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  1. LarsSG

    Identification of CD8 T-cell dysfunction associated with symptoms in [ME/CFS] and Long COVID and treatment with a nebulized ... 2023 Gil et al

    The interferon gamma results were pretty similar for the controls across the two studies. If there was a difference with fresh versus frozen, wouldn't you expect frozen ME patient CD8 cells to be less likely to produce interferon gamma, not more likely than fresh? At least that's my naive guess...
  2. LarsSG

    Arterial Stiffness and Oxidized LDL Independently Associated With Post-Acute Sequalae of SARS-CoV-2, 2023, Zisis et al.

    Also interesting to see a difference in total cholesterol and what could be differences in non-HDL, d-dimer and hs-CRP (though not significant and the latter two depend heavily on the matching). But the matching looks odd, with big differences in smokers (18-28%), sex (32-66% female), BMI...
  3. LarsSG

    Long Covid in the media and social media 2023

    There's a fair bit of vague rehabilitation and CBT-ish programs in there, plus some weird stuff (like a million pounds for weight loss for LC), but the bulk of it just went to not particularly useful stuff, like CLoCk and many similar symptom studies, vague research about comparing LC treatment...
  4. LarsSG

    Identification of CD8 T-cell dysfunction associated with symptoms in [ME/CFS] and Long COVID and treatment with a nebulized ... 2023 Gil et al

    It does seem like something, but not clear what it might be. The data isn't really there in the paper, but it doesn't look like the CD8 results correlate with symptoms. ME/CFS patient 1 (clearly Selin herself) had very low cytokine production for the "mean of 3 time points over 3 years prior to...
  5. LarsSG

    Identification of CD8 T-cell dysfunction associated with symptoms in [ME/CFS] and Long COVID and treatment with a nebulized ... 2023 Gil et al

    I think if inhaling β-Caryophyllene was hugely helpful for ME or LC, we'd know by now as it is present in significant concentrations in cannabis.
  6. LarsSG

    Identification of CD8 T-cell dysfunction associated with symptoms in [ME/CFS] and Long COVID and treatment with a nebulized ... 2023 Gil et al

    If you look in the PDF, not only are two of the authors the inventors of this concoction, but two of the authors are also patients in the case series. Good to see also that one of the few R01 grants for ME/CFS research is being used for this kind of thing.
  7. LarsSG

    Identification of CD8 T-cell dysfunction associated with symptoms in [ME/CFS] and Long COVID and treatment with a nebulized ... 2023 Gil et al

    Glutathione, NAC, B12, Eucalyptol and β-Caryophyllene (which is apparently found in cloves, rosemary, cannabis, hops, etc), according to their patent application. Apparently it treats COPD, Asthma, COVID-19, Long-COVID, and ME/CFS.
  8. LarsSG

    USA: Mount Sinai PACS clinic and Dr David Putrino

    Putrino says: "If you give someone with no persisting pathogens, but an overactive immune system that is producing antibodies for a particular virus, an antiviral that boosts immune function, they will get sicker because the last thing they need is more immune activity." I think the antivirals...
  9. LarsSG

    Post-Exertional Malaise - a discussion including defining and measuring PEM

    It would be fantastic for someone to study PEM caused by cognitive exertion in more detail. Enrol people who experience PEM from doing mental work while lying in bed, get them to do so in a clinical setting and see what you can observe. Even better, provoke PEM both physically and mentally in...
  10. LarsSG

    The pharma industry from Paul Janssen to today: why drugs got harder to develop and what we can do about it

    The author seems to be pining for the days when they found the targets entirely by chance, which is pretty clearly a strategy with diminishing returns.
  11. LarsSG

    Post-Exertional Malaise - a discussion including defining and measuring PEM

    To me, it feels like whatever process causes mental fatigue in normal people causes PEM in ME, just at a much lower threshold. Why is it tiring for someone to play in a chess tournament all day? Why is it tiring for an introvert to have video meetings all day? Whatever is going on there seems...
  12. LarsSG

    Association between COVID-19 and outstanding academic performance at a Spanish university, 2023, Amer et al.

    They did adjust for daily hours spent socializing. But I wouldn't discount that it might be a case of more conscientious students were less likely to get Covid and more likely to get top marks.
  13. LarsSG

    Opinion Long covid: where are we, what does it say about our pandemic response, and where next? 2023, Altmann and Pagel

    I think it does make political sense to focus on SARS-1 and MERS, though it probably wouldn't hurt to mention ME too at this point. In 2020, if you wanted to know about the likely long-term effects of SARS-2 to drive your pandemic response, the studies covering post-SARS-1 were much more useful...
  14. LarsSG

    Differential Cardiopulmonary Hemodynamic Phenotypes in PASC Related Exercise Intolerance, 2023, Singh et al

    Anecdotally, this matches my own experience very well of the early days of ME (once as a teenager, once more recently). One thing that was quite notable to me at the very start in both cases was a distinct inability to output the expected power from my muscles while biking or cross-country...
  15. LarsSG

    Differential Cardiopulmonary Hemodynamic Phenotypes in PASC Related Exercise Intolerance, 2023, Singh et al

    More strong evidence that we need to start looking a lot more closely at muscle and microvasculature to figure out why patients aren't able to extract oxygen from their blood. Pretty clear the problem isn't in the heart or lungs. Also, this is good: "While deconditioning is commonly suggested...
  16. LarsSG

    Typing myalgic encephalomyelitis by infection at onset: A DecodeME study, 2023, Bretherick et al

    I think they did report the results recently. Does anyone have a PDF? Would like to see what specifically they sequenced and looked for.
  17. LarsSG

    Typing myalgic encephalomyelitis by infection at onset: A DecodeME study, 2023, Bretherick et al

    That sounds pretty neat. Does a pathogen-specific T-cell detection array exist or is this something someone needs to build? Somewhat relatedly, I've been thinking that maybe we just need to sequence patients' blood (RNA and DNA) and see if any known pathogens comes up in patients more than...
  18. LarsSG

    Long-term outcomes following hospital admission for COVID-19 versus seasonal influenza: a cohort study, 2023, Xie, Al-Aly et al.

    It's been interesting to see Al-Aly and crew start out with flu as a control versus Covid in their earlier papers and then come to realize that actually flu is quite bad too and has post-acute consequences. Hopefully he manages to bring others along to this understanding.
  19. LarsSG

    Impaired oxygen delivery to muscle in chronic fatigue syndrome, 1999, McCully and Natelson

    Has anyone looked at oxygen delivery to muscle or oxygen consumption in muscle on multiple days following exertion? Basically something similar to the two-day exercise test CPET, but looking specifically at oxygen in muscles.
  20. LarsSG

    Typing myalgic encephalomyelitis by infection at onset: A DecodeME study, 2023, Bretherick et al

    10y+ duration was also associated with severity, as was age and being female. Is it possible that it has become easier to get an ME diagnosis in the UK in the past decade (or even two decades)? If that were the case, I can see two possibilities: severity is associated with infectious onset and...
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