak, it relaxes or stays slightly open, and acid slips back up the wrong way,” he said. This “gate” can weaken with magnesium deficiency, high stress, alcohol, poor sleep, dehydration and late-night snacking, all of which can disrupt healthy digestion.

When acid hits the esophagus, it irritates tissue that was never designed to withstand it, according to the doctor.

“Every time acid comes back up the wrong way, it injures the lining like a slow chemical burn,” said Gioffre, who is also the author of “Get Off Your Acid” and “Get Off Your Sugar.” Over time, that irritation erodes the lining, drives inflammation and can change the cells.

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“These new cells are no longer normal esophageal cells — they begin to shift into cells that look more like stomach lining, because those cells can tolerate the acid,” the doctor said. “That change is called metaplasia, or Barrett’s esophagus.”

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Once the cells start changing, the risk of further mutation goes up. If that process continues, Gioffre warned, it can progress to dysplasia, which is the stage right before esophageal cancer.

Some studies have shown that among those with Barrett’s esophagus, between 3% and 13% will go on to develop cancer. (iStock)

“So the real danger is not the heartburn you feel,” he summarized. “It is the repeated acid exposure forcing the esophagus to adapt in ways it was never designed to. Fixing reflux at the root stops this entire cascade before those cellular changes begin.”

Men at higher risk

Men generally have a higher risk because they burn through magnesium faster, tend to carry more visceral fat pushing upward on the stomach, eat heavier meals and snack late at night, Gioffre cautioned. These activities all weaken the acid gate and shut down healthy digestion. 

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“Eating within three hours of lying down almost guarantees the stomach does not empty, and that is one of the biggest drivers of nighttime reflux,” he said. “On top of that, men often ignore symptoms, or mask them with PPIs and antacids instead of fixing the root cause.”

All of these factors contribute to a “perfect storm” for chronic inflammation and long-term damage, according to Gioffre.

Warning signs

There are certain red flags that indicate when acid reflux has gone beyond an occasional annoyance and has progressed to constant and chronic. 

“If that burn becomes more frequent or more intense, or starts showing up even when you have not eaten, your body is waving a giant warning flag,” Gioffre said.

Difficulty swallowing, a feeling that food is “stuck,” chronic hoarseness, a constant cough, throat clearing or the feeling of a lump in the throat are all indicators that the acid is moving upward into areas it should never reach. (iStock)

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Difficulty swallowing, a feeling that food is “stuck,” chronic hoarseness, a constant cough, throat clearing or the feeling of a lump in the throat are all indicators that the acid is moving upward into areas it should never reach, according to the doctor. 

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“Ulcers in your throat, or even in your mouth, are another sign that the acid is doing real damage,” he warned. 

“Another major warning sign is when reflux goes from something you notice occasionally to something you feel every day or every night, or when PPIs and antacids stop helping,” Gioffre said. “That usually means the lining is irritated and eroded, and may already be changing on a cellular level.”

Nighttime reflux is the most dangerous because the acid sits on the esophagus for hours, causing deep inflammation and long-term cellular changes, the doctor said. (iStock)

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Unexplained weight loss, vomiting blood and black stools are all serious symptoms that demand immediate attention, the doctor added.

“The bottom line: When reflux becomes consistent, chronic and starts impacting swallowing, your voice, or the tissues in your mouth or throat, it is no longer just a nuisance,” Gioffre told Fox News Digital. “That is the point where the esophagus may be moving toward a precancerous state, and men especially cannot afford to wait on it.”

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3 key ways to prevent reflux

Gioffre shared the following essential steps to preventing acid reflux and improving digestive health.

No. 1: Follow the 3-hour rule

“Stop eating three hours before bed,” the doctor recommends. “When you eat late, the stomach does not empty, pressure builds and the acid gate relaxes, guaranteeing that acid travels upward into your esophagus while you sleep.”

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Nighttime reflux is the most dangerous because the acid sits on the esophagus for hours, causing deep inflammation and long-term cellular changes, he warned. “This one rule alone can dramatically lower acid reflux and cancer risk.”

No. 2: Strengthen the acid gate

When stomach acid is low, the lower esophageal sphincter loses its tone, allowing acid to travel upward instead of staying in the stomach, Gioffre said.

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“The fastest way to tighten that gate is to build your mineral reserves, especially magnesium,” he said.

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The best way to do this is to load up on magnesium-rich foods like avocado, spinach, pumpkin seeds, chia seeds, quinoa and almonds, and consider adding a clean magnesium supplement.

No. 3: Remove or neutralize daily triggers

The fastest way to protect your esophagus, according to Gioffre, is to eliminate or neutralize the foods and habits that weaken the acid gate and push acid the wrong way.

For people who can’t fully eliminate these triggers, certain habits can help neutralize their impact by reducing acid strength and pressure before it reaches the esophagus.

The doctor recommends cutting back on alcohol and caffeine, both of which relax the acid gate and increase the risk of acid reflux. (iStock)

“Drinking most of your water earlier in the day helps, because pounding water at night stretches the stomach and relaxes the acid gate, making it much easier for acid to flow the wrong way once you lie down,” he said.

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He also recommends cutting back on alcohol and caffeine, both of which relax the acid gate instantly.

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Some other major triggers that fuel the reflux cycle include chocolate, spicy foods, garlic, onions, sugar, ultraprocessed foods and heavy nighttime meals, according to the doctor. 

“These foods and habits weaken the lower esophageal sphincter, drive up inflammation and push pressure upward,” he said. “That’s exactly how a little heartburn turns into chronic reflux, and slowly causes the kind of damage that puts the esophagus at risk for cancer.”

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Dairy consumption linked to lower dementia risk in surprising new study

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Dairy consumption linked to lower dementia risk in surprising new study

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A large Swedish study suggests that some high-fat dairy foods are linked to a lower risk of dementia.

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Researchers in Sweden used data from the Malmö Diet and Cancer cohort, which included 27,670 adults aged 45 to 73 in Malmö, Sweden.

The team then conducted interviews, collected food diaries, and asked the patients questionnaires to calculate how much of each dairy product people ate per day. They also separated dairy into high-fat and low-fat types. High-fat cheese was defined as more than 20% fat, and high-fat cream as more than 30% fat.

Participants joined the study between 1991 and 1996 and were followed for an average of 25 years afterward.

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People who consumed at least 20 grams per day of high-fat cream had about a 16% lower risk of all-cause dementia than non-consumers. (iStock)

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The main outcome they looked at was all-cause dementia, while Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) were studied separately. Over the follow-up period, 3,208 people developed dementia. Within these groups, those who consumed high-fat cheese were significantly less likely to develop dementia.

“We were a bit surprised to see a lower dementia risk among people who ate more high-fat cheese,” Emily Sonestedt, associate professor of nutritional epidemiology at Lund University in Sweden, told Fox News Digital.

At the same time, she says it isn’t entirely unexpected to see a link with vascular dementia.

Most other dairy products, including low-fat cheese, low-fat cream, milk and fermented milk, showed no consistent association with overall dementia risk. (iStock)

“Many dementia cases involve damage to small blood vessels in the brain. Our own previous work, and several international studies, including from the US, have shown neutral or slightly protective associations between cheese and cardiovascular disease.”

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The study adjusted for factors such as age, sex, education, smoking, physical activity, alcohol use, body mass index, hypertension, overall diet quality and other dairy products.

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People who ate at least 50 grams per day of high-fat cheese had a lower risk of all-cause dementia compared with those eating less than 15 grams per day. They also had a lower risk of vascular dementia.

High butter intake was associated with a higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease, while high-fat cheese was linked to lower Alzheimer’s risk only among people without the APOE ε4 genetic risk variant. (iStock)

High-fat cream showed a similar pattern: people consuming at least 20 grams per day had a 16% lower risk for all-cause dementia compared with non-consumers.

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Other dairy products did not show clear links with overall dementia risk. Low-fat cheese, low-fat cream, milk, fermented milk, and butter generally showed no association with all-cause dementia.

One exception was that high butter intake (at least 40 grams a day) was associated with a higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease. The study also found that high-fat cheese was linked to lower AD risk only among people who did not carry the APOE ε4 risk variant, a genetic variant linked to Alzheimer’s.

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This was an observational study, so it cannot show cause and effect, and unmeasured factors may still play a role.

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“The study was conducted in Sweden, where people mainly eat hard, fermented cheeses, so the results may not apply directly to countries with very different cheese types and eating patterns,” said Sonestedt.

Because the study was observational and diet was measured only once, the results should be interpreted cautiously and cannot be used to conclude that high-fat dairy prevents dementia. (iStock)

Diet was measured only once, so changes over time were not fully captured. Cream intake was measured with less precision than cheese.

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“Although we adjusted for many lifestyle and health factors, it is still difficult to say that the cheese itself is protective. It is more likely part of a broader eating pattern and lifestyle that may support long-term brain health,” researchers noted.

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Dementia diagnoses after 2014 were not validated in detail, and baseline cognitive status was not available. 

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Some dementia cases may have been missed, and the results are from a Swedish population, which may limit generalization.

The findings were published in Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

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Misunderstood illness leaves millions exhausted, with most cases undiagnosed

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Misunderstood illness leaves millions exhausted, with most cases undiagnosed

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Fatigue can stem from a variety of illnesses and life stressors, but when that exhaustion lasts for months — often following an infection — it may indicate a condition called chronic fatigue syndrome.

Approximately 3.3 million people in the United States currently have the syndrome, with about one in four people confined to their bed at some point during the illness, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Despite its prevalence, experts say it’s a poorly understood condition that physicians frequently miss, with past research suggesting that only about 15% of those affected are diagnosed correctly.

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What is chronic fatigue syndrome?

Formally known as myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a chronic disease that causes fatigue so severe that it impairs the ability to perform daily activities.

Approximately 3.3 million people in the United States currently have the chronic fatigue syndrome, with about one in four people confined to their bed at some point during the illness. (iStock)

The National Academy of Medicine defines the syndrome as having the following three symptoms that last at least six months.

  • Severe fatigue that is 1) new and 2) decreases the ability to perform activities that you did normally prior to illness
  • “Malaise” that worsens after physical or mental effort that previously was well-tolerated
  • Unrestful sleep

People may also experience trouble with thinking and memory (often called “brain fog”) or lightheadedness when standing up. 

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There are no tests to confirm chronic fatigue, so doctors diagnose it by talking to their patients, examining them and excluding other disorders, like hypothyroidism and depression, that often share the same symptoms.

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Chronic fatigue is frequently missed by physicians, with past research suggesting that only about 15% of those affected are diagnosed correctly. (iStock)

“CFS, fibromyalgia and long COVID are all related conditions with different names,” Dr. Jacob Teitelbaum, author of “From Fatigued to Fantastic” — whose research focuses on chronic fatigue syndrome — told Fox News Digital. “What these illnesses have in common is that they are immune disorders, and immune disorders predominantly affect women.”

Many genes related to immune disorders are on the X chromosome, suggesting a genetic component, the doctor added.

Causes of chronic fatigue

Chronic fatigue syndrome may be triggered by infection or other physiologic stressors, but its causes and symptoms can vary widely from person to person, according to Dr. Julia Oh, a professor in dermatology, molecular genetics and microbiology, and integrative immunobiology at the Duke University School of Medicine in North Carolina.

Teitelbaum compared the condition to a “severe energy crisis” in the body. When energy drops low enough, the “control center” in the brain — the hypothalamus, which regulates sleep, hormones, blood pressure and pulse — may not work as well.

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Although hypothalamic dysfunction can trigger dozens of other symptoms, the hallmark signs are insomnia (despite exhaustion), brain fog and widespread pain, the doctor said.

Anything that causes severe energy depletion can trigger the syndrome, including chronic life stressors, nutritional deficiencies, thyroid and stress hormone imbalances, and sleep problems.

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These triggers are usually associated with a gradual onset of CFS, but sudden onset can be caused by certain infections, with two classic ones being COVID and mononucleosis, past research has shown.

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Head and neck trauma and sudden hormonal shifts after pregnancy can also trigger chronic fatigue, Teitelbaum warned.

Anything that causes severe energy depletion can trigger the syndrome, including chronic life stressors, nutritional deficiencies, thyroid and stress hormone imbalances, and sleep problems, according to one doctor. (iStock)

There aren’t currently any blood tests to uniformly diagnose the syndrome, but Dr. Oh said she is hopeful that will change in the future.

Her research team developed an experimental artificial intelligence-based tool, BioMapAI, that has been shown to identify the condition with high accuracy by analyzing stool, blood and other common lab tests, according to early research published in July in the journal Nature Medicine.

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“Instead of finding one smoking gun for the disease, our AI model uncovered a distinct biological fingerprint that was dysregulated in the patients, which spanned changes in gut bacteria, hyperactive immune cells and disrupted metabolism,” Oh told Fox News Digital.

Treatments and therapies

Given how differently chronic fatigue syndrome can affect people, there is no universally effective therapy, according to Oh.

The CDC recommends that patients with CFS work with their doctors to create a management plan based on the symptoms that most affect quality of life.

There are no tests to confirm chronic fatigue, so doctors diagnose it by evaluating symptoms and excluding other disorders.

Treatments generally include a combination of lifestyle changes, therapies and medications. Patients and their physicians should weigh the potential benefits and risks of any approach.

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There are some alternative therapies that have shown to be effective for some. Teitelbaum developed a protocol called SHINE, which focuses on sleep, hormones and hypotension, infections, nutrition and exercise. Some research has shown that this approach can help to improve the quality of life for people with CFS and fibromyalgia.

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Others may find alternative treatments, like physiotherapy (physical therapy) to be helpful.

Those who experience persistent fatigue that hinders their ability to participate in regular activities or impacts their quality of life should speak with a doctor.

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