Thanks
@JenB for coming here to read the comments. I very much hope that your recovery from all that surgery and your remission of your ME symptoms continues.
I have just read the e-mail that you have sent to those who have signed up to receive them. I hope you don't mind if I quote part of it:
Yesterday, I shared the news with our community that all of my symptoms of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) are
now in remission. This is the outcome of a long journey that began last year with surgery for thyroid cancer; took an unexpected turn for the worse with the sudden onset of a new symptom, central apnea, as a result of that surgery; and culminated in a diagnosis of craniocervical instability and tethered cord syndrome. Since June, beginning with the thyroidectomy, I’ve had five surgeries. It has been the most challenging year of my life. The remarkable outcome, though, is that all of my symptoms of ME are resolving. This doesn’t mean I am 100%––I am still recovering from the surgeries themselves, a process that will take at least twelve months.
What I will say is that by every objective measurement and subjective expert opinion, my ME diagnosis was accurate. I just never imagined as an acute, viral onset patient, that my symptoms could have a structural, mechanical cause. My hope going into surgery was simply that I might resolve the apnea and other neurological symptoms that developed or worsened after thyroid surgery. Recovery from ME is something I never thought would happen for me personally without many more years, even decades, of research.
So as I understand it, the sequence of events was:
- ME developed following a viral infection about 7? years ago, and became severe for some years.
- Thyroid tumor diagnosed a few years ago not requiring urgent treatment.
- Thyroid surgery carried out 1 year ago, at a time when ME symptoms were improving so well enough to undergo surgery.
-Completely new serious neurological symptoms including central apnoea and numbness in arms developed following thyroid surgery.
-These new neurological symptoms diagnosed as CCI/AAI.
- CCI/AAI surgery carried out.
- New tethered cord symptoms developed following CCI/AAI surgery.
- Gradual recovery from all 5 surgeries in the last few months.
- Remission from ME symptoms in the last few months.
I do understand the natural wish to form hypotheses to try to explain why ME symptoms have also improved significantly following the surgery, but as you have said yourself, Jen, your idea that your ME could have been caused by a milder CCI/AAI problem in existence before you had any of the neurological symptoms of CCI/AAI is just that - a hypothesis.
Reading the sequence events stripped of hypotheses, one could form all sorts of hypotheses about why someone going through that sequence of events might find their ME symptoms currently in remission. I am not going to speculate about an individual case. I don't think that is appropriate - I am not a doctor and quite rightly only have access to the bare bones of any individual's medical history.
The point I am making is that, as Jen herself has said, the idea that ME can be caused by CCI is at this stage simply a completely unproven hypothesis.
Crossposted with
@Jonathan Edwards. I agree with everything he says. We need proper scientific research on this, and need to reserve judgement on cause and effect until that research has been done.