Dr. Anthony Fauci on Long Covid and ME/CFS

Discussion in 'Long Covid news' started by Sly Saint, Oct 3, 2020.

  1. Sly Saint

    Sly Saint Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    9,746
    Location:
    UK
    This thread is the result of the merging of a number of threads

    "Dr. Anthony Fauci discusses some of the public health and scientific challenges presented by COVID-19. This talk was Dr. Fauci's keynote presentation at Penn Medicine's Cancer and COVID-19 virtual conference on September 30, 2020."

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA4UeltYUiw


     
    Last edited by a moderator: Aug 20, 2024
    ahimsa, sebaaa, Robert 1973 and 5 others like this.
  2. Kalliope

    Kalliope Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,463
    Location:
    Norway
    At 14.13 he says:
    The other thing that's perplexing, new, and we're learning about, is what some people call "lang haulers". Mainly people who clear the virus. So they are virologically quote "cured" of the disease, but for weeks and even months and maybe longer, they have lingering symptomatology that can be muscle aches, muscle pains, fever, what people refer to as brain fog, or an inability to focus or concentrate. These are things that in some respects resemble Myalgic Encephalopathy or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, although it is clearly different from that.
     
    ahimsa, sebaaa, mango and 7 others like this.
  3. chrisb

    chrisb Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    4,602
    In what ways is it different. ? Apart obviously from the fact that some attribute the cause to Covid-19 and others cannot?

    Or is it that post covid is not of psychiatric origin?

    We remember.
     
    ahimsa, sebaaa, Mij and 9 others like this.
  4. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    13,180
    Location:
    Canada
    That assertion would carry more weight if we knew what ME is. Obviously there are additional aspects, though it's not clear what differences they add up to. Maybe none. Probably not but we literally have no way of knowing because of willful ignorance going back decades and still the current planned course.

    The dysautonomia is clearly very similar. As are the fatigue, headaches and neurological symptoms. And obviously the exertion intolerance. But none of those have any more explanation than any other case of ME, which is the whole thing that has defined ME, all because of willful ignorance, denial and people straight up making stuff up to fill ignorance with their own preferred pet explanation. For one thing we know more about COVID because of severe hospitalized patients who receive more attention each week than all ME patients have for all history. We can't know what people never bothered to check.

    It's this ignorance that is at fault here. We know nothing and so have nothing to compare to because people chose not to know anything and now we have nothing to compare to because nobody took sufficient notes at the time. Because people failed at their job. And we clearly will not know any more until people actually begin the work and this is not happening right now, even coming straight from the very people who carry the most weight in making that decision, a decision Fauci continues to make to this day and for the foreseeable future.
     
    Hutan, ahimsa, sebaaa and 8 others like this.
  5. EndME

    EndME Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,118
    Anthony Fauci on becoming the ‘devil’ and a warning for his successor

    In an interview with Science Anthony Fauci reviews his career and states that he believes that ME/CFS is currently the most interesting disease to study for him. Of course that has not resulted in it receiving adequate funding, the opposite has been the case, especially under his reign, but it seems Long Covid might have changed his mind.

    Have we found the advocate we have always been looking for, is this an interview from a parallel universe or is it a reflection of his own neglect and underfunding now that he doesn't have to back up his words by action anymore as he is out of office?


    Q: Let’s say you were starting your research career today. What would you study?
    A: I keep getting fascinated by autoimmune diseases that seem to get triggered by an aberrant stimulation of the immune system. More than 40 years ago, when I was the physician for the NIH, I was struck by a subset of patients who would come in usually following a viral infection and they didn’t know what it was because no one ever cultured it. They would say, “Something is wrong, I just don’t feel right. I get tired twice as easy, I feel achy, my rhythm is screwed up, I don’t sleep very well.” People later started talking about myalgic encephalitis/chronic fatigue syndrome. What is it about? I’m fascinated by this. There’s a combination of genetic, epigenetic, environmental factors that kicks off in people following an infection.


    The full interview can be found here:
    https://www.science.org/content/article/anthony-fauci-becoming-devil-and-warning-his-successor
     
  6. duncan

    duncan Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,668
    Yay. Free Press.

    Oh dear.
     
  7. Sid

    Sid Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,190
    Ugh.
     
    Ash, Lou B Lou, Kitty and 3 others like this.
  8. rvallee

    rvallee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    13,180
    Location:
    Canada
    I do believe him when he says this, see no reason to think he'd make this up. But his description is very lacking, and I'd be far more interested in knowing why he couldn't do this when he was director of the NIH institute that is most capable of dealing with this. He could have done 1000x more in a single year than if he'd spent his entire career as a researcher, and that's accounting for his celebrity status.

    It truly is fascinating, but it's so much more disabling that what he describes. That bit is disappointing. It's not even hard to understand.
     
    obeat, Arnie Pye, V.R.T. and 11 others like this.
  9. duncan

    duncan Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,668
    Will he work with Baraniuk, I wonder.

    Curious that he didn't call it CFS, that he knew to call it ME/CFS, but that he'd characterize it in such a tone deaf manner.

    How'd he get here? Seems like a bunch of assumptions folded into this observation.

    ETA: It's easy to read stuff into a what is likely a meaningless reference. Except, it's uttered by someone who is used to having what he says scrutinized. So, balance I suppose.
     
    Last edited: Sep 27, 2023
  10. Hubris

    Hubris Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    317
    Nice, at 82 years of age his career is just getting started so I'm sure he will have plenty of avenues to start studying ME, and he will totally be held accountable for his commitment
     
    ukxmrv, Ash, Lou B Lou and 7 others like this.
  11. EndME

    EndME Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,118
    His hundredth birthday can then be celebrated with the intramural study being published in the year 2041. Just in time to get the ball rolling...
     
    obeat, ukxmrv, Ash and 10 others like this.
  12. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    14,363
    Location:
    London, UK
    It is just the mantra. But is intriguing that the way he says it makes no sense. Genetic factors do not kick off after infection. They were always there. And the environmental factor will be the infection which kicked in already - not off after.

    His mistake is to miss the stochastic element emphasised by Stastny. Stastny was a great scientist. He showed that immune genes have a role in autoimmunity and while at it pointed out that chance was probably more important than environment. Fauci made his name out of giving people dying of renal lupus cyclophosphamide. It kept a lot of people alive but a good number developed infertility and bladder cancer. He has to be given the credit for being proactive.

    It was under his watch that Covid-19 killed a million Americans. That story has not been fully told by any means yet.
     
  13. duncan

    duncan Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,668
    Yes. It's how he is packaging ME/CFS, for lack of a better word. I think you are alluding to the genetics thing, but the whole little tangent seems off somehow.
     
    RedFox, Kitty and Trish like this.
  14. Dakota15

    Dakota15 Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    563
    Totally get what you mean but to be fair now, it's on the medical journal to publish [most likely NJEM, is my hunch..] as NIH released the study to whichever journal is peer reviewing (October will make it month 6 at said journal)
     
    Binkie4, EndME, Michelle and 2 others like this.
  15. EndME

    EndME Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,118
    For all I care they can take 2 years to peer review it. The problem is not uploading a preprint to the Arvix and that's on the authors.
     
    Hutan, Wyva, Trish and 1 other person like this.
  16. Braganca

    Braganca Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    340
    Or maybe Nature.. it says 7 months on their site from submission to publication.. which would make it November.
     
    Wyva and Trish like this.
  17. EndME

    EndME Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,118
    These timeframes are rather rough suggestions than anything else. Take for example the recent Iwasaki paper published in Nature. It took one year and 1 month from submission to publication. However, they also released a preprint once they submitted the paper so that was never an issue.
     
    Lou B Lou, Wyva, Trish and 1 other person like this.
  18. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    5,305
    Location:
    Aotearoa New Zealand
    I hope the approach has the benefit of a "media blitz" with solid and unassailable publications that have all passed peer review in the leading journals.

    I recall reading from EndME here, that multiple supplementary papers (presumably on standby having already passed peer review) will follow publication of the main paper.
     
    EndME and Trish like this.
  19. EndME

    EndME Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,118
    Is that really the case though? If anything I feel like Iwasaki's recent publication received twice the media attention, once as preprint and later again when it was published after passing peer review.

    When I asked two different groups in the ME/CFS/LC field why they don't make their preprints public, the response was once that there's too much speculation in this field with people jumping aboard too many bandwagons and the other group didn't even seem aware of open access preprint repositories. Overall I find neither answer convincing, especially as this reasoning doesn't apply to other sciences like mathematics and physics which are a lot more advanced in this aspect. I might be missing something, but to me it's simply "bad/outdated" conduct of research even though it's unfortunately still quite common in biomedical research.
     
  20. Lucibee

    Lucibee Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    1,498
    Location:
    Mid-Wales
    Hmmm... methinks Fauci is trying to rewrite history somewhat. Or maybe, not so much rewrite, but establish it - as it is very difficult to find out what he has actually said about ME/CFS in the past.

    Cort thinks he remembers: https://www.healthrising.org/blog/2...ing-it-about-chronic-fatigue-syndrome-me-cfs/

    And I've had a little look back through my copy of OW to find this extract from the chapter on 1991 (Black Diamonds - A conspiracy of dunces - p471):

    That sort of attitude crops up elsewhere as well - but there are no direct quotes from Fauci himself and there only seems to be HJ's account that has this. However, we know this was a common sentiment at the time (on both sides of the Atlantic, and in Australia) and of course much more recently. I just wish someone of his ilk would acknowledge that.
     
    Hutan, Ash, Sean and 7 others like this.

Share This Page