Maybe one of the basic points to establish is that people can't make assumptions about managing severe/very severe ME based on a familiarity with mild or moderate ME.
indeed. Particularly with it being called CFS, and with so called mild/moderate being the majority, the assumption that the mild/mod experience is the same as severe but with severe just being a bit worse, is misleading i think.
I suspect this is part of what gives rise to the 'how can feeling exhausted possibly cause ____?' thing.
Particulary among drs, who will have worked to the point of utter exhaustion,
and through it, during training & in their professional lives all the time, i image ED drs especially.
My initial flare-up of ME felt identical to a flu coming on, including the central fatigue and aches and touch sensitivity.
mine too and continues to, i feel all the time as if i have some degree of flu/virus/bacterial infection - which all feel the same to me and from which ME is only distinguishable by the lack of actual fever & sinus symptoms. When i'm well rested & at my best, i feel (whilever i remain supine) like i am coming down with something, as soon as i do anything it gets a little worse, and PEM is the full blown influenza
Plus other symptoms on top.
The only way i can distinguish my ME from an actual infection is when i realise the symptoms arent fluctuating - if i go a few days without fluctuation i think 'oh, perhaps i have actually got something' & i take my temperature... & viola! Last time that happened i also looked in my throat which was sore (but its often sore as part of PEM- glands up etc) & there were big yellow pustules all over it & my temp was 39, at which point i thought wow it took me 4 days to realise that it was an actual virus/infection/whatever. I had chills/was sweating, but then i often a. Its indistinguishable
apart from the lack of fluctuation.
Obviously have other symptoms too but the underlying thing is always essentially having the flu. Which is why i struggle so much with it being called 'fatigue' - not raising that here - i accept that we're calling it that, but being exhausted & having flu (ie being
ill) are just such different bodily sensations for me, that i struggle with calling it that for myself. It just feels so inaccurate.
Well, since the symptoms are so similar to what we feel from a cold or flu, it should be accepted. Science don't know exactly why/how we feel "lousy" with a cold or flu, but it's accepted that we can't operate as normal.
Yes wasnt there some research, back by but not necessarily funded by the MEA in around 2010/2011 that tested interferon (i think thats the name of the drug - one thats used in MS & causes flu-like symptoms???) to see whether that would tell us anything - dont know what became of that.