Week beginning 18th March 2024
News, advocacy and articles
Science for ME letter to Cochrane On 17th March the S4ME committee wrote again to key people at Cochrane about the Exercise therapy for ME/CFS review, formally presenting the 70 organisations and 10,500 petition signatories supporting withdrawal of the 2019 review. The letter set out ten reasons the review should be withdrawn on the grounds of evidence of serious harms, including the authors' failure to properly review harms evidence, and the biases and conflicts of interest of the review's advisors. An update about this letter has been added to the petition.
Letter |
Petition |
Petition thread
Europe
The European petition on ME/CFS started by Evelien Van Den Brink in 2019 has been closed by the European Parliament's Committee on Petitions (PETI).
Thread
Nature
'Four years on: the career costs for scientists battling long COVID' - Kim
"Many high-achieving researchers with long COVID say that one of their biggest struggles is the loss of their identities that had been pegged to their cognitive abilities and productivity. Often, they learnt the hard way that pushing themselves beyond their limits would only cause them to crash later."
Article |
Thread
Australia Australians Abandoned by Healthcare, Sentenced to “Living Death”
Amanda Francey writes about the situation of those with severe and very severe ME/CFS. "Outdated health guidelines and medical fallacies have left thousands of patients neglected and marginalised."
Article |
Thread
Byline Times 'A Rollercoaster Of Awful Emotions': Family Speaks Out for NHS Overhaul to Prevent Deaths of Severely Ill ME Patients
The heartbreaking and currently ongoing critical case of severe ME sufferer Millie McAnish who wrongly got sectioned after being admitted to hospital in order to have a feeding tube fitted. Her mother and primary caregiver has been banned from visiting her and another family member says Millie "has declined massively in hospital".
Article l
Thread
ME/CFS Alert, Episode 137: Interview with Canadian Author Nora Gold
Llewellyn King interviews the academic and prize-winning author Nora Gold who has written the book "In Sickness and In Health" about her own struggle with ME.
Interview on YouTube l
Thread
Life of a Scientist blog Treading Fine Lines by Harriet Carroll
Musings on the interactions of scientists and patients with ME/CFS and Long Covid from the writer's perspective of being both. Issues raised include scientists and clinicians who expect respect from patients and react defensively when patients critique their work, and the toxic culture of patients idolising some researchers and clinicians.
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Thread
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Resources
Emerge Australia Your child or young person with ME/CFS or Long COVID and school
"The information on this page is designed to help you support and advocate for your child with ME/CFS or Long COVID at school."
This useful guide includes information on pacing, PEM and how ME/CFS and Long Covid affect a child's ability to attend school.
Article |
Thread
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Research news and commentary
Germany
The Post-COVID Kids Bavaria 2.0 research project at the Klinikum rechts der Isar of the Technical University of Munich (MRI TUM) was launched in September 2023. The project is coordinated by Prof. Dr. Uta Behrends and funded by the Bavarian State Ministry of Health and Care and the ME/CFS Research Foundation.
Article |
Thread
Australia Study into motor neuron firing abnormalities
Emerge calls for volunteers (ME and healthy) in Perth, WA.
Get Involved |
Thread
Jarred Younger An important change from local to remote clinical trials
In this short video (10 minutes) Dr. Younger gives an update on his recent shift from traditional clinical trials to remote clinical trials which allows individuals to participate from anywhere in the United States.
Video |
Thread
Nina E. Steinkopf A million dollar industry of wasted research
Patient advocate Nina E. Steinkopf has uncovered several unacceptable aspects concerning a Danish study on adolescents with so-called "multisystem functional somatic disorders".
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Thread
UK DecodeME The March 2024 webinar is now available.
20 minute update with Sonya Chowdhury, Chris Ponting and Andy Devereux-Cooke, followed by 20 minutes Q & A.
Video |
Transcript |
Thread
Trial by Error by David Tuller Professor Chris Ponting on the NIH's Findings and the Latest on the Genome-Wide Association Study Update
Tuller has interviewed Professor Ponting on the recent NIH intramural study to which he comments: "What the study basically found is that these 17 people are unwell and are different from the healthy volunteers in a variety of ways. But we already know they’re unwell. That’s not telling me anything new. What I would like to know is, mechanistically, what’s going wrong with the 17 individuals? That question was not addressed." As the leader of the ongoing genome-wide association study, DecodeME, he updates that there has been a delay due to the DNA extraction process taking longer time than expected, but that the study is progressing.
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Thread
The Sick Times Errors, omissions, potential bias: Why some ME experts are calling for a retraction of the NIH intramural study - Betsy Ladyzhets and Miles Griffis
An excellent, well researched article describing problems with the study and calls for retraction. Problems with the appointment of known proponent of the pyschosomatic view of ME/CFS, Brian Walitt, to lead the study, and his misuse of a psychiatric test to falsely support the hypothesis of 'effort preference', are highlighted as major sources of bias in the study's conclusions, along with many other problems.
Article |
Thread
Thoughts about M.E. NIH study: Walitt strikes again by Jeannette Burmeister
An excellent article covering the history of Walitt's psychosomatic view of ME/CFS, his support for the unevidenced and harmful views of Wessely and Shorter, and the wider problem of the same views impacting research at NIH, including the intramural study, with Walitt's invention of the term 'effort preference'.
Article |
Thread
Long COVID Research Breakdown
How federal research continues failing people with myalgic encephalomyelitis by Janna Moen
A neuroscientist who has Long Covid/ME herself, Janna Moen, has written a piece on the history of ME/CFS. The subtitle is "The long and twisted history of psychologizing myalgic encephalomyelitis and post-acute infection syndromes."
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Research
ME/CFS and related research
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Machine Learning Algorithms for Detection of Visuomotor Neural Control Differences in Individuals with PASC and ME - Ahuja et al
"In this study, we introduce a novel method to detect the likelihood of PASC or ME using a wearable four-channel headband that collects Electroencephalogram (EEG) data." The authors have developed an algorithm with a high level of accuracy that might be useful for monitoring people with ME/CFS and PASC.
Article |
Thread
Digital Biomarkers
Review article: Fatigue-Related Changes of Daily Function: Most Promising Measures for the Digital Age
"...changes of the following parameters: physical activity, independence of daily living, social participation, working life, mental status, cognitive and aerobic capacity, and supervised and unsupervised mobility performance have the highest potential to reflect fatigue-related changes of daily function. These parameters thus hold the greatest potential for quantitatively measuring fatigue in representative diseases in real-life conditions, e.g., with digital wearable technologies."
Article |
Thread
Long Covid research
Preprint: MedRxiv
Role of the complement system in Long COVID — Vadim Farztdinov et al.
Refutes findings in a recent high-profile study. "In seeking to explain why age and BMI are such strong predictors of PACS in this study, we noticed that the cohort was substantially imbalanced for age and BMI." "we used a balanced factorial design strategy by splitting all patients in disease groups by age and sex." "none of the complement components was significantly changed in PACS, using the same significance level set by Cervia-Hasler et al."
Article |
Thread
Social Science & Medicine
The double invisibility of Long Covid in children — Wild et al.
"Children and adolescents with Long Covid struggled to signal the severity of their condition and elicit care in the manner expected for other debilitating illnesses. This was exacerbated by assumptions and stereotypes about unwell children and adolescents, and their parents, and questioning of their candidacy as reliable, trustworthy patients."
Article |
Thread
Thorax
Impact of post-COVID-19 condition on health status and activities of daily living: the PRIME post-COVID study — Maarten Van Herck et al.
"Individuals with PCC have substantial and clinically meaningful worse health and more impairment in ADL than negative controls, irrespective of sex, age, pre-existing comorbidities, time since the test and health status prior to the test"
Article |
Thread
Microcirculation
Increased Angio-Derived Index of Microcirculatory Resistance Within a Timeframe of 30–60 days After COVID-19 Infection — Lei Dong et al.
"Long-term COVID-19 patients who experience chest pain without evidence of myocardial ischemia exhibit an increase in AMR, and [coronary microvascular dysfunction] may be one of the reasons for this increase."
Article |
Thread
Nature Scientific Reports
Neurofilament light chain and glial fibrillary acid protein levels are elevated in post-mild COVID-19 or asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 cases — Plantone et al.
"Our results suggest an ongoing damage involving neurons and astrocytes after SARS-Cov2 negativization, which reduce after ten months even if still evident compared to HCs."
Article |
Thread
PLOS ONE
SARS-CoV2 evokes structural brain changes resulting in declined executive function — Daniel Deuter et al.
"Affected areas were mainly found in the frontal and temporal lobe, the basal ganglia, the cerebellum, and in fiber tracts connecting these areas with a left hemispheric accentuation." "These findings were also consistent with deficits found in the neuropsychological tests."
Article |
Thread
Physical Therapy
Decline in Mobility and Balance in Persons with Post–COVID-19 Condition — Feldman et al.
"We found nearly half of those with PCC had a decline in mobility and over a third reported deteriorations in balance. The substantial prevalence of PCC, its symptoms and effects on mobility and balance"
Article |
Thread
Journal of Medical Virology
A retrospective cohort study on early antibiotic use in vaccinated and unvaccinated COVID-19 patients — Carlo Brogna et al.
"The bacteriophage behavior of SARS-CoV-2 during the acute and post-COVID-19 phases appears to be an important factor in the development of the disease." "it is worth noting that a significant number of patients who received antibiotics in the first 3 days and for a duration of 7 days, during the acute phase did not develop LC."
Article |
Thread
BMJ Public Health
Is joint hypermobility linked to self-reported non-recovery from COVID-19? Case–control evidence from the British COVID Symptom Study Biobank —
"GJH may be regarded by many clinicians as an incidental finding or simple variation of normality, where hyperextensible joints may almost represent a clinical ‘red herring’. Our findings suggest an increased risk of not recovering fully from COVID-19 for those with joint hypermobility."
Article |
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