Maybe they should have got their science or health editor to take a look at this before publishing it eh
I feel for the girl and her family and there is a good article to be written on their experiences and how they have been failed, but publishing what seem to be more lifestyle pieces like...
Microvesicle-transferred mitochondria trigger cGAS-STING and reprogram metabolism of macrophages in sepsis
Ji T, Zhao T, Long S, Wei C, Cheng D, Chen J, Kuang L
Abstract
The inflammatory cytokine storm is a hallmark of sepsis and is highly correlated with organ injury. Therefore, inhibiting...
I’m very much in learning things, seeing possibilities and throwing stuff at the wall and seeing what sticks territory. Which is very fun. But find piecing it together into something cohesive or articulating it is much trickier.
I’ve made some notes though. So they’re not fully formed or...
Not explicitly no. There’s so much in there. It’s really useful to see what someone more familiar with all this sees as relevant or important.
Yes and no. More potential fragments of mechanisms or involved pathways. Probably all a bit hand wavy!
Thanks! Well, I got there in the end and am now all aboard the mitochondria and IFN Type I hype trains. Or maybe it’s more accurate to say I have a better appreciation of your interest in these areas than I previously did :) Today a whole bunch of things you’ve said this year sort of slotted...
Presumably the sort of thing it should be easy to compare with DecodeME data, this is 2261 and DecodeME has 10x as many people’s data including comorbitities and for many, NHS records.
After some more digging there could be a link to Type I Interferons too, which has been of interest to people. We’ve often asked how signals are passed around the body especially as we haven’t seen them. How can this be interferon mediated with no measurable systemic IFN changes? Well what if...
I’ve posted a thread on a paper which could be a good reference for helping understand mechanisms of actions and why it may not work for some people with ME/CFS here
Mechanisms of resistance to daratumumab in patients with multiple myeloma
This recent paper has a good overview of usage of daratumumab in multiple myeloma including methods of action, with the main focus on resistance to treatment, either primary (no effect at all) or acquired (initial effect but resistance to treatment later evolves). Four areas are covered...
Mechanisms of resistance to daratumumab in patients with multiple myeloma
Iversen KF
Abstract
Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable cancer in the bone marrow. The treatment of MM has developed significantly during the last 20 years, which has resulted in increased survival. Daratumumab is the...
There’s a whole section on regulation of the immune system which seems potentially interesting too
Link
Link
And a discussion on metabolic homeostasis which mentions stopping mitochondria transfer in one part of the body maybe being beneficial as it allows mitochondria to be available...
I wondered about that too. It seems to be being pushed by the charity who funded it and the university doing it as a novel way of rapidly getting results, but then there aren’t really results yet. The changes they’ve seen are deemed significant but then when there hasn’t been changes they say...
The power and potential of mitochondria transfer
Borcherding N, Brestoff JR.
Preface
Mitochondria are believed to have originated through an ancient endosymbiotic process in which proteobacteria were captured and co-opted for energy production and cellular metabolism. Mitochondria segregate...
Absolutely agree.
It feels like there’s a bit of a mix of things in this thread. Maybe we need to separate people’s experiences (which are subjective and vary but I think need to be acknowledged as valid and often useful) from the question of widespread empirical evidence (which would be...
I found step count useless. Things that aren’t steps show up as steps and other activities which can triggering PEM are not counted. It was completely useless for someone who is severe and walks only a handful of steps a day.
Perhaps finding a good objective and truly accurate proxy is very...
That isn’t what I was tying to say. Take a look at my previous post, this is at least partially about HR, HRV and PEM. There seems to be a predictive element or at least something which helped in learning about what activities could trigger problems. If you wait until you feel bad it is too late.
To add some more to the above mitochondria transfer chain of thought, a couple of things from DecodeME discussions
@chillier flagged this in the candidate genes writeup
And there’s also
I’m wondering if these could all be contributing factors to why a cell may look to import mitochondria or...
When healthy and running my heart-rate was well into the mid 100s when doing so and I felt fine. Since ME/CFS if it goes above 80 I’m iffy and over 90 I can barely stand up and am screwed. Cause or effect is questionable but there’s at least a strong correlation here. Doing what I can to keep HR...
Yeah, at least for me HR has been a significant part of my illness. Now what that means is questionable. HR seemed to be a useful indicator but it was more a case of you’ve already done too much, stop. HRV was maybe more of an early warning sign, but tbh I’m not sure how accurate it was. It did...
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.