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    Chronic Lyme disease, post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS)

    "Experts warn that celebrity tell-alls and rampant “pseudoscience” surrounding Lyme is fuelling misdiagnoses. “Lyme disease has been plagued with misinformation for decades,” said Andrea Love, the executive director of the American Lyme Disease Foundation. “Unfortunately, there are instances of...
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    Oculomotor Behaviour in Individuals with Long COVID-19, 2024, González-Vides et al.

    Some pathogens are known to have a tropism for cranial nerves (e.g cranial nerves such as cranial nerve VII in Bell's Palsy and cranial nerve VIII in some vestibular disorders.)
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    Chronic Lyme disease, post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS)

    Embarrassingly biased, IMO, if only because they open with the ALDF. Even the description of Lyme symptoms is comically skewed.
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    I don't believe I said I had any problem with exertion.
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    It's how the likes of the NIH employ words like "effort" that concern me, not how we interpret them.
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    I suspect this holds true for most diseases, from a cold or flu to Alzheimers and cancer, but you seldom see volition or effort summoned. Yes, but here is when I think we needlessly and worrisomely conflate volition and effort with exertion. But, yes, point taken, albeit with the rider that...
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    Fair, although I think the way we deal with the pysch exploitation is to simply reply "insinuations involving effort and volition in any disease should be invoked with great caution, if at all. The risk to prejudice the medical community far outweighs the possibility to inform it." As for...
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    Why do I get the impression we are not talking about the same thing? Regardless, I think the central truth of the problem is medical politics compounded by a lack of proper tools - and the spine to look - to reveal what is making and keeping us sick. I don't think many ME veterans would...
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    It's one thing to debate capability when it comes to most diseases. But I fear the lines blur when we venture into volition and effort. This may be even truer for illnesses like LC and ME. These and a handful of other contested diseases find themselves victims of a warped sort of medical...
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    Exhaustion in ME/CFS, what is it and what causes it - discussion thread

    Except for the effort part, which simply doesn't belong. People with channelopathies may have an involuntary block per se, but they still usually can exert normal effort; their muscles just don't respond as well. I have no clue what "sense of intolerability that prevents voluntary effort" might...
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    Resonant breathing improves self-reported symptoms and wellbeing in people with Long COVID 2024 Putrino et al

    I fear research like this can send the wrong message. Take some deep breaths, calm yourselves - and you'll feel better? Even if it has a transitory effect, it may well just be transitory. Whatever is causing the problem in the first place - as far as I can see - is not being resolved...
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    Long Covid: Where Things Stand: Washington post live show, July 25th 2024, 9AM USA East Coast time

    Jaime was so good. I could never have comported myself as well as she as sick as we are. She conveyed some complex concepts easily and engagingly.
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    Novel characterization of endogenous transient receptor potential melastatin 3 ion channels from Gulf War Illness participants 2024 Marshall-Gradisnik

    Maybe not landmark, but once again a curious concept, this one of acquired channelopathy, in that in many ways it fits into several contested diseases' sequelae - including ME/CFS and Gulf War. You'd think large scale replication efforts would have already been done, or at least attempted...
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    News from the USA, United States of America

    Yes. For me. at least, it could not be much worse. As with the NIH Eefrt bizarre weirdness, you have to ask, "Why"?
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    News from the USA, United States of America

    Yes. Agreed. But it's complicated by issues you don't necessarily see in ME/CFS (just as ME is beset by things you don't see in Lymeworld). One example is diagnostics. Let's say you dedicate all that $25 million to erecting a diagnostics' platform that actually identifies directly whether you...
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    News from the USA, United States of America

    I'm all for getting more money in an area that is seriously underfunded, and I applaud such efforts, especially successful ones. That being said, depending where that money goes, it could be little more than Groundhog Day.
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    News from the USA, United States of America

    Broadly speaking, yes, and - on paper at least - for longer. These (TBDs and ME/CFS) are in large part diseases whose narrative is politically derived and maintained
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    News from the USA, United States of America

    Allocating more money in theory is a positive. Respectfully, throwing that increase at more or less the same groups who have failed patients for almost a half a century doesn't strike me as "a pretty big deal" anywhere. If a few million more $'s were allocated for ME research and given to the...
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