In the screenshot I posted of the bar plots of the data for tissues in everyone, it looks like there may be a signal in the bone as well. In the pelvic bone and maybe also in the femur and lumbar bone marrow, though not significant for the last two.
Does it change things for there to be signal...
I don't know about the two specific people in the images, but in the demographic data screenshot for all 13 women, for the multidimensional fatigue inventory (MFI) score it says 86.62 for cases and 32.08 for controls.
From a paper:
Upper gastrointestinal symptoms and Gulf War Illness in a clinical cohort of US veterans: a retrospective, cross-sectional study
Abdelrahman Yousef, Sarah T Ahmed, Theresa H Nguyen Wenker, Alice B S Nono-Djotsa, Stephen H Boyle, Elizabeth J Gifford, Deeksha Malhotra, Helena Chandler, Sandhya...
No, I don't think they have tried in ME/CFS patients yet (maybe not even any humans). She talks about how they are developing the GPR84 tracers and gives rationale for using them (more specific to microglia and macrophages than TSPO). She said they're at the stage where they're about to...
Note that the two PET screenshots are of two different pairs of matched participants (out of the 13+13 that were studied). I'll edit my post to make it clearer that it's two cases.
On its surface, I also both instinctively want to say things like this ("it's not depression"), and also find it strange when I see others say things like this. But I think it's because the meaning when this is said is somewhat ambiguous.
The person with ME/CFS is saying "What I have is...
Screenshots of the data from the full body scans with the TSPO tracer:
34 year old case and 36 year old control
51 year old case and 50 year old control
Edit: Added labels above PET images.
OpenAI (makers of ChatGPT) mentioned Derya Unutmaz and quoted his tweet about using AI for ME/CFS research.
https://twitter-thread.com/t/1962938974260904421
Do self-perpetuating B lymphocytes drive human autoimmune disease?
Jonathan C W Edwards, Geraldine Cambridge, Vikki M Abrahams
Published: 1999
[Line breaks added]
Abstract
Normal immunological memory is thought to be underpinned by T lymphocytes. However, in rheumatoid arthritis there are...
I know very little about the specifics of how all these drugs work. I think ideally you'd test with a drug that reduces neuron firing relatively globally in the nervous system since we wouldn't know what specific neurons or regions might be more important.
A person would do an intense exercise...
The idea is basically something like every time a person does any kind of exertion, their nervous system receives a tiny dose of something akin to caffeine, amphetamine, or cocaine. [Edit: Like stimulants in terms of the effect, not necessarily an actual chemical being added to the brain.] The...
Good points in your post. I have no idea how an infection would suddenly trigger such a disease, or how it could suddenly go back to normal.
In terms of testing, I'd want to see more studies with larger sample sizes just testing if the above studies are noise or not.
If they are actually...
Only thing I'd say is that from my quick search, the trend seemed to be that consistently (the above five studies), abstracts highlight findings in the activation direction and not people with ME/CFS having larger decreases in brain activity after exertion. Though I might have been biased in my...
I'm just learning the basics of neuroscience, so a lot of this is very foreign to me. But when I search for papers related to MRI, exercise, and ME/CFS, several highlight increased brain activation in one form or another after exertion that is absent in controls.
The following are just from a...
Thread for the blood volume measurement system made by Daxor.
"Daxor Corporation (NASDAQ: DXR) is tackling healthcare’s “multi-billion-dollar silent crisis”, the inability to precisely measure blood volume. This often results in suboptimal care, prolonged hospital stays, and increased...
Long COVID and chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalitis share similar pathophysiologic mechanisms of exercise limitation
Swathi Jothi, Michael Insel, Guido Claessen, Saad Kubba, Erin J. Howden, Sergio Ruiz-Carmona, Todd Levine, Franz P. Rischard
[Line breaks added]
Abstract
Post-acute...
New newsletter about BioQuest:
"The Heart of the Matter
- OMF has now received approval from the NIH to access plasma samples collected via the Chronic Fatigue Initiative, bringing the total number of samples for our large-scale ME/CFS biomarker project (BioQuest) to...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.