Dr. Chia took gut samples from pwME for enterovirus but I'm not sure he found anything? My best friend was a patient of his for 11 years but there was no detection of enterovirus in his gut tissue.
From a conversation between John Chia and Amy Proal a couple years ago, he discusses finding it in the gut, and that even knowing where to look, it's hard to detect:
Amy: so then you actually done quite a bit of formal research where you have showed that in patients with an mecfs diagnosis that you have gotten these gut tissue samples that you obtained via endoscopy then you not only uh identified the enterovirus in in the majority of those by via pcr for the rna but also you can find the antigen correct and also like you said you can off sometimes even culture the virus out of the sample correct and then you've done also autopsy work as well correct where you've looked at the the brain of the patients right
John: [...] other people have done muscle biopsies they have look into the brain they have looking to the heart i just happen to find a place i know if we can if a virus starts the primary infection there if they can be persistent we should be able to find it there and that's exactly what came through so we could find the viral protein in 83 percent of the sum of biopsies which has become true after we've done 850 specimens the viral rna probably about a third on the best days it's really hard to find these because i think the rna are really bound to the proteins because that's one thing that you know the cellular response is they will have helicase and all these proteins made they'll hook up to these rna and somehow they're locked up it's not really easy to find them um so we find them there and then we can put into the culture and we grew them non-cytopathic so that the viruses don't kill the cells they live in but we can pass it to another set of cells and they can infect it in some of the samples and uh so you know that was the first paper we published in january 2008 i presented at the mecfs meeting in 2007. dr kamarov put his hands up at the end said well maybe it's enterovirus. okay well then nobody else repeated it