Dear strategist,One possible reason this problem hasn't been figured out yet is that we either lack the technology or that everyone is looking at it from the wrong angle. Maybe the illness is nothing like the other illnesses that are known to exist and that's why approaching it like one of these other illnesses doesn't work.
But you raise important points. If it is on hand, would you mind very much, posting the link to Unutmaz. Thank you.
One possible reason this problem hasn't been figured out yet is that we either lack the technology or that everyone is looking at it from the wrong angle. Maybe the illness is nothing like the other illnesses that are known to exist and that's why approaching it like one of these other illnesses doesn't work.
Dear strategist,
I agree with your two posts. I have been worried that not enough brilliant immunologists are on the teams looking at this. And this disease will need brilliant minds, the sort that worked on AIDS.
I have no medical background, I just observe our family member. It is clear to me that there is a problem with the immune system. Our family member suffered from countless colds, strep throats, and bronchitis infections during adolescence. Most of the examinations she wrote during high school were done whilst sniffling or being on antibiotics. I would not have managed what she did.
Is it possible that folks with this are born with an immune system that is in some way already affected? And then when challenges hit the person later on in life, the system just cannot fight off viruses, infections, etc. In her case, it was after a systemic post surgical infection, and then C-difficile that the system totally collapsed. This would suggest, the immune system could no longer handle things. I really do not know, obviously.
But you raise important points. If it is on hand, would you mind very much, posting the link to Unutmaz. Thank you.
One possible reason this problem hasn't been figured out yet is that we either lack the technology or that everyone is looking at it from the wrong angle. Maybe the illness is nothing like the other illnesses that are known to exist and that's why approaching it like one of these other illnesses doesn't work.
not sure, but thought this might be relevant/of interestImmunologist Derya Unutmaz, MD, who heads the NIH-funded Jackson Laboratory, has found immune system disturbances in deidentified cell samples from patients with ME/CFS, particularly in CD8 cells and T-helper 17 cells, which are involved in tissue inflammation.
Scientists identified and “fingerprinted” a group of T-helper cells that are unusually numerous in the blood and central nervous system of people with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS), and may be the reason behind the neuroinflammation seen in these patients.
This T-cell population carries specific markers involved in the transmission and readout of immune signals, and is known to be less abundant in people using Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate), an oral therapy for relapsing forms of MS.