The plot from the Nath paper might reflect an artefact of controls being historic though. I wonder if the cells had been frozen. B cells are not good at making antibody unless given strong encouragement with something like EBV or PMA and they tend to sulk and die in vitro most of the time. Freezing could well be a big problem. But maybe the cells had been studied fresh previously?
I think methodology was identical. They didn't retest old samples - they used old data:
Autonomic function and CSF immunophenotypic analysis obtained in this study were compared with data collected before the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic from healthy volunteers (HVs) tested under other NIH studies NCT02669212 or NCT01875588. The autonomic testing and CSF analysis pipelines were identical in methodology to allow for direct comparisons of the neuro-PASC and HV groups.
One of those listed studies was on ME/CFS, Lyme, and healthy controls, so if there is data on B cells that Hutan mentioned for HC, there should be data for ME/CFS as well to see how it compares to long COVID. I can't find a published paper with this data though.
Edit: Oh, the data is from healthy volunteers in the big deep phenotyping study. (And another group of healthy controls in an HIV study.)
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