@elimrogers Thank you for joining and offering to share your paper. Unfortunately, it's really hard for me to follow these types of historical/sociological topics, so I'm not sure how much I can personally understand or contribute.
I'm sorry that comments on this forum have been hurtful. But...
There are some resources for learning about the immune system here: https://www.s4me.info/threads/learning-about-the-immune-system.43381/
And Sasha talks about that book here: https://www.s4me.info/threads/visual-media-for-learning-biology-medicine.39380/post-611356
I always thought of it as some side effect or other circumstance occurring that makes participants more certain what group they're in, unrelated to the outcome of interest. For example, if a patient gets a characteristic rash that is only known to happen with the active drug, they're no longer...
Muscle and cerebral oxygenation during exercise in fibromyalgia: a near-infrared spectroscopy study
Taneli Lehto, Teemu Zetterman, Dominique Gagnon, Ritva Markkula, Jari Arokoski, Eija Kalso & Juha E. Peltonen
[Line breaks added]
Purpose
We studied muscle and brain oxygenation during...
Previous paper:
Development and evaluation of blood-based prognostic biomarkers for COVID disease outcomes using EpiSwitch 3-dimensional genomic regulatory immuno-genetic profiling, 2024, Hunter et al
Thread for press release about that paper:
Oxford BioDynamics shares gain on Covid test...
If I understood it correctly, this study looked at absolute count of CD16+CD56+ cells at baseline in the blood, like the ME/CFS study, and found no correlation with response to daratumumab:
Effects of daratumumab on natural killer cells and impact on clinical outcomes in relapsed or refractory...
For this one, frequency of total NK cells wasn't different between multiple myeloma responders and nonresponders in either bone marrow or blood.
What was different was higher proportion of CD16+ NK cells and lower TIM-3+ NK and HLA-DR+ NK cells in the bone marrow in responders. I'm not sure if...
It'd would be good to know how correct this is about, for example, spleen plasma cells being mostly non-specific. That's just what I remember from an intro to immunology textbook.
Maybe high IGHV3-30 from the other studies might also point to overly high levels of non-specific innate-like...
Maybe, but if blood count was a good proxy for bone marrow count, I'd expect studies showing that blood NK count in multiple myeloma correlates with improvement from dara, but I haven't seen such a study.
I don't think it's impossible. Maybe the body can deal with the antibodies from, say, 1000...
I think also:
1. Faulty T cells being the problem
2. Faulty NK cells being the problem
3. Some other cell that expresses CD38 being the problem.
I don't think they say anything about exact levels of protective antibodies, just that they're still at protective levels at 12 months, so maybe...
The association of fatigue and pain with cognitive test performance in patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome
Joukje M. Oosterman, Marieke van der Schaaf, Willemien P.E. de Kleijn, Tanja A. Kuut, Inti A. Brazil, Hans Knoop
Highlights
• Fatigue severity was the...
Preliminary evaluation of a cognitive rehabilitation intervention for post-COVID-19 cognitive impairment: A pilot randomized controlled trial
Jacqueline H. Becker, Eric Watson, Nadia Zubair, Fernando Carnavali, Emilia Bagiella, David Reich, Juan P. Wisnivesky
Background:
Despite the profound...
Experiences of living with long COVID during childhood and adolescence: a qualitative study from the child’s perspective
Emmy Lillieberg, Per Ertzgaard, Eva Fernlund, Karel Duchen, Patrik Rytterström & Charlotte Angelhoff
Background
In February 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO)...
I'm not sure. Maybe higher dose?
Here's the paper you linked to: Effects of daratumumab on natural killer cells and impact on clinical outcomes in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma, 2017
Fig 2B
They used 16 mg/kg in multiple myeloma for that chart. The ME/CFS study used 1800 mg. I'm...
What I see is that recovery begins sometime after 9 months (in the 7 that have data past 9 months).
Maybe one participant's NK count went back up at 10 months, but they weren't tested again until 15 months, and maybe another's count didn't go back up until 20 months, and that's when they were...
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