wigglethemouse
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
This study found heart issues @Jonathan EdwardsThis comes back to the point made by Mike Murphy, the mitochondrial chap, that ME symptoms do not look like severe metabolic defects of the sort seen in heart failure or mitochondrial failure.
Paper : Impaired cardiac function in chronic fatigue syndrome measured using magnetic resonance cardiac tagging
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3627316/
If I understand right by referring to the text of the study, radial thickening is a thickening of the heart wall. This particular effect is also noted with people suffering Mitochondrial Complex V dysfunction (similar dysfunction perhaps to that Paul Fisher has identified).Results
Compared to controls, the CFS group had substantially reduced left ventricular mass (reduced by 23%), end-diastolic volume (30%), stroke volume (29%) and cardiac output (25%). Residual torsion at 150% of the end-systolic time was found to be significantly higher in the patients with CFS (5.3±1.6°) compared to the control group (1.7±0.7°, P=0.0001). End-diastolic volume index correlated negatively with both torsion-to-endocardial-strain ratio (TSR) (r= -0.65, P=0.02) and the residual torsion at 150% end-systolic time (r= -0.76, P=0.004), so decreased end-diastolic volume is associated with raised TSR and torsion persisting longer into diastole. Reduced end-diastolic volume index also correlated significantly with increased radial thickening (r= -0.65, P=0.03) and impaired diastolic function represented by the ratio of early to late ventricular filling velocity (E/A ratio, r=0.71, P=0.009) and early filling percentage (r=0.73, P=0.008).
https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/condition/mitochondrial-complex-v-deficiency
Did I interpret that right?Another common feature of mitochondrial complex V deficiency is hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. This condition is characterized by thickening (hypertrophy) of the heart (cardiac) muscle that can lead to heart failure.