Sly Saint
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Great Danes maybe?Will Danes with chronic illness get doggy visits?
Great Danes maybe?Will Danes with chronic illness get doggy visits?
Seahorse XF technology is a method that measures the energy metabolism of mitochondria and metabolic flexibility in living cells under stress, Figure 4. US researchers have recently shown that this technology can detect mitochondrial changes in blood cells from patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. We have achieved similar results in a smaller group of Danish patients - data that have not yet been published. Our desire is to combine SeaHorse technology with studies of global changes in patients' protein and metabolite patterns and relate them to measurable changes in the autonomic nervous system and immune system to identify diagnostic biomarker profiles and test the treatment effect of drugs and interventions that can restore mitochondria function and ability to communicate with the nuclear genome.
An odd article appeared as the main front news at the Norwegian Broadcaster's website yesterday. I tells about a young girl with debilitating pain, and how she has been helped by a group of specialist on "children's pain" at one of the biggest hospitals.
Development in the Danish Marie Louise-caseTurns out there were more articles about Marie Louise in that newspaper.
Datter, søster og danser blev væk i mørket
google translate: Daughter, sister and dancer disappeared in the dark
She never really started the psychology study before she got so ill that we got her admitted to the Department of Infectious Medicine at Skejby Hospital. That made everything worse because she was exposed to a treatment in Aarhus, which in our opinion was wrong, says Esben Gustavussen.
- The treatment did not help her at all. They could not help her, they told us after having tried to push her to physical exercise that patients with her diagnosis can not tolerate. She got a lot worse and deteriorated, so they gave up and we were given the choice to send our daughter to a nursing home or take care of her ourselves in our own home.
Kommunen: Hun skal bare i gang igen
google translate: The municipality: She just has to get going again
The job center Esbjerg has insisted (...) that the seriously ill woman, who has a recognized ME diagnosis, is completely bed bound and in need of help around the clock, must "orientate herself towards the labor market".
Speciallæge: Hun er syg og familien har brug for mere hjælp
google translate: Specialist: She is ill and the family needs more help
- We doctors in Denmark in general know too little about the disease. More knowledge is needed. Denmark is behind other countries, and the price is payed by ME patients who might receive a wrong treatment which makes their symptoms worse, says Kim Warming.
En af Marie Louises venner: Jeg tænker på hende hver dag
google translate: One of Marie Louise's friends: I think of her every day
- First, the visits stopped, then the phone calls became too much for her, and we made do with text messages, but finally it was only me who sent some. She could not answer. Then I began to write letters that her mother read out loud, but that had to stop too. Now I occasionally send a flower or something else so that she knows I'm thinking of her.
Development in the Danish Marie Louise-case
Professor Ola D. Saugstad will travel from Norway to Denmark to visit Marie Louise and her family. At the same time he will give a lecture about ME at the local municipality. He has visited many of the most severe ME patients in Norway, so is one of few doctors who has seen a lot of the severe cases. He is also at the advisory committee for the Norwegian ME Association, has participated in the ME debate for many years and does research on ME. One of our heroes
Here is the article from the local newspaper about his visit (not possible to google translate)
Ugeavisen Esbjerg: Gennembrudd i ME-sagen
Excellent and sensitive writing by journalist Erik Haldan – a shame not all of his articles can be google-translated, they're well worth reading.Here is the article from the local newspaper about his visit (not possible to google translate)
Ugeavisen Esbjerg: Gennembrudd i ME-sagen
The Google translation of the first paragraph is a bit unfortunate!The Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) writes about the recent survey from the Norwegian ME Association on rehabilitation centres and ME.
NRK: ME-sjuke Kristin vart endå sjukare etter behandling
google translation: ME-patient Kristin got even worse after treatment
The article has an interview with ME patient Kristin, who got ill with ME in 2011. She went to a rehabilitation centre for three weeks with focus on CBT/GET. She deteriorated and it took a long time for her to recover from her stay.
The doctor at the rehabilitation center seems surprised that some patients are not happy with their stay and says they are just following guidelines.
Ingrid Helland, the senior doctor at the National Competence Center for CFS/ME (and eager of CBT/GET, Lightning Process etc) says exercise can be good, but doesn't fit everyone. She stresses that the survey from the ME Association is not a scientific study and that one doesn't know if the patients in the survey are representative.
2 316 ME patients participated in the survey.
Om lag 3/4 av dei spurde sa seg ueinig eller svært ueinig i at dei var friskare ved slutten av opphaldet, enn då dei kom. Omtrent den same andelen var ueinig eller svært ueinig i at dei var friskare ein månad etter opphaldet.
About 3/4 of the respondents said they were unclear or very unaware that they were healthier at the end of their stay than when they arrived.
– På veldig mange slike senter trur dei at ME-pasientar kan hjelpast ved å bli mindre redde for å vere aktive og trenast opp. Dette er eigentleg ein avleggs behandlingsmetode, men ein ser likevel at den blir nytta mange stadar i Noreg i dag.
"In many such centers, people think that ME patients can help by getting less afraid of being active and exercising. This is a proper treatment method, but one still sees it useful in many cities in Norway today.
The Google translation of the first paragraph is a bit unfortunate!
(See attachment: if easily offended, don't open)
There is an option to improve the translation on Google.
There are two versions of written Norwegian, one based on Danish and one based on regional accents. This text was written in the latter, and it seems to confuse the google-translation a great deal. If others can suggest a better translation service for the article, it would be much appreciated.The words in bold don't look correct.
1500 signatures by now.A petition from an ME patient demanding that leaders of the Norwegian national center of excellence for CFS/ME (known for a strong belief in a biopsychosocial approach) must go.
The background for this petition is explained in a blogpost from the initiator Nina E. Steinkopf.
Underskriftskampanje: Ledelsen i Nasjonal kompetansetjeneste for CFS/ME må gå!
google translation: Petition: The leaders of the National Center of excellence for CFS/ME must go!
The National Center of excellence for CFS/ME has chosen a biopsychosocial understanding model for ME and merges ME with other conditions. This leads to improper treatment and poor offerings for ME patients. Support the signature campaign that requires management in the competence service to go!
Link to petition: Ledelsen i Nasjonal kompetansetjeneste for CFS/ME må gå!
google translate: The leaders of the National Center of excellence for CFS/ME must go!
Nearly 500 signatures now in just a couple of hours.
Edit to add: Over 900 signatures by now.
Edit: 1 000 signatures.
Edit: 1 300 signatures.
Here is a film with prof. Saugstad's recent talk about ME in Denmark.Development in the Danish Marie Louise-case
Professor Ola D. Saugstad will travel from Norway to Denmark to visit Marie Louise and her family. At the same time he will give a lecture about ME at the local municipality. He has visited many of the most severe ME patients in Norway, so is one of few doctors who has seen a lot of the severe cases. He is also at the advisory committee for the Norwegian ME Association, has participated in the ME debate for many years and does research on ME. One of our heroes
Here is the article from the local newspaper about his visit (not possible to google translate)
Ugeavisen Esbjerg: Gennembrudd i ME-sagen