Chronic Fatigue
What is Chronic Fatigue?
It is a state in which a person constantly feels tired, this tiredness does not go away despite having enough rest, and is constantly reluctant to start or continue a job or movement. It can be seen as physical (weakness, weakness), emotional (excessive sensitivity, reluctance) and mental (attention deficit, forgetfulness) fatigue. Some of these basic symptoms may be accompanied by chronic body pain, easy illness, palpitations, digestive disorders, weight changes, food sensitivities, excessive sweating.
Why Does It Happen?
It has become very common in our age. Since fatigue is continuous and affects daily life, it is considered a disease under the name of chronic fatigue syndrome. In terms of classical medicine, it is thought that psychological stresses, past infections and some vitamin and mineral deficiencies may be responsible, but it is stated that there are no definite causes.
From the perspective of regulation medicine, chronic fatigue syndrome occurs as a result of functional problems developing in the mitochondria, which are described as the energy centers of the cells. The chronic stresses experienced are responsible for this. These stresses experienced can be physical stresses such as surgeries, accidents, diseases, posture disorders, scars, chemical stresses such as vitamin and mineral deficiencies, malnutrition, heavy metal and acid accumulations in the body, as well as psychological trauma and stress.
How is it diagnosed?
If the person has complaints such as constantly feeling tired, not wanting to start and continue any work, not resting despite sleeping, some classical test scales are applied. Those who meet the test criteria are diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome.
How is Chronic Fatigue Treated?
Since the cause is not clear from the perspective of classical medicine, painkillers, vitamins, anti-depressants, antibiotics are given to reduce the symptoms. Behavioral therapies and psychotherapies are also recommended treatments.
What is important in terms of Regulation Medicine is to determine the person’s stress load. For this, the patient should be examined from a neural therapy perspective and the stress loads should be determined with bioinformative analyzes. A treatment plan is drawn according to the stress loads found.
With neural therapy, problematic body areas that have developed due to past illnesses are normalized, and the healthy functioning of the vegetative nervous system and hormonal system is restored.
The patient’s psychological stress is treated with homeopathy, microsystem acupuncture and psychokinesiological approach.
An effective detox program is applied by determining the toxins accumulated in the connective tissue.
The patient’s nutrition and nutritional supplements are arranged according to their needs. Since NADH, Coenzyme Q-10, B12, C, D vitamins and Magnesium are especially important in chronic fatigue, the patient’s needs should be analyzed and those that are deficient should be supplemented.
With holistic regulation medicine approaches, most patients can get rid of chronic fatigue.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Deficiencies in vitamin B12, vitamin D, and magnesium can contribute to chronic fatigue; supplements should be taken under specialist supervision.
Chronic fatigue can result from physical stresses (surgeries, accidents, posture problems), chemical stresses (nutrient deficiencies, heavy metals, toxin accumulation), psychological stress, and functional problems in the mitochondria, which are the energy centers of cells.