Wyva
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
"About the Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal
Welcome to the Patient-Led Research Collaborative’s first issue of the Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal. This issue is a compilation of six hypotheses plus poll results. People with Long COVID and associated conditions and caregivers of people with these conditions developed, wrote, chose, and edited this issue.
Historically, biomedical research has prioritized hypotheses developed by researchers without lived experience of the conditions they study. People with lived experience who have hypotheses about the mechanisms of their conditions did not have a platform to share their hypotheses, except for within patient communities.
Centering patient expertise
At the Patient-Led Research Collaborative (PLRC), we have put patients in the driver’s seat of research since April 2020. We centered patients in sourcing hypotheses for Long COVID in the development of our own surveys 1 , in choosing what research to fund 2 , and in setting a new baseline for meaningful patient engagement 3 . We know that patients are the foremost experts on their own bodies. We also know that many patients are immersed in research in areas that the majority of the medical community has yet to explore.
The authors of this issue are from diverse professional and academic backgrounds, ranging from self-taught to Ph.D. One of the goals of our Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal is to highlight the immense talent pool of our patient network, from their backgrounds, their lived experience of being a patient or caregiver, and from their ability to synthesize existing research and align it with their own hypotheses. Additionally, patients and caregivers are often communicating with each other online, discussing symptoms, experiences, lab results, and the reactions to various medications they are trying. This pattern recognition is invaluable and regularly results in patients identifying discoveries well before the public and the medical community"
Patient-generated hypotheses publication panel: Hannah Davis, Dr. Tess Falor, Malka Goldberg, Dr. Rochelle Joslyn, Anna Kern, Jerry Lin, Netia McCray, Lisa McCorkell, DVL Padma Priya, Laila Santana, Mihaela Suleap, Richelle Sepulveda, Hannah Wei.
Issue 1, May 2023 in PDF: https://patientresearchcovid19.com/storage/2023/05/Patient-Generated-Hypotheses-Issue-1-May-2023.pdf
Welcome to the Patient-Led Research Collaborative’s first issue of the Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal. This issue is a compilation of six hypotheses plus poll results. People with Long COVID and associated conditions and caregivers of people with these conditions developed, wrote, chose, and edited this issue.
Historically, biomedical research has prioritized hypotheses developed by researchers without lived experience of the conditions they study. People with lived experience who have hypotheses about the mechanisms of their conditions did not have a platform to share their hypotheses, except for within patient communities.
Centering patient expertise
At the Patient-Led Research Collaborative (PLRC), we have put patients in the driver’s seat of research since April 2020. We centered patients in sourcing hypotheses for Long COVID in the development of our own surveys 1 , in choosing what research to fund 2 , and in setting a new baseline for meaningful patient engagement 3 . We know that patients are the foremost experts on their own bodies. We also know that many patients are immersed in research in areas that the majority of the medical community has yet to explore.
The authors of this issue are from diverse professional and academic backgrounds, ranging from self-taught to Ph.D. One of the goals of our Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal is to highlight the immense talent pool of our patient network, from their backgrounds, their lived experience of being a patient or caregiver, and from their ability to synthesize existing research and align it with their own hypotheses. Additionally, patients and caregivers are often communicating with each other online, discussing symptoms, experiences, lab results, and the reactions to various medications they are trying. This pattern recognition is invaluable and regularly results in patients identifying discoveries well before the public and the medical community"
Patient-generated hypotheses publication panel: Hannah Davis, Dr. Tess Falor, Malka Goldberg, Dr. Rochelle Joslyn, Anna Kern, Jerry Lin, Netia McCray, Lisa McCorkell, DVL Padma Priya, Laila Santana, Mihaela Suleap, Richelle Sepulveda, Hannah Wei.
Issue 1, May 2023 in PDF: https://patientresearchcovid19.com/storage/2023/05/Patient-Generated-Hypotheses-Issue-1-May-2023.pdf
Table of contents
About the Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal
Long COVID brain fog is caused by free glycan sugar chains in the brain
Symptomatic myodesopsia/vitreous floaters may constitute a risk factor for Long COVID and ME/CFS
Matrix metalloproteinase inhibition with low-dose doxycycline in Long COVID and ME/CFS
Could vascular damage caused by massive inflammatory events underlie a relapse/recovery phenotype of ME/CFS and Long COVID?
Astrocyte dysregulation of sympathetic nervous system causes metabolic dysfunction in subset of Long COVID and ME/CFS patients
Increasing serum soluble CD40 ligand (sCD40L) may be a biomarker of ME/CFS and chronic Long COVID progression
Informal social media polls: SARS-CoV-2 reinfection and Long COVID, and the presence of new eye floaters in Long COVID and ME/CFS
Patient-generated hypotheses publication panel