Trial Report Low Dose Rapamycin Alleviates Clinical Symptoms of Fatigue and PEM in ME/CFS Patients via Improvement of Autophagy, 2025, Ruan et al

Disclaimer, this is 100% anecdotal:

Interestingly, rapamycin initially restored my energy and mental sharpness to the point where after two full weeks of feeling great, I risked a HIIT workout (spoiler: that was not smart. It led to a PEM crash). The crash lasted two weeks. Another three weeks went by with me resuming some function (not quite as much as before the crash) until, out of literally nowhere (I live in an airtight bubble), I came down with flu-like symptoms, then tested positive for COVID.

That was a major WTF moment.

Other than feeding/hanging out with my neighbours' cat during their trip abroad (with N95 on for the first four days, then without which I assume was my mistake — that cat is a kisser) I can't see how I could have caught it. I never leave home without a fit-tested N95 and even then, it's just to walk to the pharmacy or grocery store. No one else in my household ever tested positive. My spouse was livid: They do everything to keep me safe and here I went and got sick again on my own.

I was so flabbergasted that I actually wondered if rapamycin might not have led to either reactivation of the virus (following the viral persistence theory) or for a mutated version of it to break through. Neither of which I've ever heard of happening to anyone.

So yeah, it was probably the f%@ing cat. Consequently, my baseline ended up halved. I went from functional-but-cautious-not-to-trigger-PEM to basically bed bound. End of anecdote.
Edit: not sure what mitochondrial issues Dr Younger is referring to as there is no clear evidence for a specific mitochondrial problem yet.
I was under the impression that Rob Wüst was onto something:

"Biopsies of Long COVID patients vs controls before they exercised showed little difference. But as soon as they'd done mild exercise, the control group's mitochondria got more efficient whereas those with Long COVID (now suffering from PEM) got worse."

Relevant thread:
 
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Could you elaborate on this? What makes it so bad?
For those forum members who don't know. mTOR is basically the central agent that controls cell metabolism (it has two functional complexes mTORC1 and mTORC2) it has its fingers in every pie that you can imagine. Because of this and because of cancer I would not be surprised if it is the single most researched protein kinase in history (which is an advantage, we know how it fits into a lot of cell biology in detail)
 
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