Mij
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Especially considering Long COVID probably includes majoritarily people who don’t have PEM.
It can progress in the later stages of illness though.
Especially considering Long COVID probably includes majoritarily people who don’t have PEM.
I don’t think Long COVID is one illness. Just an umbrella term for various sequelae of COVID from Lung Damage to OI.It can progress in the later stages of illness though.
I can anecdotally testify to this. I did a few pushups and dips a few times a week about 15 years ago. People actually noticed the change in my physique a year later. Only problem was that my QOL went to hell through that time. I decided that the improved physique wasn't worth the suffering and went back to skin and bones.If a healthy person and a person with ME/CFS do identical amounts of exercise, I think their objective markers of physical fitness like muscle mass and VO2 will likely still improve similar amounts.
What caused the worsening of the hypersensitivity? I’d say it’s fair to argue that it might be the exercise, at least indirectly through affecting something that affects the underlying disease mechanism (so not by permanently damaging muscles etc).But the exercise itself is not directly responsible for the deterioration. The worsening hypersensitivity to exertion is.
I think I might not have made my point clearly before.What caused the worsening of the hypersensitivity? I’d say it’s fair to argue that it might be the exercise, at least indirectly through affecting something that affects the underlying disease mechanism (so not by permanently damaging muscles etc).
Sure it's possible, but I do wander whether there is that much reason as we've seen to specifically argue for that because one already has postulated an underlying disease mechanism which undoubtedly will be complex so can swing in any direction by whatever is going on.What caused the worsening of the hypersensitivity? I’d say it’s fair to argue that it might be the exercise, at least indirectly through affecting something that affects the underlying disease mechanism (so not by permanently damaging muscles etc).
I understood you, but I’m not sure others did.I think I might not have made my point clearly before.
Yes, I think exercise can probably cause PEM. It might be any of a million mechanisms for how it happens. Maybe chemicals released by the muscles float to the brain and damage neurons. Maybe muscles aren't involved and it's all in the brain.
My point is that there's no reason to require that muscles in people with ME/CFS don't get stronger with training for causality to exist.
Otherwise, what is the implication? Exercise makes muscles and cardiorespiratory function worse instead of better, and this is what causes symptoms? So deconditioning causes symptoms? People deconditioned just from being sedentary don't normally get ME/CFS, so this just adds complexity without really explaining anything.
If Exercise > … > PEM > … > Worse baseline long term, then the exercise is causally involved in the worsening, even if it went through other steps to get there.Sure it's possible, but I do wander whether there is that much reason as we've seen to specifically argue for that because one already has postulated an underlying disease mechanism which undoubtedly will be complex so can swing in any direction by whatever is going on.
Of course, but that requires the 2 steps we know very little of and we already know that exercise is not a necessary condition for either.If Exercise > … > PEM > … > Worse baseline long term, then the exercise is causally involved in the worsening, even if it went through other steps to get there.
If you allow me to speculate, I'd say it is directly responsible for worsening the hypersensitivity. Whatever is primed to respond to exercise (or the product of the exercise like low grade inflammation) could be getting even more aggravated by exercise. Mine always returned back to the baseline even if it takes weeks or months, but there are anecdotal reports that the worsening can be permanent. But that is different from saying that exercise is directly responsible for the muscular/cardiovascular deterioration.What caused the worsening of the hypersensitivity? I’d say it’s fair to argue that it might be the exercise, at least indirectly through affecting something that affects the underlying disease mechanism (so not by permanently damaging muscles etc).
Yes, but my point was that exercise is probably one of many factors that can lead to deterioration, so we can’t say that the physical response to exercise is equal in pwME/CFS and HC, because those physical parameters might be negatively affected by the deterioration of the disease as a whole.Of course, but that requires the 2 steps we know very little of and we already know that exercise is not a necessary condition for either.
Yes, but in the speculation it would still be causally linked to the muscular/cardiovascular deterioration, but indirectly through other mechanism.If you allow me to speculate, I'd say it is directly responsible for worsening the hypersensitivity. Whatever is primed to respond to exercise (or the product of the exercise like low grade inflammation) could be getting even more aggravated by exercise. Mine always returned back to the baseline even if it takes weeks or months, but there are anecdotal reports that the worsening can be permanent. But that is different from saying that exercise is directly responsible for the muscular/cardiovascular deterioration.
Naturally and it's one of the reasons why we should argue for some smart long-term studies tracking patients to understand which phenomena exist.Yes, but my point was that exercise is probably one of many factors that can lead to deterioration, so we can’t say that the physical response to exercise is equal in pwME/CFS and HC, because those physical parameters might be negatively affected by the deterioration of the disease as a whole.