Whatever theses researchers are, but by no means is the question in itself rhetorical, and it would be bad research to do such an implication [].Isn't using the term sickness behavior and theorizing that persistent sickness behavior is causing symptoms in ME patients characteristic of the BPS cabal?
Edit:Just to clarify, the question is rhetorical since these researchers are part of the BPS cabal.
I have always been dubious when they say that if we stop acting ill we will stop being ill.
I would say, in the essential meaning of the word, yes: you feel worse soon after exertion, when you are ill.Does sickness response include PEM?
Increased CCL11 levels in blood plasma are associated with aging in mice and humans.[12] Additionally, it has been demonstrated that exposing young mice to CCL11 or the blood plasma of older mice decreases their neurogenesis and cognitive performance on behavioural tasks thought to be dependent on neurogenesis in the hippocampus.[12]
Higher plasma concentrations of CCL11 have been found in current cannabis users compared to past users and those who had never used. CCL11 has also been found in higher concentrations in people suffering from schizophrenia; cannabis is a known trigger of schizophrenia.[13]
It's also a biomarker for CTE or punch-drunk syndrome.[14]
During periods of bone inflammation, CCL11 and CCR3 are upregulated. This is associated with an increase in osteoclast activity.[15]
IL-7 stimulates the differentiation of multipotent (pluripotent) hematopoietic stem cells into lymphoid progenitor cells (as opposed to myeloid progenitor cells where differentiation is stimulated by IL-3).[citation needed] It also stimulates proliferation of all cells in the lymphoid lineage (B cells, T cells and NK cells).[citation needed] It is important for proliferation during certain stages of B-cell maturation, T and NK cell survival, development and homeostasis.[citation needed]
IL-7 is a cytokine important for B and T cell development. This cytokine and the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) form a heterodimer that functions as a pre-pro-B cell growth-stimulating factor. This cytokine is found to be a cofactor for V(D)J rearrangement of the T cell receptor beta (TCRß) during early T cell development.[15] This cytokine can be produced locally by intestinal epithelial and epithelial goblet cells, and may serve as a regulatory factor for intestinal mucosal lymphocytes.[citation needed] Knockout studies in mice suggested that this cytokine plays an essential role in lymphoid cell survival.[16]
LIST OF SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
I. II. III. IV.
Jonsjö MA, Wicksell RK, Holmström L, Andreasson A, Bileviciute I, Olsson GL. Ljungar
Identifying symptom subgroups in patients with ME/CFS relationships to functioning and quality of life. Fatigue: Biomedicine, Health & Behavior. 2017;5(1):33–- 42.
Jonsjö MA, Wicksell RK, Holmström L, Andreasson A, Olsson GL.
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy for ME/CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) 2019;12:89A feasibility study. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science. 97.
Jonsjö MA, Olsson GL, Wicksell RK, Alving K Holmström L, Andreasson A.
The role of lowgrade inflammation in ME/CFS (Chronic Fatigue Syndrome) associations with symptoms.
(manuscript in revision).
Jonsjö MA, Åström J, Jones MP, Holmström L, Lodin K, Agréus L, Wicksell RK, Lekander M, Olsson GL, Kemani M, Andreasson A.
Sickness behavior, self rated health and functioning differences in ME/CFS and chronic pain compared to primary care patients and the general population (manuscript in preparation).
ABSTRACT
Background: Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is a chronic debilitating condition characterized by physical and mental fatigue with a heightened sensitivity to exertion. To date, the causes are unknown. However, recently the condition has been implicated as a chronic sickness behavior state. That is, the adaptive changes in brain and behavior commonly following acute infection (experiences of malaise, fatigue, brain fog and so forth) seem to have become chronic and thus maladaptive, since no infectious agent is present...
... Aims: The overarching aims of the present thesis were to: (a) investigate factors of importance in ME/CFS, including; (b) symptom patterns and their relationships to health and functioning (Study I); (c) inflammatory markers implicated in sickness behavior and fatigue and their associations with common symptoms (Study III); (d) the level of subjective sickness behavior in ME/CFS, compared to chronic pain, primary care patients and the general population (Study IV), and; (e) evaluate the acceptability, safety and preliminary efficacy of an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy(ACT)based behavior medicine treatment protocol aimed at increasing functioning and quality of life in ME/CFS (Study II)...
However, factors other than criteria symptoms, such as experiential avoidance and cognitive fusion, are likely more accessible targets in behavior medicine treatment. The results from the ACTbased feasibility study indicate the utility of conceptualizing disability in ME/CFS from a modern learning theory perspective, and the ACTbased behavior medicine treatment format should be further investigated in randomized controlled studies.
I will discuss... and how the intricate interplay between the central nervous system, the immune system and behavior could be the key to understand what gives rise to the condition, how it is maintained and how, hopefully in the future, it can be resolved.
In the prototypical situation then, sickness behavior is viewed an adaptive response in the short-term by increasing survival from infections. However, these changes are also suggested to contribute to ill-health and disability in the long-term, when persisting after recovery or where recovery has not been completed (68, 69).
In the field of psychoneuroimmunology (PNI), these effects of pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators on the brain and behavior, and the vice versa effects, are the main foci of research (63, 70-72)
As such, sickness behavior is of importance also in situations besides the prototypical (when due to an ongoing infection). Notably, the increasing body of research on the relations between the sickness behavior circuitry and psychological/behavioral factors has led to some preliminary but interesting results within the ME/CFS field (88). Recent studies investigating the relationships between objective and subjective markers of stress and inflammation, depression, stress management skills and symptoms in ME/CFS indicate the importance of taking such interactions into account (88-90). Results indicate that levels of perceived stress management skills were related to less fatigue and distress but also to decreased levels of inflammatory cytokines (90).
As previously mentioned, there has been some debate as to which extent psychological factors play a role in the illness etiology and/or maintenance. The inherent mind-body-dualism perspective is an evident problem. Importantly, the developments within the field of psychoneuroimmunology makes debate regarding the mind or the body as the “cause” of symptoms and disability obsolete, with a growing body of research showing that psychological factors, stress, inflammation, the brain and behavior affect each other in complex ways (91)
Importantly, as the sickness behavior circuitry can be active even in the absence of pathogens or verifiable disease, behavior medicine approaches to longstanding somatic conditions with unknown pathophysiology may also be directed at other targets than symptom decrease. Novel developments within the field of behavior medicine highlights the importance of developing approaches to symptoms and discomfort based on a generic sickness behavior and learning theory.
.In a learning theory-based behavior medicine treatment approach, educating the patient about the evolutionary but unhelpful function of prolonged non-malignant symptoms and the behavioral repertoire it triggers is a core intervention. Hence, a shift in perspective, from symptom reduction to a valued life, could be a more accessible and effective approach in behaviorally oriented treatments for a chronic illness like ME/CFS
.The ACT treatment format was developed as an adapted version of a treatment protocol developed and evaluated for chronic pain by our group during the last 15 years (98, 126, 127, 137-144). The treatment is described in more detail in the paper, a brief overview will follow here. The initial phase of treatment included education in plausible physiological mechanisms and learning theory principles. This in order to validate the symptoms as real and at the same time non-malignant, and to shift focus to the function (what do you do in the presence of symptoms/discomfort and is it effective?) and not the shape/form/logic of experiences (symptoms, thoughts, feelings) and behaviors. In this phase, a functional contextual analysis of the present life situation was carried out, identifying all forms of discomfort the patient currently struggled with. In the next phase, the “struggle” behaviors and accompanying rules/thoughts were operationalized and analyzed based on their workability, i.e. what effects they had on either symptom resolution or quality of life. All such strategies and outcomes were evaluated in relation to the life the individual valued, concerning for example relationships, interests and so forth. The main targets of treatment then, were to increase contact with such values as consequences, through increasing values-directed behaviors. The practice in identifying and reducing unhelpful rules and behaviors (cognitive defusion) and the letting go of the struggle with discomfort that cannot be avoided (exposure and acceptance in order to allow a shift in focus towards values) were central parts of sessions throughout treatment following the initial education phase
Thank you for the quotes, emotionally difficult to read through,... He implicates more than once that symptoms are harmless and/or not reflective of severe disease, and should be addressed with behavioral treatment ...
As @mango wrote earlier in the thread, this study is connected to the ACT-study by the same researcher team.
Both studies are part of Jonsjö's thesis -
SICKNESS & BEHAVIOR IN ME/CFS (CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME)
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://openarchive.ki.se/xmlui/bitstream/handle/10616/46839/Thesis_Martin_Jonsjo.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y&ved=2ahUKEwjApZL-zujmAhVHwcQBHZLuCyUQFjABegQIBhAH&usg=AOvVaw24c-sblCjYiHPx-hKroPIq
From the abstract :
Jonsjö seems rather convinced behavior o
is somehow a part, either in the etiology or the maintenance of the disease :
His interest in sickness behavior is mainly in relation to psychological and/or behavioral factors. The duality of mind and body is apparently bothersome, (remind you of someone?) but the field of psychoneuroimmunology is an answer to this, making the distinction unnecessary :
He implicates more than once that symptoms are harmless and/or not reflective of severe disease, and should be addressed with behavioral treatment :
.
About their ACT method, originally developed for chronic pain :
.
Thank you @Anna H for gathering that set of quotes. So, if I understand it correctly, and to oversimplify, they are saying sickness behaviour is a biologically induced pattern of behaviour in acute illness which is helpful for recovery, but in chronic illness where doctors can't find any underlying pathology, sickness behaviour sometimes continues unhelpfully.
In that situation they suggest it is at least partly perpetuated by the patient's thoughts. So the treatment ACT is aimed at getting patients to recognise the role the thoughts are playing in ongoing symptoms and to change their values so they accept the symptoms as part of life instead of fighting them?
I think it is interesting that treatment has veered from CBT which says we avoid activity out of fear that we will get sicker and we need to ignore our symptoms, to ACT which says we have our values wrong, and we need to accept symptoms as our normal and adapt...? Or something.
Either way it's all about blaming patients for not thinking the right way.
Does sickness response include PEM?
I would say, in the essential meaning of the word, yes: you feel worse soon after exertion, when you are ill.
The CCC in fact has AN alternative: post-exertional-malaise or post-exertional-fatique.It is being a bit picky, I know what you meant Spinoza577, but Dr Lily Chu, who is an authority on PEM, makes the distinction between post exertional fatigue and post exertional malaise
I hoped to have made it very clear in the following three points that me/cfs "should be" distinct.She is trying to get doctors to understand that our experience appears to be unique. The way people feel if they exert when they are ill can be predicted but what we get is out of all proportion and not related to what we have done of what our illness seems to be. That is people with heart disease find their heart struggles, pain increased heart rate, breathlessness but we can lose the ability to walk because we having been adding up our accounts and we can lose the ability to do our accounts because we have walked too far.
I think it is important for us to stress this distinction until it is commonplace.
In that situation they suggest it is at least partly perpetuated by the patient's thoughts. So the treatment ACT is aimed at getting patients to recognise the role the thoughts are playing in ongoing symptoms and to change their values so they accept the symptoms as part of life instead of fighting them?
I think it is interesting that treatment has veered from CBT which says we avoid activity out of fear that we will get sicker and we need to ignore our symptoms, to ACT which says we have our values wrong, and we need to accept symptoms as our normal and adapt...? Or something.
Either way it's all about blaming patients for not thinking the right way
I did the same the first year of my illness, though I knew something wasn't right and was going through medical examinations, I could never have imagined it was as bad, or that exertion could be dangerous, until it was.I know that i for one (when i was mild) was in absolute denial that my experience indicated illness & so i carried on with my very full, extremely happy life, regardless of symptoms, I didn't think they meant anything & so I accepted them as just a bit of an irritation & went on as normal, proclaiming how great I felt..... until those symptoms became so bad as to literally prevent me from continuing they became impossible to ignore because when you're collapsed on the floor & find that you cannot get up no matter how hard you try, or how astonishing you find it not to be able to stand up, you still cant.
Wow. Got it. Ignore these fools. What a big pile of tripe.As @mango wrote earlier in the thread, this study is connected to the ACT-study by the same researcher team.
Both studies are part of Jonsjö's thesis -
SICKNESS & BEHAVIOR IN ME/CFS (CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME)
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://openarchive.ki.se/xmlui/bitstream/handle/10616/46839/Thesis_Martin_Jonsjo.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y&ved=2ahUKEwjApZL-zujmAhVHwcQBHZLuCyUQFjABegQIBhAH&usg=AOvVaw24c-sblCjYiHPx-hKroPIq
From the abstract :
Jonsjö seems rather convinced behavior o
is somehow a part, either in the etiology or the maintenance of the disease :
His interest in sickness behavior is mainly in relation to psychological and/or behavioral factors. The duality of mind and body is apparently bothersome, (remind you of someone?) but the field of psychoneuroimmunology is an answer to this, making the distinction unnecessary :
He implicates more than once that symptoms are harmless and/or not reflective of severe disease, and should be addressed with behavioral treatment :
.
About their ACT method, originally developed for chronic pain :
.
Old piss in new bottles, more like it.Sounds like "old wine in new bottles" to me.![]()
I see that a lot, this framing that the symptoms are basically like the color of your hair, some thing you bear but has no actual effect, it's just a property, like the length of our arms, inoffensive and without any actual impact. I guess it makes it easier to leave us off to dry, absolves them of any responsibility in refusing to do their job, giving free rein to BS their way into believing they're helping.I'm always amazed that they seem to think that changing perspective on symptoms can allow a 'valued life' - ie continuing on with a normally functioning life - they must be completely ignorant of what the symptoms actually ARE... As if if that were possible we wouldnt all already be doing it!
Precisely!And this is probably true for many of us, so our lived experiences have already proven their theory wrong, which they would learn if they were to speak to actual people with ME.![]()
If applied with a proper understanding of ME, the acceptance part should be about accepting the reality of one's situation, of being chronically ill with a very debilitating disease, and accepting the limitations that puts on your life.
I agree completely. Nobody is saying you should. Accepting what is, is in no way opposed to simultaneously seeking ways to improve the situation. That is not what I meant, or what is meant by acceptance in general. That sounds more like defeat.I think this is the problem with "repurposed" philosophies.
I have no problem accepting certain things I cannot change - like the weather. I can even go so far as accepting things that cannot be changed for now - like I have ME and my life being completely altered.
However, why should I accept that I should feel this way indefinitely? Why shouldn't I look for properly conducted research? Why shouldn't I seek to improve my life and health?
While one must be pragmatic about coping with what is, it should never mean that we accept our lot without trying to improve things. Which is, as I read it, the next logical step in this philosophy (not medicine).
If we all just accepted our lot without questioning then we would still be living in caves.
I agree completely. Nobody is saying you should. Accepting what is, is in no way opposed to simultaneously seeking ways to improve the situation. That is not what I meant, or what is meant by acceptance in general. That sounds more like defeat.