American Council on Science and Health: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Progress Towards Diagnosis And Treatment, Finally?

Kalliope

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Progress Towards Diagnosis And Treatment, Finally?

Article is written by Henry I. Miller, physician and Senior Fellow at the Pacific Research Institute. He has also been a Research Fellow at the National Institutes of Health and the founding director of the Office of Biotechnology at the FDA.

The article mentions the IOM-report, the nano needle, the hypothesis of an up-regulation of a specific receptor (CRF2), cardio-pulmonary exercise tests and the NIH conference in April.

It’s early days, but we seem to be closing in on understanding, diagnosing, and maybe even treating one of our species’ truly awful afflictions. The glacial pace of progress serves as a reminder that we need to pursue a variety of research approaches and to get expeditious regulatory reviews of treatments once they reach clinical trials.
 
Looks like a well-intentioned article but listed signs and symptoms leads, as per normal, with fatigue, and gives a poor definition of PEM. Also suggests that there are no definite symptoms ("The signs and symptoms may include ...").
Some medical conditions are especially frustrating to physicians because they lack not only effective treatments but even a reliable means of diagnosis. One of the most common of these is variously known as myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). As the name suggests, it is a syndrome, a group of symptoms that seem to characterize, or define, an illness, even if we don’t know how they’re related or what causes them. That’s different from better-understood illnesses such as solid tumors, rheumatoid arthritis, or stroke, for example.

The signs and symptoms may include fatigue, loss of memory or concentration, sore throat, swelling of neck or armpit lymph nodes, unexplained muscle or joint pain, headaches, unrefreshing sleep, and extreme exhaustion lasting more than 24 hours after physical exercise or mental stimulation (“post-exertional malaise”). People with ME/CFS are often incapable of performing ordinary activities, and sometimes become completely debilitated, unable even to get out of bed. The symptoms can persist for years.
https://www.acsh.org/news/2019/09/1...-toward-diagnosis-and-treatment-finally-14285
 
Do you get the impression that any of these bores ever met someone with a ME one to one and observed and listened to them for a substantial period?

That’s a really unhelpful way to describe someone who is clearly sympathetic to ME/CFS sufferers.
 
That’s a really unhelpful way to describe someone who is clearly sympathetic to ME/CFS sufferers.
I get annoyed by the unclear and uncommitted terminology and definitions. Was admittedly too ill to read the whole thing, but this thing either has these core symptoms or it does not. No “may” or “can” about it. Same with treatments and cures. Either they work (statistically safe peer reviewed conclusions) in which case they are “medicine”, or they do not (“herbs”, “ancient medicine”, “alternative medicine” etc).
 
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