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  1. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Jejunal feeding: when is it the right thing to do?, Paine et al, 2020

    Yes seems like a problematic view, also explained in this talk by first author Peter Paine: 'First do no harm: walking the gut-brain-nutrition tightrope' - Dr Peter Paine (youtube.com) He seems to argue that a lot of functional gut disorders are more about pain and anxiety and so should be...
  2. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Maeve Boothby O'Neill - articles about her life, death and inquest

    No sorry, hope somebody else is able to help.
  3. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Maeve Boothby O'Neill - articles about her life, death and inquest

    I wonder if there is any evidence of this... Did not see this mentioned as a risk or complication in PEG reviews or long-term follow ups of PEG(-J) placement. For example: https://www.thieme-connect.com/products/ejournals/html/10.1055/s-0034-1392806...
  4. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Maeve Boothby O'Neill - articles about her life, death and inquest

    Might be good to quote from the RCP guideline as it contrasts with what the doctors have done. The guideline gives the following case example (page 71): So, regardless of the cause and medical condition, they should have stabilised or increased BMI to a safe level using clinically assisted...
  5. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Maeve Boothby O'Neill - articles about her life, death and inquest

    In the NASA studies using complete bedrest it happened rather soon. From memory: I think most of the change happened in the first days and the blood eventually volume dropped by amount of approximately 10-15%.
  6. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Maeve Boothby O'Neill - articles about her life, death and inquest

    Anyone heard anything about PEG-J, PEJ or jejunostomy being considered (i.e.placing the feeding tube directly in the stomach or intestines): were these tried and not tolerated? I find it strange that the discussion seems to focus on a nasal tube (problematic because of risk of aspiration and...
  7. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome After SARS-CoV-2 Infection, 2024, Unger et al

    Surprising result. The controls had an infectious disease as well ('Our study design required an acute infection prompting COVID-19 testing') so that may explain the lack of difference between the groups. Nonetheless, the prevalence of ME/CFS-like illness was quite low, as the authors note:
  8. ME/CFS Science Blog

    The Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) Does it Really Measure Fear Beliefs?, Aasdahl et al., 2020

    "The FABQ, although originally developed for low back pain, has later been evaluated for other populations and is now widely used. Several studies have showed that the FABQ, particularly the work-subscale, is a good predictor of future work outcomes, and is thus much used in the clinic and in...
  9. ME/CFS Science Blog

    The Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) Does it Really Measure Fear Beliefs?, Aasdahl et al., 2020

    Abstract Study design: A cohort study with 12 months of follow-up. Objective: To assess (1) the unidimensionality of the Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ) and (2) whether single questions in the FABQ predict future sickness absence as well as the whole scale. Summary of background...
  10. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Determining the societal value of a prospective drug for ME/CFS in Germany, 2024, Afschin Gandjour

    They argue that the optimal R&D investment in Germany was €676 million, which represents only a quarter of the total investment needed to bring a drug to market. They therefore say that international collaboration is necessary. A closer look at their assumptions: - The data on quality of life...
  11. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Increased risk of chronic fatigue syndrome following pneumonia: A population-based Cohort study, Hsu et al, 2024

    I think these authors have published more dan a dozen of these risk factor papers for CFS based on the Taiwanese insurance research database with a separate paper for each risk factor. I have doubts about the reliability of their database: it is unclear if ME or CFS are recognized diagnoses in...
  12. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Novel characterization of endogenous transient receptor potential melastatin 3 ion channels from Gulf War Illness participants 2024 Marshall-Gradisnik

    Noticed that this researcher: Douglas C Youvan has written a comment/editorial on the finding. Maybe it will be published somewhere in the future? Perhaps also the reason why the study was featured in The Times...
  13. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Novel characterization of endogenous transient receptor potential melastatin 3 ion channels from Gulf War Illness participants 2024 Marshall-Gradisnik

    I'm afraid they are referring to this study by the Griffith team, which does not seem lik a landmark study at all: Novel characterization of endogenous transient receptor potential melastatin 3 ion channels from Gulf War Illness participants 2024 Marshall-Gradisnik | Science for ME (s4me.info)
  14. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Novel characterization of endogenous transient receptor potential melastatin 3 ion channels from Gulf War Illness participants 2024 Marshall-Gradisnik

    Scientists say soldiers suffering from mysterious symptoms since the 1991 war are likely to have been exposed to hazardous biological and chemical agents. Full text at: https://www.thetimes.com/uk/defence/article/cause-of-gulf-war-syndrome-identified-in-landmark-study-v585cltjx By Larisa Brown...
  15. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Visual media for learning biology/medicine

    It seems that they mostly focus on medical students. So if they use something like the IOM report, Mayo review article, NICE guideline or just the Wikipedia page on ME/CFS it would likely be much better than what most medical students learn about ME/CFS (if they hear anything about it all).
  16. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Visual media for learning biology/medicine

    Thanks for sharing. Maybe they can do an episode on ME/CFS? Did a quick search and noticed that none of the team members is an actual doctor or specialist. Zach Murphy, the CEO and guy in the videos is a physician assistant.
  17. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Grip test results and brain imaging in the NIH study: Deep phenotyping of PI-ME/CFS, 2024, Walitt et al

    This paper also reports: Post-exercise depression following submaximal and maximal isometric voluntary contraction - PubMed (nih.gov)
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