Week beginning 29th June 2020
News
The Netherlands
In the Netherlands, an outline for a ME/CFS research program has been reported to the Minister of Health. The program focuses on biomedical research and advises a large investment of 20 to 29,5 million euros over a period of ten years. The proposal was developed by a steering committee that included several patient representatives and after consultation of international ME/CFS experts.
Article
here Thread
here
UK - DecodeME The ME/CFS DNA study
Webinar Monday 6th July, 4pm. You can register in advance to participate and ask questions of the panel, Prof. Chris Ponting, Dr Eliana Lacerda, Sonya Chowdhury and Andy Devereux Cooke. The webinar will be livestreamed and a recording will be available afterwards.
The ME Association has produced a free 2 page leaflet about the study.
On 2nd July it was reported on Twitter that out of 22,357 sign ups so far, 16,532 live in UK with ME/CFS and want to take part.
The University of Edinburgh is advertising for a part-time project manager for this project.
Webinar details
here MEA leaflet
here Project manager details
here Thread
here
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Articles, other news, video...
UK - Physios for ME celebrate their first year working together with an article on their website summarising all their many activities and achievements so far, and their aims for the year ahead.
Article
here Thread
here
Norway Psychologist Grete Lilledalen comments on the recent attack on ME patients in the newspaper Dagbladet. She underlines the importance of listening to the patients, particularly when they say treatments are making them permanently worse.
Opinion piece
here (in Norwegian) Thread
here
Norway The newspaper Dagsavisen has written about a possible discriminatory practice of ME patients from the Labour and Welfare Administration regarding an allowance for young disabled people. Money has been raised by patients to enable a juridical assessment of this.
Thread with links
here
Microbe Minded blog
'Interview with Dharam Ablashi: On the discovery of Human Herpes Virus 6 (HHV6) and its involvement in chronic inflammatory disease' by Amy Proal.
Dr Ablashi was a co-discoverer of HHV6 and spent many years researching its role in neurological disorders including ME/CFS. They discuss the history and difficulties of HHV6 research and the need for more research.
Article
here Thread
here
Video "Why should we learn more on HHV-6 and HHV-7? A Perspective from ME/CFS" by Dr. Bhupesh Prusty
Duration 47 minutes
Video
here Thread
here
Frozen in Amber "Energy systems and pacing in ME/CFS"
Blog post by Caroline Elisabeth, a professor of environmental studies and an ME sufferer. In this article she takes a closer look at the broken aerobic system in ME and how "a well-designed pacing program can minimise the negative effects of both aerobic and anaerobic metabolism while at the same time harness the benefits of each energy system".
Article
here Thread
here
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Trial by Error by David Tuller
Now There's CBT for "Health Anxiety" in CFS
A thorough deconstruction of the article "Prevalence and treatments of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and co-morbid severe health anxiety". The approach is described as "the PACE CBT strategy in lipstick and a tutu".
Article
here Thread
here
Nudge for BMJ About Music Therapy, Letter to "Health Anxiety" Expert
A letter to BMJ's Research Integrity Department asking for status on the CBT/Music therapy study and a letter to lead investigator of the health anxiety and CFS/ME Study inviting Dr. Daniels to respond to Tuller's critique at Virology Blog.
Article
here Thread
here
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Covid-19 and ME
Independent "As lockdown eases, those of us with chronic illnesses must not be left behind"
Helen Wilson-Beevers, who suffers from endometriosis and Hashimoto's disease, writes that the pandemic has provided a spotlight on chronic illness and mentions ME as an example. She hopes this "overdue focus" won't disappear again with the end of the lockdown.
Article
here Thread
here
Expressen Article in Swedish newspaper on women who don't recover from Covid-19. ME researcher Prof. Jonas Bergquist is interviewed and says these patients may end up with an ME diagnosis.
Article
here Thread (with link to translation into English)
here
Reset "Covid-19 "long-haulers" find a community online"
Podcast episode about the founding of the international Covid-19 support group Body Politic and the value of patients coming together in online communities for validation, sharing experiences and increasing knowledge. ME mentioned briefly. Duration: 31 minutes.
Podcast
here Thread
here
The Wall Street Journal "Three Months In, These Patients Are Still Ravaged by Covid's Fallout"
About research on patients with lingering symptoms post Covid-19. Features Dr. Ron Davis who expresses concern over the possibility of a large number of ME/CFS cases following the pandemic.
Article
here (Paywalled) Thread
here
BBC Spotlight had a report on patients not recovering after Covid-19. Medical Advisor for the ME Association Charles Shepherd was interviewed. He said he believes there will be two categories of a post covid syndrome; one with post viral fatigue syndrome seen in ME patients and one with other symptoms.
Interview and writeup by the ME Association
here Thread
here
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Biomedical research
MDPI Healthcare
"Two-Day CPET in Females with a Severe Grade of ME/CFS: Comparison with Patients with Mild and Moderate Disease" by van Campen et al.
31 mild, 31 moderate, 20 severe ME female patients included.
Abstract conclusion: 'This relatively large 2-day CPET protocol study confirms previous findings of the reduction of various exercise variables in ME/CFS patients on day-2 testing. This is the first study to demonstrate that disease severity negatively influences exercise capacity in female ME/CFS patients. Finally, this study shows that the deterioration in peak workload from day-1 to day-2 is largest in the severe ME/CFS patient group.'
Paper
here Thread
here
Journal of Neuroimaging
"Altered Structural Brain Networks Related to Adrenergic/Muscarinic Receptor Autoantibodies in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome" by Sato et al
89 patient examined with brain MRI and blood antibody tests.
'The purpose of this study was to investigate the structural network changes related to autoantibody titers against adrenergic/muscarinic receptors in ME/CFS by performing a single‐subject gray matter similarity‐based structural network analysis.' The authors conclude that the correlations they found 'suggest that β1 AdR‐Ab and β2 AdR‐Ab are potential markers of ME/CFS.'
Article
here Thread
here
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Other research
Healthcare
"Health Care Responsibility and Compassion-Visiting the Housebound Patient Severely Affected by ME/CFS" by Kingdon et al.
In this article members of the CureME research team write about their experience of visiting and caring for patients with severe ME/CFS. They explain that “some people with severe ME/CFS may lie in a darkened room with earplugs in and may exhibit increased sensitivity to light, sound and touch”. The authors note that “paradoxically, it is often the most seriously ill and needy who are the most neglected by those responsible for their healthcare.”
Article
here Thread
here
Medical Humanities
"A concerning display of medical indifference: reply to ‘Chronic fatigue syndrome and an illness-focused approach to care: controversy, morality and paradox’" by O'Leary.
Diane O’ Leary has published a response to the article by Michael Sharpe and Monica Greco that characterized ME/CFS as illness-without-disease. She writes: “When we find ourselves in a framework that suggests the possibility of medical need is somehow beside the point for medical providers, it is time to reconsider our conceptual foundations.”
Article
here Thread
here
University of Oxford
In this 2019 Master’s thesis at the University of Oxford, Brooke Scoles analyzed the language doctors use when talking anonymously on Reddit forums about various illnesses. The results showed that ME/CFS was more associated with stigmatizing words such as “laughable,” “denigrate,” “snarky,” and “made-up" than depression or auto-immune disease.
Thesis
here Thread
here
IntechOpen
"Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal (HPA) Axis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in Older Adults: The Rehabilitation Perspectives.” by Ho-Yin Lai et al.
This chapter, published at IntechOpen, reports the result of a randomized controlled trial of a 10-week behavioural intervention named ‘activity scheduling’ in 60 older adults with CFS in Hong-Kong.
Study
here Thread
here
Academia.edu
'“That's why they don't believe you, you don't look sick!”: Creating Medical Credibility and patient visibility for ME/CFS through Television' by Giada Da Ros.
In this article, president of the CFS/ME Italian Association Giada Da Ros discusses appearances of ME/CFS in TV-shows including The Simpsons, King of the Hill, Doctors and The Middle. Da Ros emphasizes the importance of The Golden Girls, “the only show that had a fictional character with the condition, before the turn of the century. “
Article
here Thread
here
Arden University Planned study
"The impact of food on cognition: Potential implications for brain fog in ME"
This study at Arden University is looking to recruit both healthy individuals and those with a diagnosis of mild ME/CFS. The aim is to investigate how food impacts people’s performance on 2 short cognitive tests, a colour naming task and a memory task. The study is part of the researchers' dissertation to achieve their MSc Psychology degree.
Study
here Thread
here
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Advocacy
Czech Republic The Czech Association of Patients with ME/CFS has sent an important open letter to representatives of medical and social authorities asking for equal access to medical and social care. The letter is signed by over 60 international ME researchers/physicians and also includes several testimonials from patients in the Czech Republic.
Letter
here (English translation) Thread
here
Australia - Survey 'Making the invisible visible: investigating the views and experiences of frail, homebound and bedridden people' Flinders University and the Caring Futures Institute.
'The survey will give homebound and bedridden participants the opportunity to provide a photograph of something that represents their lived experience alongside a written description. This information will be used to create a fully anonymous socio-scientific exhibition of posters to be rotated within different museums, social and community locations'. Survey available online for a month from 2nd July.
Survey information
here Thread
here
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