Georgetown Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center, and Division of Rheumatology, Immunology, and Allergy, Department of Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia 20007, USA
The symptom of chemical intolerance may occur in isolation,
but often occurs in conjunction with other chronic symptoms
such as pain, fatigue, memory disturbances, etc. This frequent
clustering of symptoms in individuals has led to the definition
of several chronic multisymptom syndromes, such as multiple
chemical sensitivity, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome,
and Gulf War illnesses. The aggregate research into these syndromes
has suggested some unifying mechanisms that contribute to symptomatology.
Multiple lines of evidence suggest that there is aberrant function
of numerous efferent neural pathways, such as the autonomic
nervous system and hypothalamic-pituitary axes, in subsets of
individuals with these conditions. There is perhaps the greatest
evidence for abnormal sensory processing in these syndromes,
with a low "unpleasantness threshold" for multiple types of
sensory stimuli. Psychological and behavioral factors are known
to play a significant role in initiating or perpetuating symptoms
in some persons with these illnesses. In the field of pain research,
the interrelationship between physiologic and psychologic factors
in symptom expression has been well studied. Using both established
and novel methodologies, studies have suggested that psychologic
factors such as hypervigilance and expectancy are playing a
relatively minor role in most individuals with fibromyalgia
and that clear evidence exists of physiologic amplification
of sensory stimuli. These studies need to be extended to more
sensory tasks and to larger numbers of subjects with related
conditions. It is of note, though, that existing data on this
spectrum of illnesses would suggest that there may be greater
psychologic contributions to symptomatology if an illness is
defined in part by behavior (e.g., avoidance of chemical exposures)
rather than on the basis of symptoms alone.