As far as I could ever tell, Marques was loyal to the CDC diagnostic formula, including for spinal fluid. Even so, she would have had plenty of qualified recruits. This idea that chronic Lyme cannot fit into the CDC/IDSA diagnostic paradigm is just a myth. Oddly, Marques knows that, I think...
Right. So she had people who crossed all those hurdles. Remember, we're talking over 15 years of recruiting.
a) Igenex sells some good tests. They test for more strains than just B31, and allow 2 proteins/bands, particularly relevant to late stage Lyme, that CDC testing removed due to vaccine...
Maybe. It shouldn't matter. I'd still imagine she'd have been able to pull together a decent cohort. Certainly at least one. Nath sounded bitter to me.
Sorry, but that is incorrect - at least relative to Marques' chronic Lyme/PTLDS study participants. Each had to satisfy strict IDSA/CDC diagnostic criteria before qualifying to even meet with a Marques underling. This is pedigree Lyme shit we're talking - with the population accruing since 1999...
"Adriana Marques (chief of NIAID's Lyme Disease Studies Unit) was supposed to produce all these patients with post-Lyme. She didn’t produce one patient. Not one”
To my tin ear, Nath sounds a little resentful here. I could be wrong. Still, a simple follow-up question I'd have wanted to hear...
During Q & A, Nath responds to a question about studying more than one disease at a time. I am tired, but it seemed to me he suggested that early on in the ME/CFS study design his group was going to look at ME/CFS and post treatment Lyme at the same time, and that the NIH's Lyme head couldn't...
Can't help but wonder if antigenic variation might play some role. Also caught my attention that malaria causes this IgM to IgG mishap. I wonder if other parasites might do the same (e.g. Babesiosis), as well as other pathogens.
Great conference, with a curious and good assortment of speakers...
So there's this:
"Considering the type of symptoms observed in CLD that share the common features of exacerbated central nervous system pain and sensory-processing mechanisms, CLD is included within the group of pathologies associated with central sensitivity syndrome (CSS)24. Pro-inflammatory...
"Transitioning into a long-term project will teach us so much that we need to learn about the post-infectious complications for Covid, and ME/CFS, chronic Lyme disease, all of these chronic conditions"
I suspect there are people at the NIH that are apoplectic that she said "chronic Lyme...
I don't mean to burst anybody's bubble, but some might suggest the NIH already has a policy template of sorts- and has for half a century. "Posture, mischaracterize, punt" is a seasoned approach and they're very good at it.
As for the personnel, plug and play appears to have worked fine.
This...
These are discussions that would benefit from someone with a channelopathy chiming in. There's a reason that Australian school of thought believe ME/CFS may be a channelopathy. Fatigue and exhaustion and effort and volition take on a different hue in that context.
We agree on all of this, at least up to "But there is an inability to use them etc" I think this is inaccurate. As sick as we can get, we ALWAYS have volition, we usually can put forth an effort (although admittedly some times we are so debilitated virtually no effort is possible); however...
"Experts warn that celebrity tell-alls and rampant “pseudoscience” surrounding Lyme is fuelling misdiagnoses. “Lyme disease has been plagued with misinformation for decades,” said Andrea Love, the executive director of the American Lyme Disease Foundation. “Unfortunately, there are instances of...
Some pathogens are known to have a tropism for cranial nerves (e.g cranial nerves such as cranial nerve VII in Bell's Palsy and cranial nerve VIII in some vestibular disorders.)
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