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Understanding long covid: a shortcut to solving ME/CFS? Simon McGrath
Understanding long covid: a shortcut to solving ME/CFS?
September 17, 2020 Simon McGrath Comments 0 Comment
Large numbers of people, around one in 10, don’t make a normal recovery from coronavirus but continue...
A great Stat news article by David Tuller @dave30th
Seeking the causes of post-Covid symptoms, researchers dust off data on college students with mononucleosis
From 2014 to 2018, DePaul University psychologist Leonard Jason and colleagues collected personal information and blood samples from...
I'm still slightly in disbelief that the head of WHO has said it will reach out to people with ME. Especially as my tweet didn't tag either him or the WHO.
Ha!
Indeed. It needs to go to those with a mandate to represent the community. Assuming WHO do get in touch with me, I think my only job...
Well, if the WHO said ME/CFS should be treated as a major health priority for the world, that would be a good start. Highlighting it so that ME/CFS is considered by all researchers studying long Covid would be a good step too.
I am still really shocked by the response so haven't given it that...
Big thanks to @Andy for posting this. I posted similar on Twitter and got very lucky
It's amazing and, hopefully, this will lead to serious action by the WHO.
Moderator note: This post has been copied and following posts discussing the WHO and ME will be moved to this new thread:
The World...
Moderator note.
This post has been copied and following posts moved from this thread:
Possibility of ME or PVFS after Covid-19
Big thanks to @Andy for posting this. I posted similar on Twitter and got very lucky
It's amazing and, hopefully, this will lead to serious action by the WHO.
I am planning to write a research blog about the link between Long Covid and ME/CFS, and am hoping the smart people here will help me out.
I must have missed at least 1000 posts since I last kept up with this thread. There's no way I can read all of them so if I outline what I think I know...
Some notes from me (relevant sections with key bits highlighted)
I was struck by how much lung/breathing/cardiac issues were common - so very different from ME/CFS in that respect (I suspect co-morbidities were different too). Also many similarities, and I have focused on things that look...
Lots of great analysis on this thread (no surprise there).
One point that I didn't see mentioned was that the comparison here is with baseline i.e. there is no control group (such as a waiting list control group). People may modestly improve over time in these situations regardless of bias...
I do like the idea of using sub-maximal exercise and measuring pre/post differences in brain function during a cognitive challenge.
The sample size was big by the standards of fMRI studies (38 ME/CFS; 80 GWI, 31 Healthy) but still small.
I'm not sure that the sub-maximal test, based on 25...
Yes, this is the same basic TSPO-PET MRI method as the Nakatomi neuroinflammation study indicating activation of microglia (see my blog). Though it's not clear if they use the same radiotracer to light up the glial cells (radiotracers have since got better, apparently).
However, the recent...
The Netherlands is set to make a huge investment in biomedical research
A patient-led petition asked the Dutch parliament to tackle ME properly. It instructed the Government to take action, which eventually led to the Dutch health research agency recommending a €25m biomedical research...
Thanks! Full credit to the first author Joshua Dibble, Chris Ponting's PhD student, who is funded by Action for ME and Scotland's Chief Scientist Office, and to @Chris Ponting himself.
Yes- perhaps it should say, "and these costs are declining".
The concluding section might be worth sharing...
Responding to tag.
I am afraid I am not able to look at this at the moment. However, there is a review paper in press that looks at these issues and might be available quite soon.
This looks to me like a very elegant approach.
On the one hand, you have McEvedy and Beard who simply read the medical notes from the 1955 epidemic - choosing not to contact either the patients or their treating doctors - and drew a conclusion that fitted their beliefs. That seems to be a...
Jazzed up version of my blog (thanks for the original link @Andy)
UK spends £3 million on the world’s biggest ME/CFS study
June 23, 2020 Simon McGrath
£3.2m of government money will fund DecodeME, the world’s biggest ME/CFS study, which aims to recruit 20,000 patients. It will analyse DNA...
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