Thanks, that's an interesting one where fatigue is mentioned a couple of times.
One article (on page 144 in the PDF) is on 16 healthy individuals who were strictly confined to bed for 70 days. They write:
But this was only about one of the 16 participants. "The other subjects "also showed...
Thanks, I think this is useful to try to understand their reasoning. I've tried but I have a hard time understanding how it could work without the deconditioning part.
For example:
So the person misinterprets minor symptoms as being part of an organic illness, does not stop resting, is perhaps...
For what it is worth, the fear-avoidance model and deconditioning hypothesis that was applied to ME/CFS originated from pain research, mostly low back pain. It has been criticised there too.
The deconditioning paradigm for chronic low back pain unmasked? - PubMed (nih.gov)
The evolution is...
Yes, several people made the same argument on Twitter.
But to be honest I don't really get it. Deconditioning was believed to be the middle step, the mechanism by which symptoms could arise without disease. Some argued that you can't just say to ME patients to exercise more without challenging...
Yes I think the Russian studies were the longest and fatigue was mentioned there but couldn't find those original studies (I suspect they were written in Russian). So that is a caveat.
I don't think there is clear evidence on this. Was discussed a couple of years ago on S4ME here:
https://www.s4me.info/threads/blood-volume-and-red-blood-cell-volume-in-me-cfs.17305/#post-176681
Yes, thanks that would be more accurate. The Powell et al. trial from 2001, however, (the exercise that reported by far the biggest effect size) did report:
That researchers believed that ME/CFS was caused by deconditioning so they set up an exercise trial to cure patients but when they...
Many thanks to oceanblue on the Phoenix Rising forum for analyzing the literature more than 10 years before me. This was very helpful in writing the blog.
Twitter summary here:
1) Just published a new blog post on what severe deconditioning looks like and how it is different from ME/CFS.
2) Interestingly the best evidence on deconditioning comes from NASA bed rest studies. Head-down bed rest was used as a proxy for the low gravity that...
Just wrote a blog about what deconditioning looks like and how it differs from ME/CFS.
https://mecfsskeptic.com/what-does-deconditioning-look-like/
Interestingly the best evidence on deconditioning comes from NASA bed rest studies. Head-down bed rest was used as a proxy for the low gravity...
The FDA disapproved MDMA-therapy for PTSD.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cl4465dpmrro
Although randomized trials showed a clinically significant improvement, there were concerns about unblinding as most participants were able to guess which trial arm they were in. So lack of blinding was...
Thanks, but blood volume is also something that is strongly impacted by bed rest and deconditioning so I suspect it would be difficult to make this part of diagnostic criteria.
I realise that severe ME and not being able to sit upright might cause additional difficulties setting up a feeding tube safely. But the patients described in these reviews were very ill as well, with for example stroke, cancer or dementia that also increase the risk of complications such as...
Here some quotes from reviews on NJ, PEG, PEG-J and Jejunostomy feeding tubes.
Gastrostomy and PEG
PEG is a safe and effective procedure even if performed in fragile patients
Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy and jejunostomy: Indications and techniques - PubMed (nih.gov)
Tube feeding via a...
Regarding aspiration (food content inhaled into the respiratory tract): the risk was highest for a NG-tube which they did try. So how can it be an argument to not try NJ or PEG-J where the risk is lower than with a NG?
Ok, but there must be some truth-finding involved. You can't just take someone's word for it if they say they did not screw up and did everything right.
From summaries that people tweeted, it seems that the Coroner is saying that the death was of natural cause, that nothing more could have...
Do not want to minimise the risk of sepsis but here's for example what a review on long-term TPN says:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/apt.12209
EDIT: here are some more quotes from reviews:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002916523062901...
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