Pain in bones might be a good poll .Possibly. I was tempted to suggest that you 'feel ME/CFS in your bones' but decided it was a red mullet. Interestingly, apart from osetomyelitis and cancer deposits, pain from bone marrow is not often considered in medicine. In myeloma pain occurs when bones crumble but probably not just because of the plasma cells. I think it may be a red mullet.
Could there be a relationship with hormones - in terms say of triggering mechanisms. I'm saying that as I have a vague memory that the norway study showed the rates for children are more even until adolescence.
What do you mean about 'highly sensitive to pressure change' Jonathan? What causes that pressure change?
Can confirm the horror. I remember the feeling of pulling and pressure during the biopsy. Most painful thing ever.If you put suction on red bone marrow by inserting a biopsy needle and pulling the syringe plunger it hurts like mad.
Maybe having some kind of idea about what’s going on in there? It would be difficult to help a body part if it’s essentially a black boxI was reading that there are sympathetic nerves and nociceptive nerves in the bone marrow. And something about nociceptive nerves responding to 'neurotoxic agents'. I'm not sure what the point of having nociceptive nerves in bone marrow is.
Phase changes in biological structures is a very interesting question.I spent some years working on connective tissue hydrodynamics in the 1980s and learnt that there are very complex issues wherever you have a combination of solid and fluid phase components.
Pain in bones might be a good poll .
Prusty has mentioned bone marrow, for instance here (from 1:56:33):Hasn't Prusty been thinking along these lines?
Also of course Fluge and Mella must be because bone marrow is where LLPCs live.
Prusty has mentioned bone marrow, for instance here (from 1:56:33):
Verbatim transcript of Prof. Bhupesh Prusty’s presentation to the Fatigatio E.V Research Seminar – 14th Sept. 2024
Maybe acute viral infection, as he talks about it staying latent in the bone marrowI cannot make much sense of that I am afraid.
I have no idea what he means by acute state of disease.
Apparently they’ve found viral DNA in bone marrow post mortem, but that might not mean active viruses.Maybe acute viral infection, as he talks about it staying latent in the bone marrow
Never heard of viruses staying in the bone marrow, is that proven?
He talks about ME and distinguishes between an acute and a chronic state.
I've learned, from teeth and various other pains, that I am really terrible at correctly identifying where the pain is located. I was sure the pain was from one tooth, but it turned out the neighbour was cracked. My present foot pain feels like it's coming from the top of the foot, but it's actually a cyst much lower down, pressing on a nerve there. I expect this misidentification of pain sources is common in humans. So, a poll about bone pain isn't likely to provide useful information.Pain in bones might be a good poll .