Andy
Retired committee member
Facebook post
Further details at this link, https://www.actionforme.org.uk/reso...brain-inflammation-phd-study-you-are-funding/
Interesting part of that
Action for M.E. is delighted to announce its latest PhD studentship in biomedical M.E. research.
Following our rigorous Research Funding Assessment Process, our Board of Trustees has awarded funding to Dr Neil Harrison to recruit a PhD student for three years as part of his project to investigate the effects of inflammation on brain function in M.E./CFS, with the aim of determining the neurobiological mechanisms that underpin fatigue, post-exertional malaise and pain experienced by people with M.E.
Dr Harrison, Reader in Neuropsychiatry and Neuroimaging at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, says, “This research is important as it will bring state-of-the-art brain imaging to the study of M.E./CFS, a standard this is being increasingly used in other illnesses affecting the brain. This will allow us to look in much greater detail at how M.E./CFS affects brain function and better understand how mild inflammation influences this.”
Subject to the contract being agreed, and a student recruited, this PhD will start later this month. You can find out more on our project page at https://www.actionforme.org.uk/…/what-are-the-details-of-t…/
This PhD studentship has been awarded following our October 2017 funding call for high-quality, innovative pilots that address the biology of M.E., for which a number of applications were submitted. Last month, Action for M.E. and the Scottish Government’s Chief Scientist’s Office announced that our jointly funded PhD studentship in biomedical M.E. research would be awarded to Prof Chris Ponting, University of Edinburgh.
Further details at this link, https://www.actionforme.org.uk/reso...brain-inflammation-phd-study-you-are-funding/
Interesting part of that
In addition to the PhD study he is leading, funded by Action for M.E., Dr Harrison is working on two additional projects funded by Arthritis Research UK and the Medical Research Council (MRC).
The MRC-funded study forms part of a larger grant led by Prof Mark John James Edwards, at St George's, University of London. Some concerns have been raised about this study, which was included as a work package in a much larger grant, A unified mechanism for functional neurological symptoms, including that:
We asked Dr Harrison to address this. He says:
- it is trying to prove that M.E./CFS is a functional neurological disorder
- it will be used as evidence to move people with M.E. to treatment under the banner of Medically Unexplained Symptoms, which is psychiatric in focus
- that study participants will be studying ALL patients with functional neurological disorder, and not people with clearly defined M.E.
- the “treatment” referred to in the study abstract will be behavioural.
“Thank you for asking me about this. To clarify, the grant with Prof Edwards includes several independent work packages including some on non-epileptic attack disorder and functional movement disorder. These are led by Prof Edwards at St Georges and I have no involvement in either of these studies. This M.E./CFS study is completely separate study and is led by me at Brighton and Sussex Medical School.
“I do not conceptualise M.E./CFS as a functional neurological disorder and this study is certainly not trying to prove that M.E./CFS is a functional neurological disorder. My view is that M.E. is a complex, systemic condition, which requires appropriate biomedical treatment; our current study aims to provide important new evidence in support of this.
[Much more at link]