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  1. Kitty

    The itaconate shunt hypothesis

    It would be really interesting to compare two cohorts, one with ME and the other on interferon therapy, in a study comprising carefully-designed physical and cognitive tests. Especially as patients who're due to begin interferon therapy could presumably be tested beforehand to see what changes.
  2. Kitty

    The $10 test

    Yes, it surprises me too. I haven't done CBT, but I've cut out of other treatments that weren't making any difference because staying at home did me much more good. (I've now corrected the typo on the original post, too, so it makes a bit more sense!)
  3. Kitty

    The $10 test

    Just for badness, I'm going to suggest bringing in a third alternative! Continue the treatment; Be given $10; Receive nothing (but you don't have to leave the house either).
  4. Kitty

    The Link Between Empty Sella Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and CFS: The Role of Increased Cerebrospinal Fluid Pressure (2023) Hulens et al.

    No, I'm not sure either—it does feel a bit as if they've picked out the symptoms they wanted and ignored the ones they didn't. I wonder how many ME patients have even had their CSF pressure measured? It's pretty invasive, and I can't imagine it would be done as part of routine diagnostics for...
  5. Kitty

    The Oxford Handbook of the Sociology of Disability, 2021, Brown et al

    It sounds really interesting, I so wish I could still read things like this. I know I'd last barely 10minutes before needing a break, though, and when I went back to it I'd have to read the first 10 minutes'-worth again to pick up the thread. Rinse, repeat ... give up!
  6. Kitty

    What items/documents would you like to send to GPs/primary care physicians if you were doing a mail-out?

    That looks really good, doesn't it. Hopefully it will get read and used. It reminded me of the thing I'd like inexperienced GPs to know about ME, and that's the importance of powered mobility aids for some of us. Using one was very strongly discouraged by my GP, on the basis that I would become...
  7. Kitty

    Radical rest: evidence and anecdotes

    It's slightly difficult, as it wasn't always consistent and not always by choice either. For instance, I might be ready for some work but have to wait a few weeks before something came up within striking distance of where I live*. But on average, I'd say four to five months was optimal. That...
  8. Kitty

    Radical rest: evidence and anecdotes

    Agree 100%. I wouldn't refer to it as rest if I were speaking to anyone other than an ME community, I'd call it recovery time.
  9. Kitty

    Radical rest: evidence and anecdotes

    I was only able to take time off because I was too ill to work, it wasn't negotiable. But when there isn't that level of illness, I'd agree entirely about breaks of only weeks in duration. Momentum is crucial, and every time I took a bit of annual leave, it was a nightmare to get going again...
  10. Kitty

    Radical rest: evidence and anecdotes

    I did it when I retired from full-time work. Not in the hope of recovery, but of recovering more function. It worked, but as with previous recoveries from parlous states, it would not be hurried. It took 18 months to begin thinking about work again, and it was two years before I was as...
  11. Kitty

    Grim ME and recovery broken hip with partial replacement op

    My experience of fractures has been much as you say, recovery is bit slower. But it is definitely a great time to pack in some recuperation, as you don't tend to beat yourself up so much for not doing stuff. I've never broken a hip since developing ME, though, only a collarbone, ankle, and...
  12. Kitty

    One possible reason the CBT/GET proponents misunderstood ME/CFS so badly

    It might, especially given that at proof-of-concept stages, more effort and care goes in to delivering interventions and fewer corners are cut. Some people suffering from depressive illness seem to benefit from talking therapies and gentle exercise, and if some have comorbidities and/or need...
  13. Kitty

    SF-36 - a discussion

    Yes, that does get to the nub of it. It also has the advantage of potentially making it easier to monitor patients for longer, as they're less likely to get bored by completing a long questionnaire. Given the natural ups and downs in function that some ME patients probably experience no matter...
  14. Kitty

    ‘Disruptive’ science has declined — and no one knows why

    Aah, but they still get paid, and that's what matters! Perverse incentives need to be removed, and funders ought to get a lot sharper—if people in receipt of arts grants produced effluent comparable to the output of BPS researchers, they'd never get any more money. But the edifice has been...
  15. Kitty

    SF-36 - a discussion

    But this is part of my problem with the SF-36. It compares people to "normal", even if they don't have anything like normal function. So is the purpose to show how disabled we are, compared to others; or is it to measure what happens to the function we have—however low or high it is at entry...
  16. Kitty

    SF-36 - a discussion

    No, I haven't for ME, but then again nobody has needed to monitor my long-term response to a treatment in a trial, because there haven't been any. It's the issue of how to record whether people have got better, stayed the same, or got worse as a result of receiving a treatment or placebo, in a...
  17. Kitty

    SF-36 - a discussion

    Ah, yes—now I've had chance to look, I have been screened using this. The rheumatologist got to the third hilariously inappropriate question to ask a wheelchair user, screwed it up, and lobbed it expertly into a bin eight feet away. I got the feeling she'd done it before. As it makes no attempt...
  18. Kitty

    SF-36 - a discussion

    I've never heard of it, at least by that name—I'll look it up.
  19. Kitty

    Petition: Make schools, CAMHs and other professionals recognise and accept Autistic Burnout

    I'd say I've had the fatigue—lots and lots—but not really burnout. I've been lucky enough to have a fair degree of control over my environment, specially as I've lived alone since age 16. I wasn't even allowed to do further/higher education, with all the stresses that brings at a...
  20. Kitty

    Suppose you have €5-10 million for ME/CFS research, what would you spend it on?

    That's mainly what drives me to contribute to research. I've long since reached an accommodation with ME on a personal level, but it breaks my heart to see young lives still being blighted from the teens onwards, as mine was—especially those who're severely ill.
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