Search results

  1. D

    Why has 'persistent enteroviral infection' been dropped as a research strand in ME/CFS? (Jen Brea asking)

    What's my point? This. So why confine the parameters of exploring for answers to convention? I think we need to be looking for enteroviruses and other pathogens where we don't normally and by using means that are not restricted to standard interpretation. I think we will find few answers via...
  2. D

    T cell engineering breakthrough sidesteps need for viruses in gene-editing

    "...off to the races..." Not sure I'm all that comfortable with the gambling metaphor.
  3. D

    Why has 'persistent enteroviral infection' been dropped as a research strand in ME/CFS? (Jen Brea asking)

    Yes, no easy answers with ME/CFS, so the "why" component is pretty much uncharted territory. But a short answer might be that the immune system senses the antigen, regardless of whether it is an exogenous pathogen or not. I am not sure if enteroviruses fit the bill. How's that been working for...
  4. D

    Why has 'persistent enteroviral infection' been dropped as a research strand in ME/CFS? (Jen Brea asking)

    Why? This would be an infection that is built to survive long-term, not kill. Why then would the infected organ necessarily appear diseased by typical or conventional standards? Such standards don't seem to apply to most other normal overt metrics, e.g. fever, for pwME.
  5. D

    Why has 'persistent enteroviral infection' been dropped as a research strand in ME/CFS? (Jen Brea asking)

    Not sure Lipkin looked at tissue. As I recall he looked at plasma and CSF, and he drew a blank for enteroviruses and EBV and HV6 and Borrelia - which is somewhat counterintuitive. One needs to look at tissue for some of these infections, if you go by experts in those respective pathogens.
  6. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    The best book I have read is "Cure Unknown" by Pam Weintraub. But it's a book, not a study. I can direct you to specific studies - like the internal effort to replace the CDC 2 Tier with the C6, which the UK bought into - but these are very very specific, and there are so very many of them. I...
  7. D

    Article "Mast Cell Activation May Underlie 'Chronic Fatigue Syndrome'"

    I do not remember much about MCAS, but I know one of my ME/CFS doctors looked for it and had a handful of tests run to check for it. I do not know if they are standard or generally accepted as valid for this purpose. The tests were: 1) An ELISA that measures IgG antibodies specific for IgE...
  8. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    This is somewhat similar to the path I took relative to ME/CFS and Lyme. I am oversimplifying a bit for the sake of narrative, but I got a bull's-eye rash. I knew what it was immediately. I had never had Lyme at the point, but I felt I could ride it out and let it resolve on its own, especially...
  9. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    Swollen knees are the foundation upon which much of the concept of chronic lyme was built, unfortunately. To this day, Steere or one of his disciples struggles to demonstrate a cause for swollen knees post abx. HLA genes, molecular mimicry,non viable borrelia debris - all and more have been used...
  10. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    @Woolie, I think the reservations you and others have are that you think the science pretty much eschews the concept of chronic or persistent Lyme following antibiotics. I get the sense @Jonathan Edwards feels the same, although of course I could be wrong. You believe people are suffering, but...
  11. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    @Woolie, yes, on paper, there are supposedly symptoms specific to chronic Lyme. The chief one would be swollen knees (yuck - steriotypical Steere's disease). There is another one, but I can't think of it at the moment. (The Bulls-eye rash.)Conversely, ME/CFS has PEM, which supposedly Lyme does...
  12. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    I'm not sure this agrees with my takeaway from the article. But the short answer is I'm not sure what connection this has to do with mold. But I'm not sure of a lot. That is not quite accurate. Late stage neuroborreliosis looks quite similar to neuro-syphilis. Somewhere here today I posted a...
  13. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    @NelliePledge , there are a couple reasons for testing. There are more against it, I suppose, according to some. Were it me, I'd get tested. I am not a medical doctor, of course, this is simply my opinion. It's not a function of so-called chronic Lyme. It's late stage Lyme you may need to be...
  14. D

    Brain volume loss is present in Japanese multiple sclerosis patients with no evidence of disease activity (2018) Yokote et al.

    Not so fast. I have repeatedly tested with mild brain atrophy on MRI's, but have to fight regularly for disability. I suppose it's a function of degree, but when it's your brain, well... I wonder a lot if other pwME have some sort of brain atrophy, or if it is even looked for. I think it...
  15. D

    Article "Mast Cell Activation May Underlie 'Chronic Fatigue Syndrome'"

    Not too many of the people that populate forums such as this one.
  16. D

    Article "Mast Cell Activation May Underlie 'Chronic Fatigue Syndrome'"

    Yes, dysautonmia ties in with MCAS. Lyme, too. Borrelia is even mentioned as a direct cause of MCAS, as the hufpo article below alludes to. Incidentally, this article also gives a fairly decent overview of MCAS. So many of these frequently are connected...
  17. D

    Chronic NeuroLyme vs Neuro-Syphilis

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3551238/ Th above is by Judith Miklossy, highly respected in research involving different types of spirochetal brain infections. It's an interesting read, and can help anyone who is interested in perhaps getting a handle on why chronic Lyme or late...
  18. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    I would tend to agree with you, especially in the UK where Lyme is not thought to be endemic. I live in a Lyme endemic region, and I know even here sometimes people get diagnosed with ME/CFS without ever being tested for tick-borne diseases (although that is becoming a rarity).
  19. D

    UK CFS Patient Rediagnosed with Lyme

    I do not know. But I see mold sensitivities discussed in both ME and Lyme forums. As for immune dysfunction, Lyme does that in spades. Antigenic variation is its most famous immune ploy. This causes IgG cases to go IgM, i.e, late stage to early stage, and this should not happen, and IDSA...
Back
Top Bottom