ME/CFS Skeptic
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
1) The data reported by Dr. Dane Cook in this CDC call from 13 May 2021 is pretty interesting.
He was able to analyze the results of exercise testing in the large Multi-Site Clinical Assessment of ME/CFS study (MCAM).
2) Previous meta-analyses have shown that ME/CFS patients have lower peak VO2 and cardiac responses (chronotropic intolerance) than controls.
3) Cook found something similar in the data of 179 ME/CFS patients and 169 controls from the MCAM study. But when patients and controls were properly matched for fitness these differences mostly disappeared.
4) He said: “When you match on fitness, the oxygen consumption and cardiac differences for the most part go away” and “… We saw very little evidence of overt chronotropic incompetence.”
5) Interestingly, something else showed up when patients and controls were matched for fitness.
ME/CFS patients were breathing slower but deeper.
6) Cook said: “they have a deeper ventilatory response and a slower ventilatory response. This is a unique and inefficient breathing pattern for exercise, and it can't be explained by fitness because it only showed up when we matched for fitness.”
7) He added: “We see for the entire sample that the ME/CFS throughout exercise have higher values for their ventilatory equivalents for both VO2 and VCO2. And if you switch down to the matched subsamples, you see those differences remain even when we match for fitness.”
8) Cook said: “So we think that this has something to do with the pathophysiology of ME/CFS because it cannot be explained by having low fitness.”
He said that these ventilatory responses suggest poor perfusion and a problem with gas exchange.
9) He added that he only knows of one other study that has examined this in veterans with Gulf War Illness and it showed the same thing.
He also said that these findings are consistent with some of David Systrom's work on poor delivery of oxygenated blood to the muscle.
10) In the talk Dr. Cook, who holds a Ph.D. in Exercise Science, also stressed that :
“ME/CFS is not a disease of low aerobic fitness. That is a false narrative. That has been propagated by non-exercise scientists…”
11) “… In my opinion, it's been damaging to the ME/CFS community, and it's presented a lot of noise in the research that is really unnecessary. I can't think of a plausible biological reason why someone who is low fit would have a heterogenous and complex disease like ME/CFS.”
12) I know too little about exercise physiology to comment on the biological aspect but, the study used multiple clinical sites and the analyses were performed “independent of who conducted the exercise test and blind to clinical status.”