@dannybex do you have candidates in mind? The only thing I'm aware of that might qualify is the recent brainstem findings (
here).
Last I heard Ron Davis et. al were exploring, among other things, a 'metabolic trap' hypothesis to which any notion of 'damage' seems pretty tangential.
Look, here's my thinking on this, which is absolutely not the gospel:
-Clearly ME bodies are profoundly dysfunctional.
So much so that quality of life can be much worse than for some other very nasty chronic diseases.
-Tests notably don't reveal damage to patients' bodily structures. Surely some individual patients have abnormal findings but there
isn't anything consistent between patients.
-This combination seems 'distinctive' to me. It is my understanding that the tools/methods/frameworks we have available to us are pretty adequate for finding what could be reasonably called damage. So we should heed the findings. Certainly we are not there yet when it comes to identifying 'changes' that lead to profound symptoms, so maybe we should keep working on that.
In the end, though, many things are possible because we're all in the dark.