Explanation of the picture:
About the isolated factor:
https://twitter.com/BhupeshPrusty/status/1233719655602302982
https://twitter.com/BhupeshPrusty/status/1233722114932428800
About confirming the result with the nanoneedle assay:
https://twitter.com/BhupeshPrusty/status/1233682363449847809
I might be wrong but aluminium and neurotoxicity ring a bell in the following publications:
Amelioration of aluminum maltolate-induced inflammation and endoplasmic reticulum stress-mediated apoptosis by tannoid principles of Emblica officinalis in neuronal cellular model
Dhivya Bharathi, M...
Agh! I wish they had separated the definitions according to whether PEM is a required criterion. This would have been informative, though I'm not sure many studies have used the IOM, CCC or ICC criteria.
Is the Holmes (CDC-1988) definition much different than Fukuda (CDC-1994)? Both list PEM as...
There, I've edited all my posts to mention that there was no typo to begin with. Thank you!
I wonder why they were switched to. Or rather, I wonder if the placebo-turned-active patients' outcome measure was taken into account: does this not introduce serious bias?
Yes, this is clearly a typo. Should be "placebo", because patients were either assigned active treatment or placebo throughout the whole course of the study (noone swapped groups, see my previous post).
ETA: actually, this was not a typo. See Keela's post below.
Yes, the placebo device does...
Here is a description of the placebo from a paper by the inventor of the KOS device.
Juto, J. E., & Axelsson, M. (2014). Kinetic oscillation stimulation as treatment of non-allergic rhinitis: an RCT study. Acta oto-laryngologica, 134(5), 506–512. https://doi.org/10.3109/00016489.2013.861927...
This is so inspiring to us in France. A massive thank you to the determined German patients who are moving things forward for ME -- we'll do our best to follow suit.
A recent article from HSJ on CE: https://www.hsj.co.uk/service-design/exclusive-delayed-spinal-surgery-costs-23m-in-compensation/7024296.article
Given the complications caused by cauda equina and the compensation pays mentioned above, the NHS certainly won't stop screening for it. Too risky.
Thought this review might be interesting/in line with Bhupesh Prusty's work on HHV-6 causing mitochondrial damage (fission) via a miRNA mechanism.
Open access: https://www.cell.com/trends/cell-biology/fulltext/S0962-8924(20)30018-0
Amy Proal has tweeted about it:
The stupidity of the contradiction between these 2 spokesperson really stands out. From the Google translation of the article, bolding mine:
:banghead:
This is a systematic review of studies on HRV in 4 different patient populations: CFS, fibromyalgia, IBS, functional somatic syndromes & somatic symptom disorders. Here's the list of studies they looked at for the CFS group.
Anyway, per the authors' paragraph about the limitations of the...
@strategist I have had this symptom 4-5 times since December! It's just crazy, I've been wondering if it indicates a neck issue. Here is how I describe it:
At night, I'll sleep ~4h, then wake up and go back to bed. But shortly after falling asleep again, I have this weird "pulsing tinnitus"...
I just don't understand why we can't have actual biomedical research. Why must it always come to personal/commercial interests? Just like the PACE trial, this is money wasted for nothing. The usual culprits are in, Esther Crawley included.
Setting up a petition against the study that points out...
That is harrowing.
I hope their views have changed over time and they've stopped recommending it; it seems to be the case with Lucinda Bateman? [1]. Though I believe Nancy Klimas was a co-author on a recent paper that mentioned GET in a positive way.
[1]...
Thank you for pointing this out, I had no idea. The way the tweet was worded made it appear like the caller was deliberately shut out.
Do these clinicians specialize in ME/CFS, or do they even know about PEM and the long-term consequences of forced continuous physical activity in ME/CFS? If...
A ME patient advocate was apparently shut out of the CDC call because she stood up to Dr Unger when she refused to disavow GET+CBT for ME/CFS. She still recommends these.
With N = 5 patients, I can't see how this is anything but PR/advertisement for CellTrend. The study relies on CellTrend's assay for ME/CFS [1, 2]. Harald Heidecke is the CEO of CellTrend and Carmen Scheibenbogen is a co-author of the paper.
In 2016, they published a similar study in the same...
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