Barry
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
[My bold]There is growing evidence of a link between cardiovascular and muscular deconditioning and cognitive dysfunction in ME/CFS. In a cohort of females with ME/CFS, lower peak heart rate and peak oxygen uptake (assessed during a cycle ergometer exercise task) were associated with a slowed psychomotor response speed [22]. Another study identified a correlation between upper limb muscle function recovery after a fatiguing physical task with information processing speed and sustained attention [23]. These findings suggest that better physical health may lead to improved cognitive outcomes in ME/CFS patients
When will these people learn to tell their 'arris from their elbow!
Properly diagnosed ME/CFS is not due to to being deconditioned, but there will nonetheless be a correlation/link/association in many cases ... but the causal relationship is the other way round from what they are saying. If you have an illness that renders you incapable of exercising properly, then guess what ... you are at risk of becoming deconditioned. So of course there will be a correlation. If having a cold makes you snotty, sticking a hair dryer up your nose to dry it out is not going to cure your cold!
And the potential for improved test responses with practice, means that healthy controls need to also be checked to see how their results change with practice.