Search results

  1. Sid

    Investigating reduced tolerance to alcohol in ME?

    Wine and cider particularly bad. Beer I don’t know, rarely drink it. Spirits least bad, esp. the expensive stuff.
  2. Sid

    Investigating reduced tolerance to alcohol in ME?

    In the early years of ME even two glasses of wine would make me feel completely drunk and sick for days afterwards. I was mildly ill at the time and still working full time and socialising a few times a year (with great difficulty). I live in a country that has a serious problem with heavy...
  3. Sid

    The biology of coronavirus COVID-19 - including research and treatments

    I’m amazed that the Oxford vaccine hasn’t been scrapped given the much better alternatives available. I guess the Covid panic has overridden capacity for rational/critical thought in the medical establishment and govt, if they had any to begin with. The Lancet paper was full of protocol changes...
  4. Sid

    The use of the labels ME, CFS, ME/CFS

    I’ve been given both G93.3 and R53 by different doctors and in both cases it was heavily implied that this is a post viral fatigue syndrome and dysautonomia and that the symptoms are psychosomatic and would probably resolve in six months. WHO classifications are largely irrelevant, used mostly...
  5. Sid

    ME/CFS: Organic Disease or Psychosomatic Illness? A Re-Examination of the Royal Free Epidemic of 1955, Underhill & Baillod, 2020

    Useful study, glad to see this published. No evidence of hysteria here but it doesn't sound like it was ME/CFS either, unless I am missing something. It sounds like for most people it was a self-limiting postviral fatigue syndrome.
  6. Sid

    Molecular Psychiatry (2020): The kynurenine pathway in major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia: a meta-analysis of 101 studies

    Good questions. I don't think nutrition plays a role here. To alter the kynurenine pathway you'd would need to be on a weird mix of amino acids which you can't achieve eating normal food. Most people in those studies are probably eating something more or less akin to the standard Western diet...
  7. Sid

    Aripiprazole - Abilify

    Forgive my scepticism, but if that ends up being the case, it would be, to my knowledge, the first known instance of a psychiatric drug being disease-modifying in a true sense, in any condition. They all mask the symptoms. Some would argue that long-term pharmacotherapy with psychotropic drugs...
  8. Sid

    Can’t or Won’t? Immunometabolic Constraints on Dopaminergic Drive. Treadway MT et al. Trends Cogn Sci. (2019)

    Could you say more about what’s wrong with their understanding of effort? If you feel up to it of course.
  9. Sid

    Aripiprazole - Abilify

    It should be easy enough to do an RCT of this. Widely available drug, no travel to infusion centre necessary unlike in the rituximab trial etc. @J.G I didn’t say the two drugs had the same mechanism of action. I was discussing dopaminergic interventions (including diet) more broadly. Years...
  10. Sid

    Molecular Psychiatry (2020): The kynurenine pathway in major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia: a meta-analysis of 101 studies

    Abstract The importance of tryptophan as a precursor for neuroactive compounds has long been acknowledged. The metabolism of tryptophan along the kynurenine pathway and its involvement in mental disorders is an emerging area in psychiatry. We performed a meta-analysis to examine the...
  11. Sid

    Aripiprazole - Abilify

    Yeah. We can't paint these treatments with too broad a brush. While there are some commonalities like altering relevant neurotransmitters, aripiprazole is obviously much more selective in what you're trying to target. Something like keto on the other hand results in profound shifts in energy...
  12. Sid

    Aripiprazole - Abilify

    I would be cautious about dopaminergic drugs in ME/CFS. I think these approaches just mask the symptoms while the underlying disease process is still there and possibly getting worse while you are overexerting without the warning signal of PEM. A friend of mine who has had ME/CFS for 40+ years...
  13. Sid

    Psychogenic non-epileptic seizures in children – psychophysiology & dissociative characteristics, 2020, Sawchuk et al

    "The majority of patients (n= 25, 89%) were taught to correct respiratory CO2 levels during a single biofeedback training session." And? Did it cure them? :rolleyes:
  14. Sid

    BACME: Position Paper on the management of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/ Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), Oct 2020

    If deconditioning doesn’t cause ME/CFS, what possible reason is there to push, I’m sorry, encourage, the patient to increase their activity level? Who says it’s possible to increase activity level? As others have said, this is an obvious rhetorical shift to save their jobs. That’s the problem...
  15. Sid

    What’s in the pipeline? Ongoing, registered, or planned clinical trials for ME/CFS

    Sad state of affairs. No ideas, no clues - nothing.
  16. Sid

    A request to those involved in ME research to indicate their position on spinal surgery

    When the very first posts started appearing on forums about CCI, my gut reaction was that this would end up being a bigger public relations disaster for us than XMRV. Everything that's happened since has only reaffirmed my view on this. Ironically, this sort of "advocacy" will ultimately...
  17. Sid

    Towards the unity of pathological and exertional fatigue: A predictive coding model, 2020, Greenhouse-Tucknott et al.

    The purpose of this sort of work seems to be to subsume ME/CFS within their model of FND.
  18. Sid

    Protocol ReCOVer: A RCT testing the efficacy of CBT for preventing chronic post-infectious fatigue among patients diagnosed with COVID-19.

    Wow, it didn't take long for these grifters to expand their grift operation to the new goldmine of rapidly growing numbers of post-covid ME/CFS patients. Utterly despicable.
  19. Sid

    BMJ Article: Covid-19 and chronic fatigue July 2020 Williams, Muirhead, Pariante

    Surprisingly ok letter considering the BPS positions he has previously taken. Apart from the false claim that 1% of the population has ME/CFS, it seems reasonable.
Back
Top Bottom