Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
It's what I've generally seen from ME/CFS clinicians and researchers on Twitter and from talking to multiple ME/CFS specialists I have seen (again, they may have different ideas about how non-infectious triggers lead to ME/CFS - e.g. resulting in reactivating pathogens). It seems like many review/hypothesis-type articles on ME/CFS acknowledge non-infectious triggers too, but I don't have them all sitting in front of me.
I wouldn't put much store by any of those to be honest. ME/CFS is disinformation central, as you know. I don't think we have any meaningful data papers that address non-infective triggers.