Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I have read this too, and trust these researchers to know what they are doing.
Would it be possible that there could be, for example, ongoing viral infection in brain or other tissue that is not detectable by tests done by these researchers?
And is it possible that when some people with ME find they seem to improve on antivirals, it might be some other biochemical/physiological effect of the drug that is helping, unrelated to its antiviral properties?
Local brain infection with virus would normally show up clearly on an MRI scan. Based on what we know of documented brain infection I think it is vanishingly unlikely in ME.
I think much the most likely reason that people improve while taking antiviral is that it is nothing to do with the drug. Antiviral drugs are very unlikely to do anything else of interest. I know that such ideas have been raised but not with any plausible basis I know of.
The one thing that disappointed me about Jen Brea's film was that the tiny bit of 'science' seemed muddled, speculative and out of date. There is no immunodeficiency to let viruses react I ate as far as we know. There are no inflammatory cytokines flying around. I think now we have evidence from lots of good research groups it is time to move on from this approach.