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    Chronic Lyme disease - discussion thread

    Well, yes, I suppose to a certain extent that's true. But your picture is so incomplete it does a disservice to the thousands upon thousands of people with Lyme who HAVE done their homework - many of which satisfy the 2T diagnostic protocol and have had the conventional treatment protocol fail...
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    Chronic Lyme disease - discussion thread

    @Wyva and @Mij, Im sorry I don't want to derail this thread, but there is a logical fallacy about applying exceptional occurrences to broad ones. Unfortunately I cannot for the life of me recall it. :) Why do you imagine these foolhardy sick patients buy into what you seem to think is BS...
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    Chronic Lyme disease - discussion thread

    @Mij , I am sorry for the loss of your friend.
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    Chronic Lyme disease - discussion thread

    I am always taken aback when I see such perspectives from people I respect. That's because it well may be. Can be. But not in a vacuum. Most Lyme clinicians insist on some sort of serological proof, not just symptoms. Certainly the ones I follow usually do. Well, yes, and you consider this...
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    Unexplained post-acute infection syndromes, 2021, Choutka, Iwasaki, Hornig et al

    Always nice to see some of these authors, but imho crappy Lyme coverage. I'm not sure what that says about the integrity of the rest of the piece. Maybe nothing. Also, I bring a bias to bear in that if I think someone's Lyme position is suspect, that reflects often on how I regard other musings...
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    Unexplained post-acute infection syndromes, 2021, Choutka, Iwasaki, Hornig et al

    merged thread A couple of the authors' names got my attention, so I skimmed this. I honed in on their Lyme analysis. I personally would give that a "D" grade, but I'm sicker than typical these days so perhaps I'm being too harsh. I cannot speak to the strength of the rest.
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    USA Centers for Disease Control (CDC) news (including ME/CFS Stakeholder Engagement and Communication Calls) - next call 4 Dec 2024

    I suspect it's not limited to liability concerns. Naturally there may be related concerns in play - for instance, insurance lobbies - but I imagine, because we're speaking the US, entrenched worries may run a little deeper.
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    Question: what do you think is a reasonable time that passes between an infection and ME/CFS onset?

    Infectious diseases have an entire discipline dedicated to them for a reason - and still they proliferate. Many of them - many - have little in the way of a signature, and many have no way of diagnosing them serologically. There arguably may be a clinical signature, but who are we kidding? This...
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    Question: what do you think is a reasonable time that passes between an infection and ME/CFS onset?

    Yes, but ME/CFS is quite often triggered after an elongated lag phase, so then by your logic it is pretty likely that this is the norm for ME/CFS. On the contrary, I think it can be telling and help with the diagnosis, that is, help determine which infection brought on ME/CFS. I think this will...
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    Question: what do you think is a reasonable time that passes between an infection and ME/CFS onset?

    Delayed onset may ultimately reduce down to delayed onset of ME/CFS symptoms - not necessarily delayed onset of disease or infection. Two broad examples that come to mind are asymptomatic disease and relapsing remitting disease. Also, now that I think about it, "packaged" diseases that...
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    "The Why: The Historic ME/CFS Call To Arms": new book by Hillary J Johnson

    Sure, it's good to debate any views, and to disagree. But you suggested her's were unhelpful. You don't think medical experts make assumptions all the time, and consider their's earned? I might suggest HJ could qualify as an expert on ME/CFS issues. But it does afford them the right to opine...
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    "The Why: The Historic ME/CFS Call To Arms": new book by Hillary J Johnson

    Why? She's earned her assumptions. She helped put us smack in the public square, at least for a time. Besides, we all have some earned assumptions, just as most of us have opinions as to culprits , whether pathogens or immune issues or what have you. Should she shelve hers until something...
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    "The Why: The Historic ME/CFS Call To Arms": new book by Hillary J Johnson

    This is an important step in the right direction, but I'd suggest more political than anything else. Hard fought for, though, yes. Perhaps a different way to view her reporting is it informs patients. BTW, what agreement? As for good faith... This strikes me as an odd observation. So you are...
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    "The Why: The Historic ME/CFS Call To Arms": new book by Hillary J Johnson

    Not a good era for the CDC or NIH since the 80's...Seems to me heavy on political expedience and light on deep and accurate and patient-centric research. I mean look at what got screwed up during the 80's: AIDS and Lyme and CFS. How many people grew disabled in the U.S. alone? Not a decade for...
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    "The Why: The Historic ME/CFS Call To Arms": new book by Hillary J Johnson

    Doubtful it was the right thing to do considering where we find ourselves today. Moreover, if I read his note correctly, he was trying to disappear a disease entity that was created by the EIS in lieu of ME - or at least reduce it to the symptom of chronic fatigue. Shouldn't he have instead...
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    "The Why: The Historic ME/CFS Call To Arms": new book by Hillary J Johnson

    Are these patients misbehaving in some manner, and if so, who makes that call? Prejudiced? Against institutions that not just abandoned us, but worsened our lot by deliberately psychologizing us, and rewarding the psych industry and enabling insurance carriers to deny our claims? WE are...
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    Meaning of the word 'malaise' and its use in the term Post-exertional malaise (PEM)

    OR they assume the patient is not self-aware enough to tell the difference, or the patient is catastrophizing because they read an article in Psych today. So do depression and grief and ennui and eating too much turkey and laughing too hard, that is, cause weariness out of proportion. And if...
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    Meaning of the word 'malaise' and its use in the term Post-exertional malaise (PEM)

    I too use "crash" to convey PEM to anyone not knowledgeable of ME/CFS, ie, pretty much everyone i know who I'd be willing to discuss ME/CFS. But crash is hard because it's so cross-elastic, it's used for so many conditions. My bad about the sequelae thing. In my head it was synonymous with...
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    Meaning of the word 'malaise' and its use in the term Post-exertional malaise (PEM)

    Exertion-induced sequelae? EIS? I am particularly fond of EIS because it's a full-circle acronym in the US. In the US, EIS stands for Epidemic Intelligence Service, the part of the CDC that investigates new or unusual disease outbreaks. It was the EIS that looked into Lake Tahoe and supposedly...
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    Meaning of the word 'malaise' and its use in the term Post-exertional malaise (PEM)

    Ha! Tops 20 minutes, @Mij . But I've had my same doctors for years. No one even bothers to ask me about my symptoms anymore. Usually we fill that quarter hour talking medical politics. ;)
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