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Original Article

Trial of a Selective Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitor, Galanthamine Hydrobromide, in the Treatment of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

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Pages 35-54 | Published online: 04 Dec 2011
 

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to search for a means of diminishing the plight of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) and to test the hypothesis that central to the pathogenesis of CFS is a cholinergic defect. Forty-nine patients who fulfilled consensus criteria for CFS were treated with the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, galanthamine hydrobromide. Thirty-nine patients finished the study according to the protocol with 43% reporting 50% improvement in fatigue, myalgia and sleep and 70% reporting 30% improvement whereas patients in the placebo group reported only 10% improvement in the same parameters of CFS. The improvement of patients on galanthamine was in most cases gradual and reached significance for the group only after four to eight weeks. The improvement was stable, and no patients who reported over 50% improvement on galanthamine relapsed to a pretrial level of any symptom. One of the most surprising effects was the dramatic improvement of sleep disturbances that occurred in most patients on this medication: more than 60% of the patients who finished the study reported over 70% improvement in sleep deficit. If the subjective report by patients can be proved by objective means, this would be the first demonstration of a drug that can be used to correct a sleep disturbance that also influences a specific stage in normal sleep. The most common adverse effect of galanthamine, as given in this study, was nausea that was dose-dependent and reversible. Galanthamine hydrobromide is relatively safe and appears to be an effective medication against many symptoms of CFS. But the positive results of this study have to be interpreted cautiously because of methodological limitations of this trial. First, this study was originally organized as a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial but was changed to an optional crossover after two weeks of treatment. Also, the adverse effects of the active drug in 30% of patients could compromise the double-blind. With these limitations in mind, it is nevertheless tempting to conclude that this study lends an indirect support to our hypothesis that a cholinergic deficit may play a role in the pathogenesis of the syndrome.

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