andypants
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
@Simone any idea when videos from Emerge Conference will be made available? Thank you.
Still available at https://goliveaustralia.com.au/emerge2019/
@Simone any idea when videos from Emerge Conference will be made available? Thank you.
phewthere will be transcripts of all presentations
Having no luck with that but thanks @andypantsStill available at https://goliveaustralia.com.au/emerge2019/
@Simone any idea when videos from Emerge Conference will be made available? Thank you.
@FMMM1 If you go to the Agilent website you will see that the Seahorse is not approved for clinical useNIH are looking for suggestions on how to "advance ME/CFS research" [https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-NS-19-045.html]; the development, and validation, of a diagnostic based on a Seahorse type analyser (or Ron Davis's nano needle) seems to be one suggestion - @JaimeS @Esperanza - for ME Action to suggest?
They are lying to themselves, what they are really looking for is a way to assuage their cognitive dissonance.NIH are looking for suggestions on how to "advance ME/CFS research"
@FMMM1 If you go to the Agilent website you will see that the Seahorse is not approved for clinical use
https://www.agilent.com/en/products/cell-analysis/seahorse-analyzers
"For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures."
In addition if you look at the raw data in Dr Cara Tomas/Julia Newton Seahorse papers you will see that in fact it is not a very accurate diagnostic test.
EDIT : Ron Davis did say that he was not sure how all the sample preparation required to analyse using the Seahorse affects the sample. I believe he said that pyruvate is one of the chemicals used! So yes, a lot more work and funding needed in the diagnostic area.
There was no mention of Suramin.Was there any mention of Suramin? As I recall, that was another drug that corrected the nanoneedle impedance.
Could you tell me where I could find a clip where he says this, please? Thanks
@Simon M @Chris Ponting Just in case you have yet to put it on your calendar Mark Davis is talking at 1:30pm EST April 4th at the NIH conference.He spoke about it in his talk at the beginning of Day 2. He also showed a couple of slides related to the T-cell study. I did not see it "live," but a recording of the entire day seemed to be up on the site for a while. The next day, it seemed like only the afternoon portion of that recording was up there.
From what I remember from Ron Davis's talk there was not enough info to draw any conclusions. Some patients had TCR expansion, some did not. One who did was later found to have cancer so data for that one not valid. Some healthy controls had TCR expansion (I wonder does this mean they are not healthy).The news that was unknown to me (at least) was that the T-cell clonal expansion that had been seen in 4 ME patients turned out to also be showing up in controls at more or less the same frequency. I think they compared 12 patients with 12 controls, or something close to that.
Egads.One who did was later found to have cancer
It seems strange that NIH/the European Commission [see presentation by Dr Eliana Lacerda: The European network on ME/CFS – EUROMENE - reference to recommending biomarkers] don't just get on and fund the development, and validation, of a diagnostic test.
3. Lastly he announced two other drugs that correct the nanoneedle impedance signature when used with a patients blood. Copaxone and a new drug called SS31.
[Screenshot removed]
He summarised to say that they don't know why these drugs have the effect they do.
Of note is that Copaxone is an MS drug. Ron Davis has talked with MS experts and they agree that their MS patients match the diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS but insist their patients do not also have ME/CFS in addition to ME..................
https://www.meassociation.org.uk/20...gy-production-and-mitochondria-14-march-2019/
“Thus far, we have shown that ME/CFS patients do not harbor proven mtDNA mutations, another exclusion, albeit an important one. As such this group of patients do not fall within the category of patients with mitochondrial disorder.”
“If ME/CFS patients have some form of mitochondrial dysfunction, the form and cause of this dysfunction is a matter of debate.”
@JaimeS @Esperanza My impression, after viewing this talk "Professor Paul Fisher: Specific mitochondrial respiratory defects and compensatory changes in immortalised ME/CFS patient lymphocytes", is that there is an opportunity to develop a diagnostic test for ME.
From what I remember from Ron Davis's talk there was not enough info to draw any conclusions.
I don't get why copaxone would work in ME. In MS as i understand it it provides something for the body to attack, essentially as a sacrificial protein. We don't have MS even if what we have might be in a related but differing family.2) copaxone (IM, very expensive)
I don't get why copaxone would work in ME. In MS as i understand it it provides something for the body to attack, essentially as a sacrificial protein. We don't have MS even if what we have might be in a related but differing family.
Unfortunately I don´t think they are interested in finding biomarkers since recognising ME patients ( and presumably many more that currently are undiagnosed ) would be an economical problem if there are no treatments.