Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a growing public health problem worldwide. According to worldwide estimates, this ailment ...
NIH has an historic opportunity to transform post-viral illness research by bringing ME/CFS into its long Covid RECOVER ...
Feeling extra tired? A new study suggests COVID-19 could be the culprit. People who have had COVID-19 are m ore likely to ...
A study suggests that catching COVID-19 significantly raises the risk of developing ME/CFS (formerly called "chronic fatigue ...
A new study being conducted in part by University of Utah Health shows COVID-19 infection is associated with a nearly ...
A new study found that people who have had COVID-19 are more likely to develop chronic fatigue syndrome. A researcher and ...
Diandra DeFreitas achieved one of her biggest dreams in life: becoming a mother. However, this dream came with complications ...
TUESDAY, Jan. 21, 2025 (HealthDay News) -- COVID-19 appears to increase a person’s risk of developing chronic fatigue syndrome. People who’ve caught COVID are nearly five times more likely to develop ...
Risk of long COVID is higher in women and a link between SARS-CoV-2 infection and development of ME/CFS is shown, according ...
A decision to cancel a planned update of a Cochrane systematic review of exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome has ...
SALT LAKE CITY — The virus associated with COVID-19 increases the risk of chronic fatigue syndrome by almost eight times, according to a study recently completed by University of Utah Health.
"We still have no definitive idea of the risks involved in pregnancy for women with chronic fatigue syndrome. The suggestion that it's okay to be pregnant is not yet substantiated by science.