jnmaciuch
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I’ve been mulling over the idea that the presence of thyroid antibodies during the resolution period after acute infection may be a relevant predisposing factor to ME/CFS. Temporary infection-induced thyroiditis is a documented phenomenon—it may even occur at a much higher prevalence than we know, simply because it could resolve on its own within a few days or weeks and someone may never have gotten around to a doctor who would screen for those antibodies.There is a persistent suggestion that thyroid autoantibodies are more common in people with ME/CFS, which maybe should be taken seriously. But again, there are all sorts of ways one might explain that which don;t necessarily imply the ME/CFS itself requires autoantibodies.
Given thyroid hormone’s relevance to gene regulation, intracellular calcium (CD38, neuron and/or muscle function), and a couple other threads that have come up as potentially relevant, I was thinking it could be a good culprit for a global signal that aids resolution of certain immune processes following infection. Obviously I’d jump to interferon here.
If the stochastic appearance of anti-thyroid antibodies interferes with thyroid function during and after acute infection, it might leave someone more vulnerable to a feedback loop involving mechanisms that were active during infection and failed to adequately resolve. The antibodies themselves may not remain pathologically high after infection, but the damage was already done, and some pwME may retain slightly higher than normal levels long term.
Not to mention the sex disparity in Hashimoto’s is similar to ME/CFS (though the exact ratio is a somewhat under debate).
Last edited: