My onset was similar. From what I can tell, the current position of the medical industry is one of aggressive denial about the sometimes devastating and permanent alterations of the microbiome caused by (often needlessly) prescribed antibiotics, especially when given in infancy before a robust...
This would be in line with anecdotal observations discussed on other fora that massage makes many patients worse. I don't know that it's actual PEM he's measuring but it's interesting nonetheless that something this innocuous elicits symptoms and biological alterations.
I don't think this study should be dismissed out of hand just because of the author's BPS allegiances. Although this is not an ME/CFS study per se (since he did not measure PEM), it still tells us something interesting about the relationship between early immune activation and persistent fatigue...
Well it’s easy to change the results by for instance taking medications. Hyde’s buddy Goldstein observed decades ago that sending patients for a SPECT scan was of no use to him anymore since a drug he gave them could change the pattern of brain activation within seconds and in the opposite...
So, this talk was more interesting than I anticipated given Pariante's egregious past statement that ME/CFS is caused by 'excessive rest'.
It appears that the subset of people who develop persistent fatigue following IFN alpha have a significantly higher IL-6 and IL-10 response to treatment...
It might even work in our favour if the same abnormality is shown in a 'real' disease like MS or lupus. Harder to deny that way. If a novel, unfamiliar test shows an abnormality only in ME/CFS, the BPS crowd will still be able to play god of the gaps strategy and say it's caused by spending too...
I think the purpose of research is to get the silent majority of doctors, especially the younger generation, to accept that this is real, people who may not have strongly held BPS views or may not even know what ME/CFS is. Obviously the BPS lobby will never accept any amount or quality of...
Looking at some recent reviews of 100 year old psychiatric literature, it appears that fever therapy (pyrotherapy) by intentionally infecting the patient with malaria was quite effective for neurosyphilis (this was in the pre-antibiotic era). About a quarter of psychotic patients were able to...
There have been some previous metabolomic studies of MDD and other conditions labelled psychiatric but you know how it goes, everyone measures different things. There are a lot of metabolites.
Small sample size but strengths of the study include using medication-free first-episode major depression and an illness control group (bipolar disorder).
Full text at: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41398-018-0183-x
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