What I found annoying is the promotion of CBT and GET in this study.
Even with these mixed results, extraversion is a potentially important factor in understanding how CFS develops and is sustained in individuals because extraversion correlates with subjective well-being [29–32] and guiding a person to act in a more extraverted manner can increase subjective well-being [33]. Such an effect, along with the positive effects of extraversion on exercise behavior [24–26], may explain some of the benefits of cognitive behavioral and graded exercise therapies in CFS [34–36]. That is, acting in an extraverted way may have a “navigational effect” that positively alters the daily experience of fatigue, pain, and associated negative mood states described by people with CFS.
Why make "subjective well-being" the aim? If one is treating Cancer, say, the size of the tumour is the most important thing, rather than "subjective well-being".
Regarding CBT, studies like the three looked at in Wiborg et al. (2010) suggest people aren't necessarily more active in total. So very speculative.
The slight attenuation of the effect in MZ compared to DZ pairs suggests that the association between low extraversion and both definitions of chronic fatigue may be somewhat confounded by familial factors. Nevertheless, the strong association that remained in the MZ pairs, even when controlling for shared genetics, is consistent with the hypothesis that, to an important degree, extraversion affects fatigue, fatigue affects extraversion, and the relationship may be mutually reinforcing, regardless of the initial direction of causation.
There was no evidence in this study that I could see that showed the relationship was reinforcing. This part is taken from the results section - if they want to speculate, I think it would have been better in the discussion section to make it clear what was and wasn't found.
These results may have important implications for clinical interventions for people with CFS. Considerable evidence suggests that extraverted individuals tend to achieve greater levels of subjective well-being than introverted individuals [30, 31]. Self-reports and spousal reports of dispositional extraversion and overall positive affect have shown reasonably robust correlations that vary in the range of 0.10 to 0.70 [29, 32] across various ages and cultures [46]. Evidence also indicates that guiding introverted people toward acting as if they were extraverted can increase subjective well-being [33]. That is, positive affect tends to follow on what individuals do regardless of what traits they have or who they are [33, 47]. Therefore, this navigational effect of “doing” may positively alter a person’s daily experience of fatigue and well-being. Clinically, therapeutic efforts can capitalize on this effect to reverse the slide toward greater introversion in everyday life —an outcome to which individuals with CFS may be prone. Consistent with this approach, several randomized clinical trials have demonstrated that cognitive–behavioral and graded exercise interventions that focus on increasing social and physical activity are efficacious in lowering fatigue and improving physical function in people with CFS [36, 48–54]. In addition, higher extraversion has also been shown to predict positive response to both antidepressant medication and cognitive– behavioral interventions [34, 35].
Again, is one interested in "subjective well-being" or actually treating the illness? Making people more extraverted might mean they don't self-report as ill, but that's not dealing with the core illness.
Also, CBT and graded activity programs doesn't necessarily mean people do more in total.
An alternative interpretation of this is that graded activity-oriented CBT and graded activity programs do make people more extraverted and that could wholly or partly explain some subjective improvements reported (without objective improvements).
Concluding paragraph:
In conclusion, we found that higher emotional instability and lower extraversion were linked to chronic fatigue, such that emotional instability acted through shared genetic mechanisms and extraversion acted primarily through a bidirectional, causal pathway. Behavioral prevention and intervention strategies can be used to mitigate or reverse the development and maintenance of CFS and other fatiguing illness. Taking an extraverted approach in day-to-day interactions may have a “navigational” effect that lowers morbidity and improves subjective well-being and functioning in people who suffer from chronic fatigue.
I'm pretty sure extraversion hasn't been measured before and after CBT or GET in CFS, so what they are saying is all very speculative, particularly for a concluding paragraph. Similarly, going the other way, there are no specific studies mentioned showing that any intervention that caused people with CFS to be more extraverted, improved scores.
I've just noticed in the abstract, they also have this in the conclusions section:
Whereas emotional instability and chronic fatigue are linked by shared genetic mechanisms, the relationship with extraversion may be causal and bidirectional.
They've produced no evidence that it was bidirectional. All they found was a correlation/association between the two.