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  1. ME/CFS Science Blog

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

    Thanks. The data is in .raw filetype and have some trouble converting it to something like CSV or Excel. Anyone who has more experience in this?
  2. ME/CFS Science Blog

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

    This study is listed on MapME/CFS but it doesn't include the raw data from what I can see, only summary statistics of their analyses and modelling.
  3. ME/CFS Science Blog

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

    Just posting the main results here: The Japanese used next-generation sequencing (NGS) and got the following results: They also found that it was related to an infectious-onset and shorter illness duration (perhaps that explains why Ryback only seem to find it in the mild/moderate but not...
  4. ME/CFS Science Blog

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

    Any ideas at what this may point to? If it is not specific antigen driven expansion, what else might be causing this? And why would B-cell abnormalities make sense, as Nath said, if it is likely not related to a specific antigen drive?
  5. ME/CFS Science Blog

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

    Thanks, the two studies these refer to are I believe: 2020 Lipkin study: Plasma proteomic profiling suggests an association between antigen driven clonal B cell expansion and ME/CFS | PLOS ONE 2021 Sato study: Skewing of the B cell receptor repertoire in myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic...
  6. ME/CFS Science Blog

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

    Looks interesting. The first author is Audrey Ryback who is also trying to replicate the 'something in the blood' theory, as explained by Simon Mcgrath here: Remarkable researchers hunting for ‘something in the blood’ of people with ME | Science for ME
  7. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Should we change our name: 'ME/CFS Skeptic'?

    Thanks for the suggestions. It seems that misuse of the term skeptic has become so common (i.e. as in climate skeptics) that a correct use of the term has become confusing to most people. We still plan on changing the name but needed some more time to consider the best options. Will probably...
  8. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Incidence and Prevalence of Post-COVID-19 Myalgic Encephalomyelitis: A Report from the Observational RECOVER-Adult Study, 2024, Vernon +

    Later in the text they write: So that suggests that one ME/CFS symptom is enough to meet the ME/CFS-like definition. What they call ME/CFS should have been named ME/CFS-like to be consistent with the literature. And what they named ME/CFS-like shouldn't have been named anything.
  9. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Incidence and Prevalence of Post-COVID-19 Myalgic Encephalomyelitis: A Report from the Observational RECOVER-Adult Study, 2024, Vernon +

    Bit sad that they got more than 1 billion in funding and this is the best they could do...
  10. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Incidence and Prevalence of Post-COVID-19 Myalgic Encephalomyelitis: A Report from the Observational RECOVER-Adult Study, 2024, Vernon +

    Made a Twitter summary with comments here: https://bsky.app/profile/mecfsskeptic.bsky.social/post/3lfnfst3mev2u 1) The RECOVER study found that adults who got a SARS-CoV-2 infection were approximately 5 times as likely to develop ME/CFS. But there are some important caveats… 2) The main one...
  11. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Incidence and Prevalence of Post-COVID-19 Myalgic Encephalomyelitis: A Report from the Observational RECOVER-Adult Study, 2024, Vernon +

    What the paper doesn't really discuss is that the rate of ME/CFS in the acute-infected - 73 of 4,515 (1.6%) - was much lower than in the post-acute infected - 458 of 7,270 (6.3%). The former was enrolled within 30 days of infection.
  12. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Donating and fundraising by people with ME/CFS - discussion thread

    I think the main reasons are: 1) Many ME/CFS patients are not diagnosed yet. Other have received other diagnoses such as chronic Lyme, POTS, MCAS, CCI, etc that cause confusion and break up the patient community into smaller parts. 2) A lot of ME/CFS patients are disconnected from family and...
  13. ME/CFS Science Blog

    What do we mean by a diagnosis like ME/CFS?

    I would argue that the causal path is valuable for researchers, and an indication of what treatment to use is useful for doctors, but for patients it can simply be enough to have a description of what you're going through. Even if the pathology or treatment for many us turns out to be very...
  14. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Relationship between major depressive disorder and [ME/CFS]: a two-sample mendelian randomization study analysis, 2025, Zhu et al

    Thanks a lot @forestglip and @Nightsong Will send a message to the authors asking for a clarification. Let's hope it just some minor error that they uploaded the wrong Excel sheet or used the wrong SNP identifiers or something like that. Everything else in the paper seems plausible: they cite...
  15. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Relationship between major depressive disorder and [ME/CFS]: a two-sample mendelian randomization study analysis, 2025, Zhu et al

    Trying to understand where they extracted the data from. The paper refers to reference 8, a meta-analysis by Howard et al. 2019 of the three biggest GWAS studies on depression. The supplementary material of this study shows the 102 SNPs that reached statistical significance (P < 5 × 10-8)...
  16. ME/CFS Science Blog

    Relationship between major depressive disorder and [ME/CFS]: a two-sample mendelian randomization study analysis, 2025, Zhu et al

    This seems like quite an important study. Hopefully, it will get some more discussion and analysis. @Jonathan Edwards @Simon M @Chris Ponting @chillier The major limitation is the risk of misdiagnosis but the results look so strong that they might be immune to even large rates of...
  17. ME/CFS Science Blog

    EU: News from the European ME Coalition (EMEC)

    Important update from the European ME Coalition: The results of the Horizon Europe call on high-burden, under-researched conditions have been made public. 3 (out of 4?) projects from the call have already been announced, receiving approximately 7 million each. They focus on endometriosis...
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