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    Post-Exertional Malaise ... Related to Central Blood Pressure, Sympathetic Activity and Mental Fatigue in [CFS] Patients, 2021, Kujawski, Newton et al

    Hey, maybe they're all curry-loving people that cumin works for as a PEM blocker. :) As Invisible Woman says, it's a mess. It sounds like they did a poorly set up experiment and then tortured the results until it provided an interesting result.
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    Hypothesis The Enterovirus Theory of Disease Etiology in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: A Critical Review, Hanson et al (2021)

    To me, the lack of a definite 'all PWME have this virus' finding means that ME is not a viral disease. Viral infections might trigger ME in people susceptible to developing ME, and might increase the severity in PWME who are susceptible to that, but that there are also other PWME who triggered...
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    Designing a questionnaire on ME/CFS onset

    "specify time from onset to first ME/CFS formal medical diagnosis" It's been 20 years since my ME started, and I still don't have a formal medical diagnosis. There is no clinical test, so the best one could achieve is a doctor's 'professional opinion', and I haven't seen any point in bothering...
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    Article: Tissues, not blood, are where immune cells function

    I almost expect a paper to come out revealing yet another, separate, immune system in our bodies, that no one had noticed before. They keep finding new organs, new lymph channels and other new--and important--bits of our bodies, so maybe they'll discover that RBCs engulf pathogens, or that...
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    An interesting article about sleep

    I noticed the article too. My thought is that they discovered a separate sleep function, and that it possibly only applies to simple brainless organisms. I don't think it suggests that we should ignore the neural-refreshing aspects of mammalian sleep. Neural sleep may have provided the needs...
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    Study on the Relationship between the miRNA-centered ceRNA Regulatory Network and Fatigue, 2021, Yang et al

    The paper supports my hypotheses for ME. For quite a long part of my ME, T2 (3-5 diiodothyronine) was an important treatment for me. A single dose would block an otherwise worsening of my symptoms for a very consistent 21 days. Hampering thyroid function, and thus T2 levels, would make my...
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    For faster progress in ME/CFS research, funders and researchers need to treat patients as partners, not subjects (Simon M blog)

    One thing that bothered me about the ME research projects is that their email addresses disappeared. If a patient discovers something, whether a treatment or a reliable correlation between symptoms and some factor, how do they pass that along to the research community? I considered the...
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    "Exercise in a pill" - potential for ME/CFS?

    How about laying in bed while a boxer pummels you? :blackeye:
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    "Exercise in a pill" - potential for ME/CFS?

    If that's what it did, it could be remarketed as "Pet cat in a pill. No litter box to clean!". :emoji_cat2: Regarding the pill in question, I really don't think that it offers health benefits to bedbound people. Larger unexercised muscles might even be detrimental.
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    Electrophysiological studies in patients with the post-viral fatigue syndrome, 1985, Jamal and Hansen

    I wonder whether there's some sort of bias against following up (or funding) research that has been done x years ago, even if it's suddenly become more relevant.
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    Rapid fatigability or a lower amount of available energy - the same thing or different?

    Have there been a clear clinical answer to the question: "Do PWME have lower ATP production and/or reserves?" I've seen some studies saying yes, and others saying no, but I haven't seen one yet that definitively answers it. However, I think the question should be "Do all PWME have lower ATP...
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    Rapid fatigability or a lower amount of available energy - the same thing or different?

    Yes, I think it's the neurons involved in motivation not functioning normally. There seems to be some understanding of the parts of the brain involved in motivation, so it's not a complete mystery. I'd study that research material and try to figure out why my ME is affecting motivation ... but...
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    United Kingdom: ME Association news

    If it had been clearly labelled: "One hypothesis", I wouldn't have a problem with it. At least it's something other than "It's a psychiatric problem". Saying that the graphic explains ME is simply wrong.
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    Rapid fatigability or a lower amount of available energy - the same thing or different?

    I agree; it can confuse perceptions, and it doesn't apply to all PWME. My preferred explanation for how it feels is how we feel when we have a flu: we feel lousy, achey and lethargic/brainfogged overall and just want to hide under a blanket until it goes away. ... and after 20 years of this...
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    Rapid fatigability or a lower amount of available energy - the same thing or different?

    A good topic. As with several other posters, I do not feel any reduction in available energy or the rate at which I can use it. I believe I have a neurological disorder which impairs my ability to make the effort required to do things. My legs might feel like going for a 40 km ride (and would...
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    Health Research Priority Setting: Do Grant Review Processes Reflect Ethical Principles?, Pierson and Millum, 2021

    What's the goal of providing funding for medical research? Is it just to boost the public image of the donors or fund allocation organizations? Are unspecified-target donors assuming that their donations will be wisely allocated for maximum reduction of suffering in the world? Are...
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    Coupled electrophysiological, hemodynamic, and cerebrospinal fluid oscillations in human sleep, 2019, Fultz et al

    How are waste products removed? If they're pumped out through astrocytes, do the astrocytes not absorb it from CSF? Regardless of the final 'waste drain', movement of fluid would be important for preventing localized buildups of waste.
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    A Noted Pain Psycholgist's Reference Page: not encouraging.

    Well, what do you expect from a psychologist? It's the 'if you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail' syndrome.
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    Sleep deprivation impairs molecular clearance from the human brain, Eide et al, 2021

    There was another research paper last year that explained how the slow brainwaves of deep sleep helped pump fluids from the brain. Astrocytes also open the BBB a bit during sleep to transfer waste out. I'm not sure whether they used markers to prove it.
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    Sarah's adventures in blocking out light

    You could tape (or otherwise attach) strips of light-blocking material to the outside edges of the door, extending past the opening. I think that would be way more convenient than a whole sheet of fabric. Probably easier than the foam strips too. If you care about how it looks, you could be...
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