Open Australia: Griffith Uni: ION CHANNEL DYSFUNCTION IN ME/CFS

From the linked flyer

"This project aims to investigate the role of ion channel dysfunction in ME/CFS and PVS patients as potential diagnostic and therapeutic targets.

We are recruiting the following participants:

• ME/CFS group: participants who have received a diagnosis of ME/CFS (where diagnosis was made using the CCC 2003 or ICC 2011 definitions).

• PVS group: participants reporting chronic symptoms following a known viral infection, but have not received a diagnosis of ME/CFS nor other medical condition explaining the symptoms.

• Control group: participants who report no health concerns.


The inclusion criteria are as follows:

• Australian residents aged 18 to 65 years old

• Non-smoker

• No current diagnosis of serious chronic illness, e.g. autoimmune, cancer, cardiovascular, diabetes or primary psychiatric diseases

• Not pregnant or breastfeeding


This study involves:

• Donations of 84ml of blood

• Completion of an online questionnaire"
 
This group of researchers have been implicating TRP ion channels for several years now, has anybody
replicated their findings?
If it was a valid finding surely it would have been validated by now.
I don't think there's anything 'invalid' in what the Griffiths Uni team are doing - it's the way lots of chemical physiology has progressed, teasing apart one element at a time. With TRPICs there's a range of related functions, all of which may operate in different ways https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transient_receptor_potential_channel#Families Certainly it's a labourious way of going about things which is why a lot is riding on Decode ME as possible means to shortcut what is otherwise a long hard slog.
 
It sounds like an interesting possibility to rule in or out—good luck to them. :thumbsup: It'd be great to get a reasonably clear result in an ME research project, even if it's a negative that advances our knowledge of where not to look.
 
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