I may have repeated this about a dozen times or so throughout my comments. Hopefully the message gets across.
I am glad you included and repeated the need in your comments.
I may have repeated this about a dozen times or so throughout my comments. Hopefully the message gets across.
I have been saying this everywhere for, idk, years.I may have repeated this about a dozen times or so throughout my comments. Hopefully the message gets across.
Yes! And a strategic plan that is focused on delivering outcomes for patients as rapidly as possible and is not constrained by a 10 or 20M budgetI have been saying this everywhere for, idk, years.
Good others are, too. More voices means more chances they listen.
Dr. Komaroff's online article in JAMA currently has about:
31,000views. (07/12/19)....
65,000 views. (07/24/19)
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2737854
With just above it a "trending" Exercise Therapy May Benefit Chronic Fatigue.
Although that the best that can still be said at this time is "may", after 3 decades of insisting it would, is a serious indictment of how poor and aimless this body of research is. "May" is simply not the basis for guidelines, practices and policies and this disconnect is a serious problem.
Although it’s position might actually be based on views so we can all give the bio marker article extra traffic by clicking through And definitely not click through on the exercise is helpful articleWell, now "trending" above it is...
Biomarker Test for Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
[I suspect "trending" is just a matter of cycling through other articles with "chronic fatigue" in the title.]
Komaroff was involved in the process that created CFS
n the 1999, Komaroff delivered a presentation to the Medical Board of California, recommending GET and CBT for "CFS".
If UpToDate is any indication (Komaroff is editor), then the belief remains that GET is helpful for a subset of CFS patients. Even though PACE has been largely rejected, and the potential for harm in some patients is recognized.That advice from Komaroff about increasing exercise seems strangely at odds with the state of his knowledge and understanding in 1993 at the CIBA Conference when he was clearly of the view that
In our experience, 80% of patients with CFS have an exceptional post-exertional malaise......Typically the patient tolerates the physical exertion reasonably well, and may even feel energised during and immediately after the exertion. However 6 to 24 hours later the patients feel ill...
It is hard to see why increasing exercise would help such people.
“Over the last 35 years, there have been over 9,000 scientific publications that compare people with the illness to healthy people of the same age and sex,” explained Anthony Komaroff, a professor at Harvard Medical School and senior physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital. “And they find a whole variety of abnormalities.”
People with M.E. have deficiencies in three organs important for the body’s hormonal balances called the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
found itTo clarify for those who, like me, were confused by the AfME tweet above, Dr Mark Guthridge summarised Dr Komaroff's article for AfME's magazine.
So much of the information in the summary is wrong or at least inadequately supported by facts. I'm surprised to see Dr Guthridge disseminating it.
e.g.
Even with somewhat interested and unerstanding doctors, also in clinics, I rather experienced that they didn't find such reviews helpful. And for the less understanding doctors reviews of this sort only reassured them that all 'proof' of biomedical etiology is unsound and exeggerated. In their view my alleged focusing on this research only proved that I have a somatization disorder.
What gives me hope are reviews of potential pathophysiologies, clearly formulated as hypotheses and also poining out that there haven't been found until now objectivley measurable biomedical abnormalities that can differentiate pwmE from healthy people.
I think sentences like "A general downregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis is seen in patients with ME/CFS" are misleading. Or have I missed something? Is there a proven downregulation in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in a majority of pwME?
Regarding the diverse brain imaging studies over the last decade, I have the impression that all the findings cannot be integrated into a common picture of abnormalities.
As to the more recent findings of Ron Davis' teams around "something in the blood" I think it's good to point to these observations as promising research. However it seems to me also important not to exaggerate the evidence.
One of EUROMENE's recent papers seems to me a good and realistic approach to review the biomedical research on ME:
Scheibenbogen, Carmen; Freitag, Helma; Blanco, Julià; Capelli, Enrica; Lacerda, Eliana; Authier, Jerome; Meeus, Mira; Castro Marrero, Jesus; Nora-Krukle, Zaiga; Oltra, Elisa; Bolle Strand, Elin; Shikova, Evelina; Sekulic, Slobodan; Murovska, Modra (2017), "The European ME/CFS Biomarker Landscape project: an initiative of the European network EUROMENE", Journal of Translational Medicine, 15: 162, doi:10.1186/s12967-017-1263-z
And a publication that gives me some hope is this paper from 2016:
Jonathan C.W. Edwards, Simon McGrath, Adrian Baldwin, Mark Livingstone, Andrew Kewley. (2016) The biological challenge of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome: a solvable problem. Fatigue: Biomedicine, Health & Behavior 4:2, pages 63-69,
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21641846.2016.1160598
I realize that regularly updating such reviews might be exremely strenous and less interesting work. I think it could be very helpful as a basis for decisions regarding further research, though. Maybe it could also convince outsiders that scientifically sound biomedical research on ME does exist.
[Edit: 'scientifically sound' meaning reporting what was investigated, found and not found in a clear and reasonable manner an not exeggerating the evidence.]