PEM discussion thread - post-exertional malaise

That's definitely an interesting way to look at it. As discussed above though, some people do seem to experience PEM without having other symptoms at baseline (e.g. the person whose ME/CFS starts with just PEM after they work out hard at the gym, but without ongoing chronic fatigue/malaise at baseline), so it can't always be described as a change in the severity of symptoms (sometimes it's just new symptoms).
I'm struggling to follow things as always but, if the definition of PEM is a worsening of symptoms after physical or mental activity, wouldn't there need to be discernible symptoms to start with in order to tell if they had become worse?
I have assumed that apparently well people who become fatigued after a hard workout are showing a normal reaction that goes away after a good sleep. It can take a triathlete up to ten days to recover.
 
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I'm struggling to follow things as always but, if the definition of PEM is a worsening of symptoms after physical or mental activity, wouldn't there need to be discernible symptoms to start with in order to tell if they had become worse?
I have assumed that apparently well people who become fatigued after a hard workout are showing a normal reaction that goes away after a good sleep. It can take a triathlete up to ten days to recover.
That may be the definition (worsening of symptoms), but like I said it appears that some people (likely in very mild/early stages of the illness) experience PEM with no apparent baseline fatigue/other symptoms. It's not like a normal reaction to a hard workout because it has typical features of PEM (e.g. delayed onset, flu-like symptoms, etc.) The personal example of mine was when I was a kid, if I would play really hard all day I would get a fever/exhaustion the next day (my mom called it my "overtired disease" lol). But I didn't have any baseline chronic fatigue (that I was aware of - I was also a young kid though so if I had some mild level of fatigue I may not have been aware of it due to no clear baseline).

"Worsening of baseline" rather than "worsening of symptoms" for PEM could work though.
 
so it can't always be described as a change in the severity of symptoms (sometimes it's just new symptoms).
That’s why «and sometimes new symptoms» was included at the end.
I haven't actually looked at either study in any depth (pretty tired right now).
Okay, then I think that’s where we should start. Make threads for them if you can’t find them here already with the search function. I think I shared a guide in the other thread
 
If I started from a well rested state, I can do intense exercise for a short amount of time, without triggering PEM. I can also do other activities without significant problems. In fact that these activities are so unproblematic and rewarding is a problem, because it makes me want to do more. Doing more then leads to PEM. My PEM appears to result from the cumulative effect of activies and rest in the preceding days. Activity here means anything which involves more work than resting, even listening to music, reading or being around other people. Thinking of it as metabolic activity may be close to the truth.

Different parts of the body seem to be able to have their own PEM tresholds and generate somewhat different PEM profiles if stressed excessively.

Maybe PEM is how the body reacts when it cannot tolerate more than a certain amount of metabolic activity within a certain timeframe.

I now have better aerobic fitness and strength than some other healthy people, but have less endurance and begin feeling unwell after too much activity, and get PEM from too much cumulative activity. The main difference between me and a normal person appears to be that they can keep going for much longer and with no significant impairment. At least in my case, it is possible to improve fitness with the right approach, but this has little effect on disability. If someone can't be active for half a day on most days of the week then they can't earn enough money to sustain themselves, and won't fit into many existing systems built for normal people.
 
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So "ME/CFS" (whatever that is) appears to be able to present as "just fatigue" at least in its prodromal stages in some individuals (I don't buy into the notion that every time a new symptom is added it reflects a different underlying disorder).
PEM could be a spectrum pathology just as ME/CFS is a spectrum disease. My PEM, for example, seems to get shallower and shorter as I continue to recover. At some point, it may become undistinguishable with normal post-exercise fatigue. I could consider what I have now an age-related fatigue if it weren't for some fatigues that is still disproportional to the exertion.

That said, I don't have too much problem drawing the line between PEM and no PEM, because you need to draw the line somewhere. Otherwise, we could end up including idiopathic fatigue or age-related fatigue in ME/CFS as well. Idiopathic fatigue could well turn out to be a mild form of ME/CFS, but we don't know that yet. And including them in ME/CFS without knowing could well muddle ME/CFS research (and perception). Only precaution would be that idiopathic fatigue progressing to ME/CFS is a possibility, so they may need to be careful.
 
Moved posts

Yes, for sure. I think the kind of thing she is describing in Sjogren's patients seems to be a bit different from what would typically be considered "exercise intolerance" or transient PESE though (e.g. see her description of hers below... can be triggered by sensory input, giving a presentation leads to extended decline, etc.), though as I said it may be distinguished from the PEM of ME/CFS by lack of delayed onset and possibility of leading to more enduring declines in baseline. Like I said, I suspect that kind of PEM is probably unique to ME/CFS (& possibly some cases of CCI).

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I don’t see anything in those quotes that points to PEM specifically. The term exercise intolerance already exists for some of what she’s talking about. Lots of disorders that involve the immune system are fatiguing. They usually don’t look more than extremely superficially like ME, though.
 
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I don’t see anything in those quotes that points to PEM specifically. The term exercise intolerance already exists for some of what she’s talking about. Lots of disorders that involve the immune system are fatiguing. They usually don’t look more than extremely superficially like ME, though.
I don't know, it sounds fairly PEM-like to me. Can be triggered by cognitive, sensory, or physical exertion, leads to a decline lasting for 24-48 hours. While certainly the latter does not compare to more severe forms of PEM in ME/CFS, it seems comparable to milder forms (I have experienced a wide range of duration/severity of PEM episodes, some on the milder end have resolved within a day or two). Hers is lacking the delayed onset (but not everyone with ME/CFS always reports a delayed onset to PEM - perhaps because PESE can kind of blend continuously into PEM). And some people report more rapid onset to PEM from certain kind of triggers - e.g. there was a post on Twitter a while back where a woman with ME/CFS said she gets immediate-onset PEM from emotional distress with many ME/CFS patients in the comment reporting the same.

 
@nataliezzz Your description of this Sjogren’s fatigue is very vague, and you haven’t clearly explained why you think it’s exactly the same thing as PEM rather than one of a hundred types of exercise intolerance or post-exertional fatigue you see in many different disorders. People with POTS and fibromyalgia can have fatigue after exertion that sounds somewhat like PEM but doesn’t look the same on closer examination, for example. Heck, even ADHD can cause fatigue after cognitive exertion and sensory input. None of that on its own suggests a relationship to ME. If you’re going to say the delay seen in PEM, which is an aspect of it that seems to majorly distinguish ME from other disorders, is not important to identifying PEM, you should explain your reasoning because it’s not obvious that we can just ignore it and still be talking about the same phenomenon.

I am not opposed to the idea of PEM-like experiences in other disorders. I have seen plenty of accounts that sound a lot like it in lupus, down to sore throats, swollen lymph nodes, and a level of disability comparable to at least moderate ME. But I think we need a lot more than what you’re presenting to buy that Sjogren’s causes PEM.
 
I think this is getting this thread off topic, so I am going to stop there.
Fair enough, my original point about bringing up the "flavor of PEM" (as I originally phrased it) seen in some Sjogren's patients was in response to another person saying that they see many people on SFN forums reporting PEM and appearing to meet criteria for ME/CFS. I was bringing up the point about the "flavor of PEM" seen in Sjogren's and pointing out how it seems to be distinguished from the PEM in ME/CFS by the lack of delayed onset (although based on anecdotal reports, there also appears to be immediate-onset PEM for some ME/CFS patients, at least from some triggers) and the possibility of leading to enduring declines in baseline, because I do not think these aspects of PEM in ME/CFS can be explained by peripheral neuropathy, which is often a part of Sjogren's (it can also affect the CNS); I suspect high rates of SFN in ME/CFS are downstream of the underlying central pathology, rather than causal.
 
Lots of conditions cause exercise intolerance. Not all exercise intolerance is PEM. I’m wary of conflating something that lacks one of the main features of PEM with what you see in ME.

A person won't understand the differences unless they've experienced both sides.

I've experienced delayed exercise/walking intolerance one month post-COVID infection when I thought I had recovred. It was not at the same experience as delayed or immediate ME PEM.

I also experience vestibular exertion intolerance and it's not the same although pacing prevents and relieves it if I go over my energy limit.

We are seeing PEM used for many different condition it seems.
 
A person won't understand the differences unless they've experienced both sides.
If the whole shitty ME/CFS saga proves anything, it is that a lack of direct experience of a disease process/state is all too often a major barrier to understanding its nature and consequences, and to finding solutions to it. Indeed, it can be highly misleading.
 
I just think this sort of stuff tells us nothing useful because people invoke causation very unreliably.

And it is worth remembering that chairpersons of disease charities very often appear not to have the disease they claim to have. That applies very widely.
 
Sometimes I get PEM (or what I believe to also be PEM) where I am more tired/fatigued/weak than normally, have some muscle/bone/joint aches and a super sore throat. I don't feel horrible though and I am keen on going out for a walk or doing something. Out of carefulness, I end up doing nothing all day - but I am wonder if anybody here has those days as well and whether you also just sit them out or get up to something?
 
Sometimes I get PEM (or what I believe to also be PEM) where I am more tired/fatigued/weak than normally, have some muscle/bone/joint aches and a super sore throat. I don't feel horrible though and I am keen on going out for a walk or doing something. Out of carefulness, I end up doing nothing all day - but I am wonder if anybody here has those days as well and whether you also just sit them out or get up to something?
I get those as well. I rest, because not resting has never turned out well for me
 
Sometimes I get PEM (or what I believe to also be PEM) where I am more tired/fatigued/weak than normally, have some muscle/bone/joint aches and a super sore throat. I don't feel horrible though

I'd call that moderate PEM.

For me, a certain level of PEM falls into the category of acceptable consequences of doing things I enjoy. These have been calibrated by trial and error so they don't usually trigger severe PEM.

I have mild PEM (symptoms at a rather lower level than you're describing) quite a lot, and I always rest through it. Once it's fully passed I can choose something else from my list of enjoyable-but-restrained activities without risking an accumulation of PEM.

It doesn't always work, of course. I can feel as if I have the capacity to do something and be confident I'm rested enough, yet I get worse PEM than usual.

For me, pacing means avoiding PEM accumulation whenever possible. I'm moderately ill, though, not severe, and I also use a powerchair. Walking even short distances burns through my capacity incredibly quickly, so limiting how much of it I do frees up capacity that I can use for other things.
 
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