Search results

  1. adambeyoncelowe

    Well-known, famous people with fibromyalgia

    Interestingly, some UK clinics give the same stats for ME patients. This is based on clinical anecdote only, however.
  2. adambeyoncelowe

    Cholesterol anyone ?

    There's also fisherman's pie, which has fish in a cheesy sauce with peas and other veg, again topped by mashed potato. We're a creative bunch, culinary-wise, we Brits.
  3. adambeyoncelowe

    Michael Sharpe: Mind, Medicine and Morals: A Tale of Two Illnesses (2019) BMJ blog - and published responses

    Also the ratio. If you have more comments than likes, that's usually see as a bad thing.
  4. adambeyoncelowe

    Do I have now ME next to Sjogren or only Sjogren?

    I would reframe the question slightly: does an ME diagnosis help you or not, at this point? Unlike pSS, ME doesn't have any treatment that shows efficacy. Will you get treatment options with an ME diagnosis that you can't access with pSS? Or will a pSS diagnosis mean you'll be told to do more...
  5. adambeyoncelowe

    Cholesterol anyone ?

    Yeah, it looks like what most people call porridge is the same as oatmeal, so long as made with oats: https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.mnn.com/food/recipes/blogs/amp/whats-difference-between-oatmeal-and-porridge. Porridge can sometimes be made with things other than oats, in which case it isn't...
  6. adambeyoncelowe

    Michael Sharpe: Mind, Medicine and Morals: A Tale of Two Illnesses (2019) BMJ blog - and published responses

    Maybe someone needs to make a response to the paper citing Michiel's blog, so that the two are more clearly linked? It's helpful to have everything in one place.
  7. adambeyoncelowe

    Cholesterol anyone ?

    I think metabolic syndrome happens somewhat more often than usual with us. Raised blood sugar, raised cholesterol, central obesity (apple shape in the middle). Exercise is probably involved, but also, as mentioned above, poor eating due to low energy. I think I was heading this way. It might be...
  8. adambeyoncelowe

    Post-Exertional Malaise Is Associated with Hypermetabolism, Hypoacetylation and Purine Metabolism Deregulation in ME/CFS Cases, 2019, McGregor et al

    From Wikipedia: Inosine pranobex = Imunovir. This and the supplement inosine have have both been used anecdotally by patients and clinicians. (This isn't a recommendation, by the way.) If this adds up, it could be interesting and might suggest treatments. Of course, it's a tiny sample, so we...
  9. adambeyoncelowe

    Gulf war syndrome vs "ME/CFS"

    The symptoms do appear to have a lot of overlap. GWI seems to have some kind of PEM, for example, but it seems to be different to our PEM somehow. I read something once about the different phenotypes of GWI being due to injury in different parts of the brain (e.g., brain stem alone, brain stem...
  10. adambeyoncelowe

    Gulf war syndrome vs "ME/CFS"

    They may have different brain chemistry: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/11/171110084312.htm
  11. adambeyoncelowe

    MEA Website Survey: Physiotherapy and ME | 02 July 2019

    I think the idea, re: boom and bust, is that you're always supposed to boom. If you feel ill, you don't stop.
  12. adambeyoncelowe

    The Stanford Daily: Stanford Medicine professor (José Montoya) fired for violating University rules of conduct (june 2019)

    I thought Alvin's comment was more aimed at the defenders in the articles, and society in general. But I could be wrong. As an analogy, it seems like people in the past tended to disbelieve their idols could do terrible things just because they liked their music/films/TV shows/politics. But I...
  13. adambeyoncelowe

    The Stanford Daily: Stanford Medicine professor (José Montoya) fired for violating University rules of conduct (june 2019)

    Absolutely. In my experience, abusers get away with it because they're superficially charming. That's why people find it hard to come forward. The victims worry no one will believe them because the abuser is so popular.
  14. adambeyoncelowe

    Forward-ME Group Minutes - 8th May 2019

    I think Willie was misunderstanding something. We've only been setting protocols. We haven't discussed treatments yet, only the protocol we'll use to look at the evidence for treatments.
  15. adambeyoncelowe

    Tinnitus Poll : Making a distinction of subtypes

    It's mostly just one ear, but I think I get it in both ears from time to time.
  16. adambeyoncelowe

    Forward-ME Group Minutes - 8th May 2019

    I think it's the latter.
  17. adambeyoncelowe

    Trial in progress: Glucocorticoid dynamics in health and disease, Lightman, University of Bristol

    I didn't realise I was generally apathetic! I thought my apathy was only reserved for guff.
Back
Top