Although I applaud the general goal of this article, I believe it has some problems/inaccuracies.
1) This authors beat around the bush about the "connection" between post-covid illness and ME/CFS
By noting the possible connection between “post-Covid syndrome” and ME/CFS, Fauci has highlighted the long-neglected field of post-viral illness — a poorly understood phenomenon that likely holds important clues about the causes of, and treatments for, both conditions.
It would have been better for the authors to state explicitly that after 6 months, people with symptoms X, Y, Z (depending on the diagnostic criteria) HAVE ME/CFS. It doesn't matter if the trigger was Covid, Ebola, EBV, tick bite, alligator bite, iatrogenic cause, unknown cause, mold, etc. It doesn't help to use words like "possible connection" (even if Fauci used these words). By not being explicit, you are going to have post covid people at 6 months or a year after infection saying that they have "Post Covid", when, in fact, according to existing diagnostic criteria they have ME/CFS. This will further bifurcate the patient community and I'm sure that 6 months from now we will have people on twitter claiming that they don't have ME/CFS but rather have "Post Wuhan Covid 19 strain A1B2 disorder, which is something completely different from ME/CFS". And this becomes a problem because it undermines fundraising and research for the "syndrome" of ME/CFS, e.g. these folks won't support ME/CFS research because they believe they don't have it.
This is the way I have would have written this "Although neither of us are physicians or biomedical researchers, based on anecdotal reports, it appears very likely that a percentage of Covid survivors will be diagnosed with ME/CFS."
2)
The cardinal symptom is not fatigue per se, but a prolonged relapse of exhaustion, cognitive dysfunction, and other symptoms after a minimal amount of activity. This is generally called “post-exertional malaise.”
This statement is not true. For example, under the CCC criteria there are four "cardinal" symptoms or signs. If you do not have fatigue (per se or otherwise), you do not have ME/CFS
1
Fatigue
Required The patient must have a significant degree of new onset, unexplained, persistent, or recurrent physical and mental
fatigue that substantially reduces activity level.
2
Post-Exertional Malaise and/or Post-Exertional Fatigue
Required There is an inappropriate
loss of physical and mental stamina, rapid
muscular and
cognitive fatigability,
post-exertional malaise and/or post-exertional fatigue and a tendency for other associated symptoms within the patient’s cluster of symptoms to worsen.
There is a pathologically slow recovery period – usually 24 hours or longer.
3
Sleep Dysfunction*
Required There is
unrefreshing sleep or sleep quantity or rhythm disturbances such as
reversed or chaotic diurnal sleep rhythms. Note that patients without sleep dysfunction can still meet the diagnostic criteria if their illness began with an infection — see * below.
4
Pain*
Required There is a significant degree of
myalgia. Pain can be experienced in the
muscles, and/or
joints, and is often widespread and migratory in nature. Often there are significant
headaches of new type, pattern or severity. Note that patients without pain can still meet the diagnostic criteria if their illness began with an infection — see * below.
A cardinal symptom or sign does not mean one symptom. For example, inflammation has 5 cardinal signs (from wikipedia).
Inflammation is characterized by five cardinal signs:
- rubor (redness),
- calor (increased heat),
- tumor (swelling),
- dolor (pain), and
- functio laesa (loss of function).
3.
Why some people are vulnerable to these chronic symptoms isn’t known
This statement is not completely true. See here
https://www.s4me.info/threads/human...syndrome-me-cfs-fluge-mella-et-al-2020.14329/ Lande et al. identified 2 HLA risk alleles that likely predisposes people to contract ME/CFS
I'm done.