CDC Posts NEW CONTENT on ME/CFS (July 12, 2018)

Yea, I agree that CDC needs to be careful about what treatment it promotes. The problem for me is that isome of the statements the site makes about exercise suggest they are promoting a form of treatment or a benefit that's not supported by the evidence while they also leave off important evidence that could better guide doctors on what to do and not do.

For instance, the site states "While vigorous aerobic exercise can be beneficial for many chronic illnesses, patients with ME/CFS do not tolerate such exercise routines." So is the site telling doctors that "non-vigorous" aerobic exercise is okay? What kind? Based on what evidence?

The site also states:
"Expectations need to be managed, as exercise cannot be expected to be a cure. However, improved function is a long-term goal of managing ME/CFS; tolerance of aerobic exercise and normal levels of activity is also a long-term goal that can be related to improved function, but should be pursued cautiously as described above."​
But couldn't this wrongly suggest to doctors that exercise could lead to tolerance of aerobic exercise and normal levels of activity? Especially given the pervasiveness of the PACE GET narrative?

On the other hand, the PEM treatment section doesn't directly speak to impaired aerobic energy metabolism and the lowered anaerobic threshold for which there is evidence. The Etiology and Pathophysiology section does briefly mention this, which is great to see. But IMO, what's known about this needs to be reiterated and integrated into the PEM section to help doctors better understand what they are dealing with.
I have a concern that if one pushes for only statements that have good evidence, a lot of the good stuff will also go. And even the evidence from 2-day exercise studies doesn’t appear to neatly replicate: each study tends to find an abnormality but often they are different.

As I suggested before, I think the problem about the promotion about exercise is at partly and probably mainly to do with the sympathetic and knowledgeable physicians that the CDC rely on (probably some of Klimas, Bateman, Komaroff, Lapp, Levine, Natelson) who recommend exercise. The CDC are unlikely to not mention exercise when so many of them do on top of the evidence from GET trials.
 
I forgot who here was that can write / publish papers, but can we like detail the workwell foundation study and recommend as test for CFS/ME??? I think we need replication or more literature so other sites will accept this as acceptable testing. So we can move forward and have at least this we can do to test.

By the way I called my university for testing and the psycology department runs the testing :( and had some CBT crap there, suffice to say I run away.
 


That's well overdue.

Did you find something that said that? Or is it that Reeves is not listed on their definitions page? I suspect its not listed there because CDC has said its not a different definition from Fukuda, just different operationalization. They are still defending that it selects the same patients and defending studies that used it. If I remember correctly, a Reeves Fukuda study was published in the last year or two
 
Another thing I noticed: the other dx criteria are listed as 'historical'. It's an interesting attempt at linearizing a really web-shaped reality. I'd still say the most preferred criteria by patients are CCC (if they've compared CCC and ICC; if not, ppl tend to say the newer one). These aren't 'historical' criteria, they're still very much in use by patients and clinicians, and by researchers, too.
 
I have a concern that if one pushes for only statements that have good evidence, a lot of the good stuff will also go. And even the evidence from 2-day exercise studies doesn’t appear to neatly replicate: each study tends to find an abnormality but often they are different.

They have all found issues at the ventilatory threshold at day 2 - it is the VO2peak that varies from study to study, I suspect it is because not all participants are reaching a true VO2Max.
 
Dolphin said:
I have a concern that if one pushes for only statements that have good evidence, a lot of the good stuff will also go. And even the evidence from 2-day exercise studies doesn’t appear to neatly replicate: each study tends to find an abnormality but often they are different.
They have all found issues at the ventilatory threshold at day 2 - it is the VO2peak that varies from study to study, I suspect it is because not all participants are reaching a true VO2Max.
But was there a consistent finding with a particular measure at the ventilatory threshold? My impression was there wasn't. If so, which measure?
 
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But was there a consistent finding with a particular measure at the ventilatory threshold? My impression was there wasn't. If so, which measure?

Here is my quick summary of all the data I have seen so far:

van Ness 2008
Difference in Ventilatiory threshold Oxygen Consumption (VTO2)
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold not reported

Vermulen 2010
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold (difference between patients and controls on 2nd day only)
Difference in VTO2 (difference between patients and controls on 2nd day only)

Snell 2013
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold
Difference in VTO2

Keller 2014
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold
Difference in VTO2

Giloteaux 2016
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold (notable trend as it was a twin study)
Difference in VTO2 (notable trend as it was a twin study)

Hodges 2018
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold
VTO2 (no difference)

Nelson (seminar presentation 2017, hopefully to be published this year)
Reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold


Many of these studies have been quite underpowered, but they have surprisingly all shown the same trend - reduction of workload at ventilatory threshold.
 
Fair play to Jennifer...that sums it up really 'a contradictory mess'.... whatever good bits are in at are spoiled by returning to the increase in exercise. We would love to increase our exercise and might do so some day if we are given appropriate medical treatments. I keep trying to convince myself the update is a good thing and it is to some degree but it's like they bring us in from the cold to a nice cosey kitchen but then turf us back out again into a damp miserable shed.
 
Thanks to everyone looking carefully at this. I still haven't taken to time to do so.

It sounds like this is an improvement on what came before, but that it's still worth requesting improvements/clarifications.
 
The major problems I see are the recommendation for increased (aerobic) exercise, the lack of specific treatment recommendations (besides exercise), the requirement for individualized chronic care (very expensive and without strong evidence it will lead to better outcomes), and putting primary care doctors at the center of developing and implementing a treatment plan (no training, most don't have the time to manage and continously update treatments for complex fluctuating chronic patients).
 
It is however, to my reading, better than what preceded it.

Not perfect, it's even bad/dangerous in places, but better.

This is the perspective of someone from the UK, other countries/people may differ in their opinions - as is only right.

(It reads like it was developed by several different people, who each had different briefs)
 
It is however, to my reading, better than what preceded it.

Not perfect, it's even bad/dangerous in places, but better.

This is the perspective of someone from the UK, other countries/people may differ in their opinions - as is only right.

(It reads like it was developed by several different people, who each had different briefs)

I believe it was written by two people who have different views about the illness, but it could have done with some input from patients. As it is, it's a sloppy compromise at best, and openly contradictory at worst.
 
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