Now that makes rational sense! Thanks.@Perrier i understood it as PEM is causing poor sleep. Not the other way round.
Now that makes rational sense! Thanks.@Perrier i understood it as PEM is causing poor sleep. Not the other way round.
Maureen Hanson's keynote talk is still on Facebook, starting at 57mins
This rate of genetic problem in IDO2 for controls is much higher than previously reported, initially from population figures (not controls) a rate of more like 40% was reported. This can easily change how we view IDO2. The results still appear to be significant, but start looking more like a minor risk factor than a potential cause. I do hope that controls were not genetically related to the patients though, this could skew the results.broken IDO 2 genes (this is the key gene for the metabolic trap hypothesis). 99% of patients had a broken gene vs 90% for a large group of controls
Francis Collins has been explicitly saying this to us for some years.In my opinion, what we here in the US have to do is, first, to continue to push NIH for set-aside funding, and secondly, build up a strong relationship with Congress.
In my experience it is more often that person's boss, who is not a technician and demands the machine does things it cannot do (or do reliably).The most stupid part of most technological devices is the person running the machine.
Do we know what the five subsets are?That wasn't the impression he gave at Symposium.. He had identified 5 ME subsets. It seemed that he had alot of work done.
https://www.s4me.info/threads/uk-cmrc-2018-conference-prof-alain-moreau.6083/Do we know what the five subsets are?
Thanks. I'll check that out later.https://www.s4me.info/threads/uk-cmrc-2018-conference-prof-alain-moreau.6083/
From about minute 34 in the video, 4 sub-groups based on miRNA expression.
I didn't see the latest talk, I don't know about 5 subsets.
Yes, Debored, yes. What should be done? This "current pace" is destroying the hope of many young people. Every one has a different theory. Where can you get with that? But if things continue as they are now, it will be 60 years and more before anything happens. I too am not critical of anyone. But there just isn't enough cash or brains on this.For people who are frustrated with the current pace of change, I have bad news for you. It’s bad, and it’s not some neat scientific problem that can be worked out by a few intrepid and curious scientists. At the current rate I wager we will not see a cure for 50 to sixty years. What made fast change happen in aids treatment was very aggressive civil disobedience actions and public pressure on the fda , cdc, etc. while people bicker over various advocacy groups use of various diagnostic criteria for ME, etc , meanwhile absolutely nobody , even advocates I admire (this is not a personal attack on anyone) is holding anybody’s feet to the fire with regard to funding on this illness.
I have participated in a number of long debates on this. Its been a problem as far back as I can recall.What should be done?
We don't have half a century anyway. My take is that we have ten to twenty years to make major advances or research funding is going to go into a long term downturn due to rising global economic issues, a whole other discussion. We have to have something to show before that happens.
@Perrier i understood it as PEM is causing poor sleep. Not the other way round.
We are also "screwed" if folks keep saying 'fatigue.' Fatigue arises only after the body has been tormented with an array of intolerable symptoms: flu feeling, toxic feeling, sick feeling, poisoned feeling, sense of dying feeling, weakness, inability to stand or walk, and the indescribable PEM. As I stated elsewhere here, after listening to Dr Moreau on a local radio station I was truly discouraged. For the emphasis was largely on fatigue, extreme fatigue. As I stated, I call the radio station to try to broaden the spectrum of symptoms. Imagine needing to do this with any other illness. As for governments, I don't know what to say. Canada gave Dr Moreau 1.4 million (over 5 years) now is that not 3$ per ME patient in Canada? I hate to say this because it is very invasive, but more pictures of the 25% are required, and ceasing to use the word CFS or fatigue.For me it’s eirher a movement develops that pushes these government agencies aggressively for more funding, or Dignitas. I’m afraid I really can’t get that excited about studies which have mostly small, non replicable results , or have been done before thirty years ago. We’re screwed unless there are people that can fight for us.
You are correct Stuart. Remember JFKennedy; he set a time line for getting to the moon. He set a time line and it was adhered to. To some extent this has been done with AIDS too, but here there is no time line set, and this monstrous disease needs one. Otherwise, the researchers are just stretching their grants out, reapplying and on it goes. I know Ron and Hanson sense urgency: don't know about the others, but a time line is not a bad idea, as well as narrowing down and eliminating some of the 'problems" and focusing more precisely. Imagine all the challenges of finding a way to reach the moon; surely, this horrific illness (which does kill by suicide) should be treated with urgency too.And I was told by one ME researcher that the number of young people acquiring this is increasing.At least AIDS patients died.
Yes, I said that, because if this is really the hockey stick of another epidemic that just didn't get paid attention to but has broadly infected 8-14% of the population whose current condition is a latent infection, or whose illness is sub-clinical, or if indeed this is a retrovirus that has infected the germline...
Then not just the 1% known to have ME are 'screwed,' humanity is screwed.
It is a problem that won't go away that will make all other problems worse, like the climate crisis, the longer it goes ignored, the greater the consequences and more expensive, if not impossible, to solve.
Maureen Hanson: "we need to tell the public that they need to worry about ME"
"I suspect there is a central cause of the disease, I agree with Maureen....ultimately we want to figure out what that organism is and get rid of it. Many people are trying to sort that out." Ron Davis
You are correct Stuart. Remember JFKennedy; he set a time line for getting to the moon. He set a time line and it was adhered to. To some extent this has been done with AIDS too, but here there is no time line set, and this monstrous disease needs one. Otherwise, the researchers are just stretching their grants out, reapplying and on it goes. I know Ron and Hanson sense urgency: don't know about the others, but a time line is not a bad idea, as well as narrowing down and eliminating some of the 'problems" and focusing more precisely. Imagine all the challenges of finding a way to reach the moon; surely, this horrific illness (which does kill by suicide) should be treated with urgency too.And I was told by one ME researcher that the number of young people acquiring this is increasing.