Search results

  1. D

    Possible Treatment For Bourbon Virus

    A new study points to a successful antiviral, at least in mice, for the Bourbon virus, a deadly TBD spreading in the US...
  2. D

    CNS findings in chronic fatigue syndrome and a neuropathological case report (2017) Ferrero et al.

    AD and AD plaques and a potential role of infectious disease biofilms: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5008232/ This link suggests spirochetes as a possible agent, but it could be any one of several infectious diseases. The spirochete angle is supported - in addition to this...
  3. D

    MS Fatigue and Lassitude (2014)Matt Allen G -blog on multiplesclerosis.net

    Is there a disease that doesn't have fatigue as a characteristic? If so, THAT is the disease that needs investigating into fatigue. The rest seems like busy work, like when you were a kid in school and you pretended to be reading during study or quiet time, but were really just wasting time.
  4. D

    New Lyme test using nanotrap technology in urine samples

    My infectious disease doctor is suggesting I get this test. I have to explain to him why that is not a good idea: a) It is a much better test for early Lyme, with very impressive accuracy ratings. But for late stage - not so much; b) It's not FDA-approved, so you pay out of pocket, and it can...
  5. D

    Psychology Today blog platform: "It's All in Your Head - The relationship between contested illnesses and psychiatric illnesses"

    "...nor do we have objective tests that make diagnoses secure for any of these conditions." a) Actually, there are three FDA-approved objective Lyme tests that can be - and are being - used to diagnose late stage Lyme refractory to antibiotics, aka chronic Lyme. So there are objective tests...
  6. D

    Orthostatic Intolerance in chronic fatigue syndrome, 2019, R. Garner and Baraniuk

    START = Exercise-Induced POTS, if I understand correctly. It may be a Baraniuk thing, not sure.
  7. D

    Orthostatic Intolerance in chronic fatigue syndrome, 2019, R. Garner and Baraniuk

    @Mij, my csf results were inconclusive because they didn't do all the tests they should have, given the protocol. So one of the doctors reviewing the results of the vestibular testing was just opining about testing for any brain infections that might be behind the vestibular issues...
  8. D

    Orthostatic Intolerance in chronic fatigue syndrome, 2019, R. Garner and Baraniuk

    Well, I don't recall. My take away was they (two doctors) were talking about a brain biopsy, but the vestibular includes things outside the brain. They were intent on describing how screwed up my vestibular system was, and I was trying to affix a cause. They said something to the effect it could...
  9. D

    Orthostatic Intolerance in chronic fatigue syndrome, 2019, R. Garner and Baraniuk

    "Goofiness"? That's an OI thing according to this study? Fair enough. The boat swaying, which I can identify with, I associate with vestibular issues, but who can say? For me, it's the whole head thing, including sight and hearing - but balance is definitely off, enough so I take nausea meds...
  10. D

    Orthostatic Intolerance in chronic fatigue syndrome, 2019, R. Garner and Baraniuk

    Yeah, I'm thinking what symptoms he is ascribing to OI may not always be OI.
  11. D

    Chronic Diseases & Employment: Which Interventions Support Maintenance of Work and Return to Work among Workers with Chronic Illnesses?, 2019, Nazarov

    Is it too much of a stretch to wonder if there was an insurance company sponsoring some of this effort?
  12. D

    18% patients with Multiple Sclerosis are Misdiagnosed (2019) Kaisey et al

    I'm not sure that catagorizing MS as autoimmune is universally accepted, or even if there is consensus that points that way. I seem to recall a good deal of writings that leaned toward infections of various sorts. I don't have a horse in this race; I'm just wondering at the almost assumptive...
  13. D

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

    It's funny how a handful of the entrenched older guard from a couple of specific medical niches cannot shake free from their perverse obsessions, even when the writing is on the wall, even when the world is increasingly watching and aware.
  14. D

    Biomedical articles on MEpedia - purposes and pitfalls

    I cannot help but wonder what the formal difference is between an anecdote and a case study. Level of detail or scrutiny? Who is doing the scrutinizing? Length of write-up? Whether it gets published? In terms of utility, is one necessarily better than the other outside of the name? If as a...
  15. D

    The Conversation: "The scandal that should force us to reconsider wellness advice from influencers" May 2019

    Those among us that have been this sick for an extended period likely have long since reconsidered wellness advice from most everybody. I cannot think of a single expert, especially world-renowned medical researchers/clinicians, as well as medical institutions like the CDC and NHS, whose advice...
  16. D

    The biopsychosocial bomb? (or the importance of disclosure)

    Willy Burgdorfer discovered the causative agent behind Lyme. He was recruited to investigate an outbreak of something in CT because of his world-wide acclaim when it came to the study of spirochetal and ricketsial diseases, among other vector-borne diseases. He identified the new species and he...
  17. D

    Public Statin Deniers and Anti-Vaxxers. How political rhetoric is infecting medicine (2019) Blog post by Jerome Burne HealthInsghtUK

    So here's a statin story about someone who had no problem with statins on paper, but whose doctors thought they did because of the statin rebellion - and it turns out statins were actually bad in this instance. My wife has a channelopathy. It has been demonstrated through genetic testing. It's...
  18. D

    Jen Brea: My ME is in remission

    With all due respect, not always, at least in terms of the precise thing. Or perhaps relevance? A test can be precise, but not good at evaluating what it is suppose to, is what I am trying to get at. Even taking this as a given, clinicians and researchers alike accept or discard ranges as their...
  19. D

    When Your Body Ages Too Fast

    Sorry, @Dudden , I did not explain myself well. I was trying to figure out what error it is to say someone can "age more slowly". Age and time go hand in hand. You cannot age more quickly or slowly. Your body can show signs of aging more rapidly or slowly - there are diseases that do this. But...
Back
Top Bottom