Search results

  1. A

    Assessment of the Gut Microbiome in Patients with Coexisting Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, 2025, Chojnacki

    Quinolinic acid (QA) is an NMDA receptor agonist, potentially neurotoxic, produced by microglia and macrophages in the brain during inflammation Xanthurenic acid (XA) is primarily produced in the brain, specifically within neurons ... do these 2 metabolites ring any bells? (I am too inexpert...
  2. A

    Amplification of select autonomous HERV loci and surrounding host gene transcription in monocytes from patients with [PASC], 2025, Koo et al

    Non-scientist, I am struggling to see how HERV expression is involved in relevant (or any) disease pathways.
  3. A

    Multifaceted evolution focused on maximal exploitation of domain knowledge for the consensus inference of Gene Regulatory Networks, 2025,Segura-Ortiz+

    In an effort to understand this paper, I note their reference #69 is a thread here: which I commented on just now:
  4. A

    HERV activation segregates ME/CFS from fibromyalgia while defining a novel nosologic entity, 2025, Gimenez-Orenga, Oltra

    I understand little of this study (still trying, though...) , but it prompts questions: a) is HERV profile a potential MECFS diagnostic? b) do these T-cell profiles provide disease pathway clues? And @Hutan has provided great insight to one of their related papers "Over-representation of Torque...
  5. A

    What could it mean biologically that both physical and cognitive exertion can cause PEM?

    Thanks very much - so hard to sort out fact from fiction, especially for a non-scientist like me. Could you point me to a study that concludes there is NO cortisol dysregulation? Is there a better way to find relevant papers than just ask Gemini or ChatGPT?
  6. A

    PEM discussion thread - post-exertional malaise

    Is there evidence that MECFS causes dysregulated cortisol, or that the arrow of causality is reversed? Or if other systems eg immune are involved?
  7. A

    What could it mean biologically that both physical and cognitive exertion can cause PEM?

    Responding to deleted post about scary movies causing heart rate to spike. But pwME allegedly have dampend/dysregulated cortisol feedback (prolonged, stuck in overdrive) vs scary-movie would involve more normal negative feedback (transient). Also pwME allegedly may have immune system...
  8. A

    PEM discussion thread - post-exertional malaise

    Adrenalin really fits my wife's PEM - in addition to physical-effort-triggering (delayed in her early years, when she was unwittingly overdoing things; 25 years later, now moderate/severe, PEM is much more immediate), it also fits the speed/ease with which cognitive or emotional effort induces...
  9. A

    What could it mean biologically that both physical and cognitive exertion can cause PEM?

    Given endogenous vs epipen adrenalin have different dosages, release patterns, delivery routes, associated hormones (epipen would have no associated cortisol or norepinephrine, etc ... is epipen response PEM-relevant?
  10. A

    Cellular immune function in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) (2019) Cliff, Nacul et al.

    Same comment - this preprint uses blood: "Can these blood/saliva studies give any useful information to the extent MECFS involves tissue-localised reactivation?"
  11. A

    Cellular immune function in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) (2019) Cliff, Nacul et al.

    Can these blood/saliva studies give any useful information to the extent MECFS involves tissue-localised reactivation?
  12. A

    CoQ10 - Coenzyme Q10

    How embarrasing ... I will sharpen my pencil in future.
  13. A

    CoQ10 - Coenzyme Q10

    This Lancet Europe article thinks: De we have someone who could ask Maureen Hansen?
  14. A

    OMF: Muscle Biopsy and Plasma Study into Post-Exertional Malaise, David Systrom, 2022

    As a relative newbie to s4me, this is my first encounter with David Systrom. No idea whether he is a good scientist, but he really knows how to explain things clearly. Reminds me of Audrey Ryback.
  15. A

    Actively Protective Combinatorial Analysis: a Scalable Novel Method for Detecting Variants that Contribute to Reduced Disease…, 2025, Sardell+

    The video presentation of these protective SNPcombinations seems to have been prematurely curtailed for lack of time - a pity. Or perhaps a blessing given, on my cursory reading of the paper at any rate, that they did not identify specific protection mechanisms or insights ... just likely gene...
  16. A

    Webinar 2pm today (Friday 6 June 2025): Genetics Centre of Excellence (Edinburgh Ponting lab): update on recent research

    That 2019 "bipolar" paper says " In bipolar disorder hyperactivity is the main symptom of the manic phase, possibly reflecting faster signal transmission in the brain. Based on this assumption we have investigated genes related to the action potential, refractory period, ion channels and CNS...
  17. A

    Webinar 2pm today (Friday 6 June 2025): Genetics Centre of Excellence (Edinburgh Ponting lab): update on recent research

    PL filed a patent application which is, as usual, fairly impenetrable.
  18. A

    Webinar 2pm today (Friday 6 June 2025): Genetics Centre of Excellence (Edinburgh Ponting lab): update on recent research

    Late-comer to this thread though I am, and non-scientist to-boot, I have been trying to get to the bottom of this "combinatorial" approach. My take on it is to: a) enumerate all possible SNP combinations b) for each of these SNPcombinations: ... count Ca=#cases with it, and Co=#controls with...
  19. A

    [Retracted] Causal Relationship Between Diet, Lipids, Immune Cells, and [CFS]: A Two-Mediation Mendelian Randomization Study, 2025, Li et al

    Might this study not have considered performing a bi-directional MR analysis? Seems to me CFS could just as easily prompt a nice big chilli pizza washed down by a nice bottle of wine, rather than the other way around?
Back
Top Bottom