It has taken me a while to get my head around this thread, given the extreme press of information. I found it very hard to see the wood for the trees.
@nataliezzz is this a fair overview of what you are saying?
Hi Peter,
Thank you for your efforts to understand the theory (I think you did a pretty good job!), and your critiques. I am going to try to come back and respond in depth to them (let me come back to it after I have updated my post with the relevant information - I estimated 2 weeks).
- We need assurances that any subject cohorts have conditions that are defined as well as possible by accepted criteria given this is an area where we see high levels of both false positives and false negatives in diagnosis.
- Are the anecdotes of managing IFL improving other conditions credible or could they be coincidental? (I suffer from B12 deficiency, and when I am in deficit a B12 injection might subjectively be interpreted as improving my ME/CFS, but longer term any B12 supplementation beyond what is necessary to avoid going back into deficit has no impact. So I am after several years of varying levels of supplementation fairy confident that B12 treats my vitamin deficiency not my ME/CFS.)
The fibromyalgia patients in Dr. Gold's study were previously diagnosed by a rheumatologist using American College of Rheumatology (ACR) criteria for fibromyalgia.
GWI Study Criteria:
"Criteria for GWI participants were adapted from the VA Cooperative study #470...Eligible veterans were deployed to the Persian Gulf
between August 1990 and August 1991 and reported onset after August 1990 of each of the following symptoms: fatigue, pain involving at least two body regions and cognitive dysfunction (memory or concentration problems). All three symptoms must have lasted for more than 6 months, were present at the time of screening, and were unexplained by any clearly defined organic illness. Exclusion criteria included alcohol abuse, active clinical depression, active post-traumatic stress disorder, current use of opiates, and a prior diagnosis of sleep apnea.
Potential participants were screened for the relevant symptoms using three self-report instruments measuring cognitive difficulties, pain, and fatigue. The Cognitive Failures Questionnaire, a 25-item instrument that assesses frequency of difficulty with memory, attention, action, and perception in everyday life (increasing difficulty rated 0–100 with our clinical threshold at 20) [16, 17]. This instrument has been previously used to assess veterans with GWI. A pain visual analog scale (increasing pain rated 0–10) with a pain rating of 2 serving as the clinical threshold The Fatigue Severity Scale, an 11-item instrument measuring the level of disability related to fatigue [18] (increasing disability rated 1-7 with our clinical threshold at 2). To be included, GWI participants had to score above the designated clinical threshold on each of the questionnaires. Conversely, Gulf War veteran controls had to score below the clinical threshold to be included."
With the published case report (not coming from Dr. Gold by the way) of the woman whose fibromyalgia symptoms resolved with treatment of OSA with a mandibular advancement device, the object finding of alpha-delta sleep (the only consistently replicated objective finding associated with fibromyalgia that I'm aware of) disappeared along with fibromyalgia symptoms. FIQR (Revised Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire) was used to assess fibromyalgia symptoms before and after treatment:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8848527/
I think considering individual’s potential sleep issues is worth doing, and if studies demonstrate a higher level of IFL than in the general population that would be very useful, just as I think everyone with ME/CFS should be on the look out for food intolerances. That is not because everyone with ME/CFS has food intolerances, but rather that there are unusually high levels of food intolerances in ME/CFS the reasons for which we don’t currently understand. So being on the look out for food intolerances means we can improve the quality of life for those that have both.
Collectively on lots of threads I feel here we are coming to a consensus that given we do not yet understand the aetiology of such as ME/CFS, clear descriptions of the phenomenon are very important, but that speculation about possible causes should not be part of the clinical setting as that only serves to alienate those who disagree. I am sure many doctors will see Dr Gold as a quack, because he is using a theory that goes well beyond current evidence to prescribe treatment for fibromyalgia, which will not help getting the wider medical profession to ask has he identified a clinically significant issue. In terms of treatment, if a person with ME/CFS who also has IFL would see an improvement in their quality of life if that is treated that is fantastic. But then it is a separate academic issue explaining any etiological significance.
Re: Dr. Gold "using a theory that goes well beyond current evidence to prescribe treatment for fibromyalgia," see my reply to Dr. Edwards:
"Tinkering about with treatments as 'a clinician' without doing proper trials." That is not what is happening here. Dr. Gold has a lot of fibromyalgia patients referred to his department because the rheumatology department at his university has caught on to the fibromyalgia - sleep-disordered breathing connection, and he finds that they all (or almost all) have sleep-disordered breathing, and that their fibromyalgia symptoms (pain, fatigue, insomnia, IBS, etc.) improve when treated with CPAP that is properly titrated to eliminate inspiratory flow limitation (I think this is a big part of the reason why many OSAS patients don't feel [much] better on CPAP by the way - their AHI may be down, but they can still have a lot of flow limitation).
CPAP is an almost no risk treatment and it is the established treatment for OSAS/UARS (sleep-disordered breathing + daytime fatigue/sleepiness), which he finds to be present in all/close to all the fibromyalgia patients he sees. This is exactly what a clinician does - treats people for a disorder they have. There is nothing questionable about this at all.
I would like to remind people that unrefreshing sleep, fatigue, and cognitive dysfunction are all well established symptoms of both ME/CFS (& fibro, GWI) and UARS/OSAS, so even if people disagree that there is supporting evidence for a causal role in sleep-disordered breathing in disorders like ME/CFS and fibromyalgia, encouraging people with these disorders to be evaluated for sleep-disordered breathing seems like something we could all get behind (by the way I haven't been using this thread to encourage people).