Search results

  1. hotblack

    Do you want to be able to watch Jonathan's seminar on Maeve Boothby O'Neill's case?

    Having it public would be a really useful resource
  2. hotblack

    COVID-19 Vaccination and Odds of Post–COVID-19 Condition Symptoms in Children Aged 5 to 17 Years, 2025, Yousaf et al.

    Agree, those with the biggest financial incentives to do the right thing and follow the science and get people vaccinated (amongst loads of other preventive healthcare measures) are health insurers and drug companies. So they will.
  3. hotblack

    A comparison of genome-wide association analyses of persistent symptoms after Lyme disease, fibromyalgia, and ME/CFS, 2025, Hirsch et al

    It would be good to get the thoughts of someone a bit more familiar with this sort of study. The numbers look quite low for getting much useful from GWAS from what I’ve read around DecodeME. But they’ve used CDC diagnostic codes for diseases, and MyCode looks like a proper healthcare system...
  4. hotblack

    Deep Sequencing of BCR Heavy Chain Repertoires in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, 2025, Ryback et al

    Maybe for mild/moderate people the compensatory mechanism for whatever is going on elsewhere is working while in severe it’s not or has stopped or paused for some reason. Or it may not even be a distinction as clear as severity but just for different people with ME/CFS at different times or in...
  5. hotblack

    Open ReMEdi clinical trial, UK [Lindus Health, Alfred E. Tiefenbacher GmbH]

    I’d hoped any drug trials we saw in the UK would have been done by people who cared about or at least understood ME/CFS. This all looks very generic and boilerplate.
  6. hotblack

    Updates from the UK ME/CFS Biobank / CureME team

    Dr Jacqueline Cliff Has been doing the HHV-6 reactivation study which is ongoing https://www.brunel.ac.uk/research/projects/reactivation-of-herpesviruses-in-chronic-fatigue-syndrome
  7. hotblack

    Updates from the UK ME/CFS Biobank / CureME team

    Yes, limited space but recording available after. This from an email I received
  8. hotblack

    Deep Sequencing of BCR Heavy Chain Repertoires in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, 2025, Ryback et al

    To me uncertainty and partial information and things we as patients need to find ways to be comfortable with. If there’s anything we know about ME/CFS it is that it isn’t simple. I’m hugely hopeful about upcoming science, but expect that in even the most enlightening studies we’ll only uncover...
  9. hotblack

    [Poll] How does exertion affect sleep? (Read instructions in first post)

    Presumably makes them feel a bit woolly?
  10. hotblack

    Deep Sequencing of BCR Heavy Chain Repertoires in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, 2025, Ryback et al

    Absolutely. The more I learn about biology the more you can see it using fundamental chemistry and physics, not just the ‘simple’ stuff but including crazy quantum and probabilistic stuff. Amazing stuff. So much more for us to learn and (try to) understand.
  11. hotblack

    Deep Sequencing of BCR Heavy Chain Repertoires in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, 2025, Ryback et al

    The way I suppose I would probably think about it is a complex circuit with lots of different electrical pathways/tracks and switches and components. Or maybe even just the electrical system in a house. And depending upon which switches are enabled different lights switch on. And sometimes you...
  12. hotblack

    [Poll] How does exertion affect sleep? (Read instructions in first post)

    Oh that’s interesting @Yann04 the whole MCAS thing is something I’ve been interested in learning more about. Thanks @forestglip that’s really useful to help understand what information you’re trying to get at.
  13. hotblack

    [Poll] How does exertion affect sleep? (Read instructions in first post)

    I’d have difficulty answering a ‘first night’ question. I can’t be that fine grained really. I would say that I have a mixture of all of these after exertion, but it varies presumably depending upon many variables which tbh I cannot be sure of: Difficulty getting to sleep Less restful sleep...
  14. hotblack

    If ME/CFS research got £1 billion, what would stop it being wasted?

    Setup a scientific panel of people like Jonathan and Chris and have patients chosen from this forum by vote as patient representatives. Get Sonya from AfME to help organise and chair the group. Let anyone pitch and all pitches would be openly discussed here, but that panel and patient group...
  15. hotblack

    Exeter firm excited over long Covid test success [BBC News]

    Given the link on their website (on an older article from 2023) to book a test, which seems linked to a US firm which runs private medical centres in the UK, I’d agree. https://recognitionhealth.com/ But it does seem interesting they’ve popped up after a couple of years of quiet. Has something...
  16. hotblack

    Exeter firm excited over long Covid test success [BBC News]

    Someone from a private company selling a test which it wants to market and then talking about treating them, when we have no idea about treatment… hmmm. I understand the hope especially from the patients involved, but even they seem to admit they’re not cured after being treated. David Strain...
  17. hotblack

    Are the types of virus that can trigger ME/CFS a clue to cause/mechanism?

    So now we’re moving beyond types of virus to variants within a virus! Makes you think though, if (still a big if) ME/CFS is virally triggered is there some bit of DNA or RNA shared amongst those which trigger?
  18. hotblack

    Why do some viruses take months to recover from, and does that tell us anything about ME/CFS?

    I find this interesting going back to my experience of vaccines, no problem with the flu one but significant issues with mRNA and viral vector covid-19 ones. So my body is, for some reason, reacting very differently to I guess the spike proteins? So within the wider population why not...
  19. hotblack

    Sex Differences in Long COVID, 2025, Shah et al.

    Could it just be the effect of age here or did they account for that? Presumably those who were pregnant were younger and the difference looks similar to the age ratios?
  20. hotblack

    Norepinephrine-mediated slow vasomotion drives glymphatic clearance during sleep, 2025, Natalie L Hauglund et al

    And a write up on Arstechnica https://arstechnica.com/science/2025/01/how-sleeping-pills-interfere-with-the-brains-internal-cleaning-mechanism/ I was also pondering potential ME/CFS relationships too. Either something disrupting norepinephrine and this process which triggers some symptoms or...
Back
Top Bottom