Indeed.
I will just add that since we have no studies, anecdotally I was doing keto on and off for 10 years (2003-2013) before healthy kids on reddit and such used it to shave off those troublesome 10 lbs and in that time ‘met’ hundreds, maybe thousands of people with various disorders trying it. One woman with ME/CFS benefitted (couldn’t walk around the block previously), a few men. Some got miraculously better initially and relapsed severely as time passed.
As keto has been around for a very long time (100 years ago it was used to stave off death in type I diabetics before discovery of insulin, still used in refractory epilepsy, lots of studies on this now), if it side-stepped the metabolic derangement(s) of ME/CFS we would know about it and everyone would be using it. There is nothing new here, it’s just that every generation reinvents the wheel since no effective treatments are available.
@Sid the thing is that ME researchers are, I believe, finding more and more evidence that comes to the conclusion that this is a heterogeneous disorder. That the causes, triggers, and possibly even drivers of the disease are different between patients and though we all end up in pretty much the same place the treatments that will work will vary between patients.
So it completely makes sense that circumventing metabolic impairments works really well in a subgroup and not in another. That's why it's important for people to catalog our experiences when such an intervention works really well. That's also why we cannot make blanket statements that something definitely won't work. There likely will never be a treatment that "
we would know about it and everyone would be using it".
Quoting from Ian Lipkin in the recent article from Simon McGrath in ME Research Review:
The heart of ME/CFS? Lipkin’s Collaborative probes the impact of exertion
"
He believes that in ME/CFS, as with cancer, a group of similar-looking patients will prove to have different causes or triggers for their illness but will share a final common pathway: “ME/CFS”. As with cancer, he expects they will find the specific cause of ME/CFS for some groups of patients quite quickly – the low-hanging fruit.
On the other hand, Lipkin believes it may prove much harder to find causes for ME/CFS in other patients – the fruit higher up the tree.
Lipkin is aiming for precision medicine, where doctors try to establish each patient’s exact problem so that it can be treated in the most effective way. If for example, the microbiome is abnormal, there are already plausible treatments available, such as probiotics, antibiotics or antivirals that could have a profound impact on illness. Other patients may have abnormalities in immune system or mitochondrial function that will require the development of specific drugs or genetic therapies."
Now look I'm not a fan of Ian Lipkin
at all, I think he has a chronic problem of throwing out pretty bombastic statements to give patients hope, like saying "
We will solve ME/CFS in the next 3-5 years" which was back in 2015. I believe he cares more about his personal research interests, getting funding, and putting out publications in research areas that are hot topics currently (e.g. microbiome research). It's funny at the end of 2015 he said we'll solve it in 3-5 years, and now in the above article in mid 2018 he's now saying "
he also said he was very hopeful that there would be real progress for patients within five years." Oh brother please stop...
But besides that I do believe these statements above about heterogeneity are probably correct, and they aren't just his there have been other high-profile ME researchers who've said the same thing.
Taking from this, and I've thought about it a good deal and do not want to be negative, but if this disease is so heterogeneous and requiring precision medicine approaches to treatments then, pardon my bluntness, this is going to suck and get ready to wait for a very long time. The industry is only really doing precision medicine in cancer and this mostly because the disease is one of the most prevalent diseases humans get combined with one of the most horrendous and lethal.
There are $$billions$$ of dollars of research going into cancer, not $15 million for ME/CFS like in the U.S.. Precision medicine is very expensive, requires way more research, and many more treatments/drugs have to go through the clinical trial and FDA approval process. There isn't just one or a few targets anymore. If people think we are going to have new FDA-approved drugs or other therapies within the next 10 years I have a lot of doubts. If they repurpose existing FDA-approved drugs that might shorten the time, but I think many ME physicians have tried many of these and the results are not enough.
"Patients may have abnormalities in immune system or mitochondrial function that will require the development of specific drugs or genetic therapies."
This is going to take 20 years or more unless they seriously start spending $100s of millions of dollars now.
Lipkin mentions probiotics, antibiotics, antivirals for subgroups, but we've tried all these interventions, we've seen the evidence anecdotal and clinical, if they do work they only work in a few, and when they do work most only have improvements but not remission. They cannot go back to a life full of free will. ME effectively robs you of free will. That cannot be said of the majority of other diseases that have FDA-approved treatments, people with other, even very serious illnesses can get back to a fairly normal life when they get treatment.
I would be ecstatic if they have a diagnostic test for this disease within 10 years. That's all I can realistically hope for.