3rd Annual Community Symposium on the Molecular Basis of ME/CFS at Stanford University, sponsored by OMF, 7th Sept 2019

It's sad that research institutions like the NIH can't even follow in these footsteps, let alone lead, but things can finally get serious momentum.

In the interest of fairness, I think that NIH has made a contribution to the forward motion with this disease. They haven’t done enough by a long shot, but Maureen Hanson heads one of the 3 cooperative research centers and others in that room have NIH funding as well. Dr. Younger wasn’t able to attend, but he was recently funded too.

What I wish is that every researcher in that room would flood NIH with research applications. The research community has to grow and I think that this conference, as well as the NIH young investigators conference earlier this year, are opportunities for stimulating that growth.

In my opinion, what we here in the US have to do is, first, to continue to push NIH for set-aside funding, and secondly, build up a strong relationship with Congress. I don’t believe that Congress will allocate funds for this disease until they see a research breakthrough. I hope that we will be ready for a major push when the breakthrough happens.
 
I'm glad these researchers are being honest and presenting negtive or mixed results and I'm glad they are organizing these conferences. Still many questions, most have been raised already, and no answers. And I'm humbled by how long I think it's going to take those answers to come.

I guess the most sobering thing is how are we still not sure if it's an infectious entity or not 40 years on. Those osler web's tweets are clearly written from an agenda/perspective, so I'll hold off until I can watch the videos or someone who was there can clarify.

For example, I'm finding the following hard to believe. What evidence? Why virus? Why/how is it endemic?

Mark the day when the truth was finally told by the top scientist in this field: September 7, 2019. Maureen Hanson provides the history and evidence that ME is an infectious disease, caused by a virus, that was allowed to become endemic since the "surge" of disease in 1990s

I'm also not sure about lumping. People get me/cfs gradually or rapidly. They get it in Africa and in urban Asia. We don't know is it a motorcylce, a car or an airplane that hit you.

Nonetheless, it takes a lot of courage and patience to research this illness and I'm grateful for everyone involved in the conference.
 
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In the interest of fairness, I think that NIH has made a contribution to the forward motion with this disease. They haven’t done enough by a long shot, but Maureen Hanson heads one of the 3 cooperative research centers and others in that room have NIH funding as well. Dr. Younger wasn’t able to attend, but he was recently funded too.

What I wish is that every researcher in that room would flood NIH with research applications. The research community has to grow and I think that this conference, as well as the NIH young investigators conference earlier this year, are opportunities for stimulating that growth.

In my opinion, what we here in the US have to do is, first, to continue to push NIH for set-aside funding, and secondly, build up a strong relationship with Congress. I don’t believe that Congress will allocate funds for this disease until they see a research breakthrough. I hope that we will be ready for a major push when the breakthrough happens.

I agree politicians won't stick their necks out on me/cfs unless there is a breakthrough. They don't want to get mugged down in the psychosomatic and public perception about me/cfs. They need something to stand on.
 
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Since I can't stream this my best source is the tweet 'transcript,' this is back to square one, which keeps getting reset, and those who speak up get sent into the corner, we'll have to see what happens to Hanson.


Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


"It's still conceivable there are small outbreaks--maybe everyone eats at the same restaurant one day, gets sick, but everyone who gets sick goes to a different doctor...but (given its widespread nature) I think a lot of people now have immunity to this virus." Maureen Hanson

2 replies 3 retweets 14 likes

Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


"This is not a genetic disease. It requires an exposure. To this day, we don't know why people are susceptible to polio...it could be bad luck--you get one or two other viruses, you're immune system got messed up, and you get ME." Maureen Hanson

2 replies 12 retweets 35 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


"I loved Mareen's courageous talk. I loved that she called a spade a spade..." Ron Davis

0 replies 4 retweets 18 likes

Hillary Johnson Retweeted
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


"I suspect there is a central cause of the disease, I agree with Maureen....ultimately we want to figure out what that organism is and get rid of it. Many people are trying to sort that out." Ron Davis

0 replies 5 retweets 22 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


Q to Hanson: Foolish virus vs genius virus? Can you speak to role of EBV as genius virus? "most people are having reactivation of EBV, immune system can no longer control it. What if another virus comes along when you have mono? That could result in ME."

1 reply 5 retweets 11 likes

Hillary Johnson Retweeted
Anna Giuseppa‏ @AnneSpaceCoast 3h3 hours ago


Replying to @oslersweb
She will need 24 hour security now! She is the 3rd women scientist saying similar. Elaine D and Judy M said "viral" cause and look what happened to them!

2 replies 6 retweets 18 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


"I suspect there is a central cause of the disease, I agree with Maureen....ultimately we want to figure out what that organism is and get rid of it. Many people are trying to sort that out." Ron Davis

0 replies 5 retweets 22 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


Maureen Hanson on subsets, a paraphrase: I'm a lumper, not a splitter. When you're hit by a car, you may have multiple injuries, but you were still hit by the same car. There is a fundamental disruption (a virus)

2 replies 6 retweets 14 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 3h3 hours ago


The desire by scientists to "stratify" patients and break them into subsets is, IMO, a way to enable them to personally understand the disease better but which does little to get to the heart of the infection. amateur hour, in other words

0 replies 2 retweets 4 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 4h4 hours ago


Polite women don't make history. Thank god Maureen Hanson had the courage to tell the truth about ME. The field must change immediately, If your research isn't about finding the infection, it's just peripheral and more of the same. Find the genius virus

0 replies 4 retweets 21 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Read between the lines of Maureen Hanson's keynote speech: tragedy began in the 1980s when formerly obscure disease exploded. Male MDs + scientists, dismiss as hysteria. No $ for research for decades. Disease spreads until it's endemic and here to stay. NIH still doesn't get it

0 replies 12 retweets 25 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


correction: 1980s!

1 reply 1 retweet 9 likes

Show this thread
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Mark the day when the truth was finally told by the top scientist in this field: September 7, 2019. Maureen Hanson provides the history and evidence that ME is an infectious disease, caused by a virus, that was allowed to become endemic since the "surge" of disease in 1990s

2 replies 13 retweets 23 likes

Show this thread
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


"We know we're dealing with a genius virus" Maureen Hanson. Finally--a scientist with the guts to state a long obvious fact that ME is caused by a virus, a "genius" virus compared to HIV, Zika, polio; a virus clever enough to hide its damage to victims, masking reality of ME.

4 replies 17 retweets 50 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Maureen Hanson: we need to tell the public that they need to worry about ME

1 reply 11 retweets 35 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Unfortunately, genius viruses like the one causing ME/CFS are very clever viruses. we have $15 million in 2019...We need more research. We need money. We hear NIH say they'll fund more if more applications are received. But, you need specifically designated $; set aside funds

1 reply 9 retweets 21 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Maureen Hanson: disease is now endemic. People get sick and don't seem to be part of an outbreak. What happens when emerging disease becomes endemic? Disease must compete with other endemic disease.

0 replies 5 retweets 14 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Maureen Hanson: the different outbreaks are clearly identifiable as what we today call ME/CFS. Ramsay's description in 1950s resonates with our current five symptoms, PEM, brain fog, and relapsing remitting symptoms. They are the same disease, but with some variations in virus

3 replies 10 retweets 26 likes
Hillary Johnson‏ @oslersweb 5h5 hours ago


Maureen Hanson Keynote. Will give you my thoughts about ME, not just data. Some speculation.: Cause of abnormal functioning of immune system. 70 percent started with viral-like infection. upsurge of outbreaks in 1950s, another outbreaks in 1980s.

0 replies 4 retweets 10 likes


I was at the Symposium and happened to read this, so I asked Maureen directly if she believed that the cause is a virus. She made a point of refusing to specify or state this at all. She said that what she thinks matters is what is happening/being done—the action rather than a presumed actor. She said that for instance, HIV was discovered after seeing what was going wrong with the immune system. The common cause, in other words, is what is being done. Whatever the agent itself might be seemed immaterial to her thinking, beside the point right now.

So, in my translation of what she communicated, the point is to look for the function that is going wrong, rather than to insist ahead of time that it has to be one type of agent or another. To insist that it has to be a particular kind of agent, ahead of time, could close down the best sort of research process.
 
I was at the Symposium and happened to read this, so I asked Maureen directly if she believed that the cause is a virus. She made a point of refusing to specify or state this at all. She said that what she thinks matters is what is happening/being done—the action rather than a presumed actor. She said that for instance, HIV was discovered after seeing what was going wrong with the immune system. The common cause, in other words, is what is being done. Whatever the agent itself might be seemed immaterial to her thinking, beside the point right now.

So, in my translation of what she communicated, the point is to look for the function that is going wrong, rather than to insist ahead of time that it has to be one type of agent or another. To insist that it has to be a particular kind of agent, ahead of time, could close down the best sort of research process.
I'm so confused now. I have seen it reported that she said "we know we're dealing with a genius virus". Where is that quotation coming from?
 
Am feeling confused now. Is the utube available yet to relisten to Dr Hanson? She was early in the day. I remember the virus statement too.

Were you able to discuss this with her @Sing?

Eta: I seem to remember Dr Davies saying something about how straightforwardly Dr Hanson spoke or something similar


Eta2: there is another thread on Dr Hanson’s talk https://www.s4me.info/threads/maureen-hanson-talk-at-omf-symposium-2019.11192/
 
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I thought Ron Davis had been saying (previously) that it wasn't a virus. Has he changed his mind?
I think the evidence strongly suggests its both a genetic predisposition and a virus or maybe many candidate viruses. Indeed this might mean its an otherwise unremarkable virus, and only those with the genetic risk have severe issues with it. 69 out of 70 with an IDO2 mutation is far too many for it to be by chance unless its an absolute fluke or a systemic bias in the testing.
 
I agree politicians won't stick their necks out on me/cfs unless there is a breakthrough. They don't want to get mugged down in the psychosomatic and public perception about me/cfs. They need something to stand on.
Which really shows the damage the whole "fatigue" reframing has done. It ruined everything in heinous sabotage. And Wessely touts it as one of the biggest accomplishments of the last 3 decades. What a talentless hack.
 
But @Sing just said that Hanson didn't say that at the Symposium. Or am I misunderstanding something? I'm so confused.
I heard her saying it, it will probably be on a video when it's released.

I googled it and it seems she was either talking about a pop band, or what's probably a scifi book, so came to the conclusion that there is probably no such thing as a 'genius virus' that she must mean that it's just not as 'stupid' as most other viruses, in that it's hard to detect as it's symptoms make no sense to our current techniques.

Not that the virus, if there is one, which seems unlikely, is smart, just that our technology is too stupid to see it, again, if it exists.
 
I'm so confused now. I have seen it reported that she said "we know we're dealing with a genius virus". Where is that quotation coming from?

It was either misquoted or taken out of context. The point she was making (even brain fogged I think I got the main point correctly) was that it could be that ME/CFS was triggered by a "hit and run" virus, which messed up the immune system and then left no traces behind, so the virus is genius in that sense. She used the example of how poliovirus can cause a horrific disease like poliomyelitis for 1% of children, but for the rest 99% that catches it it will barely cause symptoms, and after you get poliomyelitis it's difficult or impossible to actually find the poliovirus in the body anymore. But anyway, at no point was there any suggestion made that they had found a new virus or any active infection in patients.
 
It was either misquoted or taken out of context. The point she was making (even brain fogged I think I got the main point correctly) was that it could be that ME/CFS was triggered by a "hit and run" virus, which messed up the immune system and then left no traces behind, so the virus is genius in that sense. She used the example of how poliovirus can cause a horrific disease like poliomyelitis for 1% of children, but for the rest 99% that catches it it will barely cause symptoms, and after you get poliomyelitis it's difficult or impossible to actually find the poliovirus in the body anymore. But anyway, at no point was there any suggestion made that they had found a new virus or any active infection in patients.
Thanks. So people on Twitter were overstating the point?
 
Without remembering the exact details and words in that part of the presentation, I think the idea was that if it is a virus, it is a « genius » virus vs a « dunce » virus. They were making a joke as well as a good point, while talking about the different history of our illness vs others like HIV, for which it was easy to discover the cause. With the current technology, she said that a virus like HIV would take almost no time at all to identify—She might have said, « a minute! »
 
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