PEM discussion thread - post-exertional malaise

And I've said the same - excitement, novelty, stimulants, even stress seem to protect me from PEM. At least in the short term and until it doesn't
I will add that this is the same for me. To the point that excessive resting and lack of novelty/stimulation actually makes me worse in the long run. It's a delicate balance.

On dopamine it's also interesting to note that dopamine is a precursor to adrenaline so there is a relationship there.

Responding to deleted post suggesting that short term protection from PEM from excitement, stress, stimulants, etc, could be immunosuppression.

I know I might sound like a broken record but isn't cortisol considered fairly immunosuppressive? I've also read some anecdotes on Phoenix Rising, Reddit (and here too now that I looked) of corticosteroids being an effective PEM-blocker for some. As well as improving symptoms in general, but mainly in the short-term. I've had similar periods of running on stress for longer periods and then crashing hard. I haven't tried corticosteroids myself but I could totally see it having such an effect. Now whether it "blocks/prevents" PEM or just "masks symptoms" I don't know.. maybe those are even the same.

I do like the idea of interferons accounting for PEM symptoms, and activated t-cells producing the interferons. And adrenalin being one of a number of things that activates t-cells. Perhaps there is some mechanism running counter to that can make adrenalin release protective, but that mechanism is progressively worn down with constant use?
So I wonder if cortisol could be the protective mechanism? Adrenaline's effects are rather short-lived but does also trigger the release of cortisol which can remain elevated long-term and suppress the immune system. Then over time chronic high levels of cortisol might downregulate the release of more cortisol.. (as the body seeks homeostasis) and then the interferons take over... --> PEM time.

I could also see this explaining why PEM can be delayed. My experience is that when I don't overdo it too much and can relax afterwards I only get mild symptoms and get them fairly fast. While if I overdo it big time and have some stress/excitement symptom onset is delayed till my body gets in resting mode.

Just spitballing here.. I don't know much but stress has been a topic of great interest to me since getting ME/CFS and struggling with excessive feelings of stress and anxiety the first few years.
On that note: Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers by Sapolsky is a great read on the biology of stress.
 
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So I wonder if cortisol could be the protective mechanism? Adrenaline's effects are rather short-lived but does also trigger the release of cortisol which can remain elevated long-term and suppress the immune system. Then over time chronic high levels of cortisol might downregulate the release of more cortisol.. (as the body seeks homeostasis) and then the interferons take over... --> PEM time.
Except that people with ME/CFS tend to have normal levels of cortisol. I don't think there is anything particularly unusual about the levels of adrenalin and cortisol that we have. If they are part of the story, it's their effect on other things.

I have this paper in my many tabs to have a look at, I've only read the abstract
Cortisol and epinephrine control opposing circadian rhythms in T cell subsets
It probably doesn't have much to do with what we are talking about, but, it does illustrate the multiple axes of variation going on in biology - it's not just levels of a substance, but where in the body it is, often precisely where in the cell, and the ratios of other substances and so many more factors. And this suggests that the time of day can also have an impact on the effect of the substance on various sorts of t-cells.

It's a 2009 paper, so presumably the understanding of this has improved since.

Another interesting point is that this paper reports that cell counts of specific T-cells vary with the time of day and exposure to cortisol and adrenalin. That could be a confounder in immune cell count studies, especially given people with ME/CFS participating in trials tend to have different waking times to healthy people.

Pronounced circadian rhythms in numbers of circulating T cells reflect a systemic control of adaptive immunity whose mechanisms are obscure. Here, we show that circadian variations in T cell subpopulations in human blood are differentially regulated via release of cortisol and catecholamines.

Within the CD4+ and CD8+ T cell subsets, naive cells show pronounced circadian rhythms with a daytime nadir, whereas (terminally differentiated) effector CD8+ T cell counts peak during daytime. Naive T cells were negatively correlated with cortisol rhythms, decreased after low-dose cortisol infusion, and showed highest expression of CXCR4, which was up-regulated by cortisol.

Effector CD8+ T cells were positively correlated with epinephrine rhythms, increased after low-dose epinephrine infusion, and showed highest expression of β-adrenergic and fractalkine receptors (CX3CR1).

Daytime increases in cortisol via CXCR4 probably act to redistribute naive T cells to bone marrow, whereas daytime increases in catecholamines via β-adrenoceptors and, possibly, a suppression of fractalkine signaling promote mobilization of effector CD8+ T cells from the marginal pool. Thus, activation of the major stress hormones during daytime favor immediate effector defense but diminish capabilities for initiating adaptive immune responses.
 
Except that people with ME/CFS tend to have normal levels of cortisol. I don't think there is anything particularly unusual about the levels of adrenalin and cortisol that we have. If they are part of the story, it's their effect on other things.
I don't mean to say they're abnormally high like we see in Cushing Syndrome but they could still be elevated temporarily (within normal ranges). Thus leading to immunosupression. Or maybe it blocks/mask symptoms through a neural pathway. But to me it does seem the stress system is involved in delaying / blocking / masking PEM and possibly also triggering PEM.

But like I said I'm spitballing, maybe there's nothing there. It just seems to fit with what I know and experience! :)
 
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I know I might sound like a broken record but isn't cortisol considered fairly immunosuppressive? I've also read some anecdotes on Phoenix Rising, Reddit (and here too now that I looked) of corticosteroids being an effective PEM-blocker for some. As well as improving symptoms in general, but mainly in the short-term. I've had similar periods of running on stress for longer periods and then crashing hard. I haven't tried corticosteroids myself but I could totally see it having such an effect. Now whether it "blocks/prevents" PEM or just "masks symptoms" I don't know.. maybe those are even the same
It can be variable based on the cell type you’re looking at in what circumstances, but in most cases the answer is yes. corticosteroid injections are commonly used in treatment of RA (for example) for that reason if joint inflammation is not well controlled by other therapies. There are just problems that happen with chronic use
 
That process took months but led to him being bedbound for a short time and much worse than he had been prior to the school return for a long time.

I can't think what the mechanism could be, what could create that initial protection but only for a certain amount of time.
Each patient could be responding differently to similar situations, and I certainly wouldn't consider my experience anything more than an anecdote let alone universal. It probably is best for individual patients to rely on their own experiences, especially if the experience is repeatable, rather than trying to reconcile the differences. Just to clarify my experience though, the boost I get on the road does not completely eliminate PEM. Run up a hill for example, and I struggle for a few days. And my skiing performance degrades drastically after about a month. (I hung up my skis at the end of January this year and I had a fantastic Feb.)
 
Responding to a deleted post about individuals teasing out patterns of outcomes from different heart rate patterns.

That brings back the memory. I was experimenting with different constants, threshold, etc. to gauge the model's sensitivity, I ended up multi-dimensional matrices of permutations. It used to take a full minute to crunch the numbers on my then-new i7 laptop with the fan running at full speed.

I think it's quite possible that different patient may need different model. So the facility to tweak may well be a necessity than nicety. The model would be useful only if it lets the individual patient forecast.
 
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I will add that this is the same for me. To the point that excessive resting and lack of novelty/stimulation actually makes me worse in the long run. It's a delicate balance.
This is why I think sticking to a routine or 50% solution may not be the best strategy in the long run. But then, nobody did a clinical trial on them, apart from pacing, so we wouldn't know for sure... Walking slowly a few blocks to a cafe and people-watching while downing a cup had been the best therapy for me when I was in the deeper end.
 
According to the Bateman Center's new clinician manual for ME/CFS, etc., the cortisol in ME is low or lacks the diurnal variation curve.

See page 9 here:

Side note: Conjecture about when a tested substance is within normal limits (i.e. cortisol) but at the "high end of normal" seem to me to be meaningless clinically, because the insignficance is in the concept of "normal range."

Didn't have the bandwidth today to look up the reference (if any) Bateman et al uses for that statement.
 
@Utsikt moving this discussion on PEM here
That simply is not how you categorise health conditions. The presence or absence of PEM makes such a profound difference to the impact on the person’s health that to not distinguish between the different presentations makes no sense.
Yes, and the presence or absence of a symptom like chronic widespread muscle/pain tenderness also makes a profound difference to the impact on the person's health, yet people are trying to make PEM out to be in a completely different category than the aforementioned symptom.
And biologically speaking, there has to be a distinct difference between someone with or without PEM, otherwise they would both have it or not have it. We don’t know what that difference is yet, but that isn’t relevant.
Yes, but what I am saying is, presence or absence of PEM (or any other symptom) does not mean there a different underlying etiology of the symptoms per se (doesn't mean there isn't some difference in the physiological processes occurring). Many people with ME/CFS (myself included) had other symptoms of ME/CFS like fatigue and unrefreshing sleep before PEM emerged (same for pain & OI for me); do I think I had a different disorder when I just had the fatigue and unrefreshing sleep? No. People are constantly saying "ME/CFS is not just fatigue," - which is true - but what I'm saying is, many of us had "just fatigue" before we met full ME/CFS criteria, and I don't think we had a different disorder then (and some people have "just fatigue" without PEM on their way out the illness, or during certain periods of their illness when they are doing better). 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).

And like I said, based on my own childhood experience, I would wager "ME/CFS" (whatever that is) can present as just PEM without any significant fatigue/reduced functional capacity (plus, I hear from some other people with ME/CFS that PEM without chronic fatigue [but usually taking a high activity threshold to trigger the PEM] was one of their first symptoms, similar to what I had as a kid; people say they didn't feel particularly tired/fatigued but if they worked out really hard at the gym e.g. they would feel flu-like/tired the next day. They later go on to develop the "full ME/CFS" picture).
 
Yes, and the presence or absence of a symptom like chronic widespread muscle/pain tenderness also makes a profound difference to the impact on the person's health, yet people are trying to make PEM out to be in a completely different category than the aforementioned symptom.
Widespread pain is maybe the most common symptom there is, so it’s of no use in distinguishing syndromes based on only subjective symptoms. For specific illnesses, the presence or absence of pain might indicate that it’s a different sub-category of that illness, which will have a different biological mechanisms that might require different interventions.

PEM is not a very common symptom, and due to its unique nature, it’s a much more reasonable way to try to separate out a certain group of patients. PEM is also not the only symptom that is required to separate out ME/CFS patients, so I’m not quite sure what you’re getting at here in terms of putting PEM in a different category.
Yes, but what I am saying is, presence or absence of PEM (or any other symptom) does not mean there a different underlying etiology of the symptoms per se (doesn't mean there isn't some difference in the physiological processes occurring).
That is literally what a different etiology means - that there are differences in the physiological processes.

It doesn’t matter if PEM is caused by X + Y, but X or Y alone cause some other symptoms. It’s the combination of X and Y that makes PEM into a distinct feature.

You’re trying to treat ME/CFS (or PEM) as an X-disorder because X+Y = PEM. That’s just inaccurate.

But what might actually be true, is that it’s Y alone that causes PEM, and that Y just might happen to sometimes occur together with X. If that is the case, ME/CFS (or PEM) definitely isn’t an X-disorder.

As for your personal experience, have you considered that it could be possible to have a fluctuating predormal phase of better-than-mild ME/CFS before full onset?

Or that there might be some people with very light ME/CFS which basically makes their symptom threshold too high to be met by anything other than strenuous exercise?

That would be an entirely plausible explanation for pretty much any PEM occurrence in people that doesn’t meet the current diagnostic criteria.
 
Yes, but what I am saying is, presence or absence of PEM (or any other symptom) does not mean there a different underlying etiology of the symptoms per se (doesn't mean there isn't some difference in the physiological processes occurring)
That is literally what a different etiology means - that there are differences in the physiological processes.
No, this is not what a different etiology means. Let's take ME/CFS first. A person with ME/CFS may or my not have OI or cognitive impairment according to the IOM diagnostic criteria. Just because not everyone with ME/CFS has OI or cognitive impairment does not mean that for those who do, these symptoms are caused by a different etiology (i.e. not by ME/CFS).

But ME/CFS is not the best example since it is a syndrome of unknown cause. Take diabetes. Not everyone with diabetes has neuropathy, but the etiology of diabetic neuropathy is diabetes (again, there are different physiological processes that may be occurring in people with and without diabetic neuropathy).

Symptoms can be common features of any disease/disorder in many but not all individuals with that disease/disorder and their presence in some individuals does not mean it is caused by a different disorder (i.e. has a different etiology).
As for your personal experience, have you considered that it could be possible to have a fluctuating predormal phase of better-than-mild ME/CFS before full onset?

Or that there might be some people with very light ME/CFS which basically makes their symptom threshold too high to be met by anything other than strenuous exercise?

That would be an entirely plausible explanation for pretty much any PEM occurrence in people that doesn’t meet the current diagnostic criteria.
Yes, that is exactly what I am suggesting. But I'm just suggesting this "better than mild" ME/CFS can manifest as either PEM without chronic fatigue or chronic fatigue without PEM (as I have experienced both), although I definitely wouldn't have called my ME/CFS "better than mild" when it started (without noticeable PEM) as the fatigue was pretty debilitating, even though I was technically in the mild range in terms of functional capacity. Maybe PEM was present at that point and I just never did enough to trigger it, but what is notable is that I've had both PEM with no noticeable chronic fatigue and chronic fatigue with no noticeable PEM at different points in my life.
 
@nataliezzz
There’s a lot here I’m not going to comment on, but I’ll try to see if I understand your assertion.

You believe that there might be a factor X, that in combination with factor Y, causes PEM, and e.g. in combination with Z, causes OI? (X, Y, and Z might be multiple factors.) And X + P results in widespread pain, and so on.

And you call factor X: ME/CFS?

To me, that’s just wrong, because you’re redefining the concept of ME/CFS. But it might be a language thing where what you actually mean isn’t the diagnosis/concept of ME/CFS, but rather the currently unknown mechanism(s) that manifests as the cluster of symptoms we call ME/CFS?

But that still wouldn’t be right because ME/CFS requires PEM, so the mechanism(s) behind ME/CFS must include Y.

If I’ve got all of this right (that’s a big if), I think you need to find a new term for X, because ME/CFS already means something else.

PS, I think we might be in the wrong thread again. I don’t know where to put this, because it isn’t really about PEM per se. And the concept of ME/CFS thread is about a specific paper.
 
@nataliezzz
There’s a lot here I’m not going to comment on, but I’ll try to see if I understand your assertion.

You believe that there might be a factor X, that in combination with factor Y, causes PEM, and e.g. in combination with Z, causes OI? (X, Y, and Z might be multiple factors.) And X + P results in widespread pain, and so on.

And you call factor X: ME/CFS?

To me, that’s just wrong, because you’re redefining the concept of ME/CFS. But it might be a language thing where what you actually mean isn’t the diagnosis/concept of ME/CFS, but rather the currently unknown mechanism(s) that manifests as the cluster of symptoms we call ME/CFS?

But that still wouldn’t be right because ME/CFS requires PEM, so the mechanism(s) behind ME/CFS must include Y.
PEM is a unique symptom because it is not a symptom of (many) other disorders, but that does not mean that in people for whom all of these symptoms tend to cluster in varying combinations (fatigue, unrefreshing/disturbed sleep, body pain, brain fog, IBS, sensory sensitivities, etc. and yes, PEM) that presence/absence of PEM specifically makes it a different disorder (in my opinion). For example, a quick Google search indicated there's a study that found 47% of a sample of GWI patients endorsed PEM. Let's just presume this is a good study for the moment (I haven't looked into it); I don't think 47% of GWI patients having PEM mean that 47% of GWI patients have a separate/additional underlying disorder (ME/CFS) in addition to whatever is causing their GWI while those w/ just fatigue/pain/cognitive dysfunction/disturbed sleep/etc. w/ no PEM only have GWI.

That's my personal opinion (that I am trying to convince others of the validity of).
PS, I think we might be in the wrong thread again. I don’t know where to put this, because it isn’t really about PEM per se. And the concept of ME/CFS thread is about a specific paper.
I have no idea, either. Sorry.
 
PEM is a unique symptom because it is not a symptom of (many) other disorders, but that does not mean that in people for whom all of these symptoms tend to cluster in varying combinations (fatigue, unrefreshing/disturbed sleep, body pain, brain fog, IBS, sensory sensitivities, etc. and yes, PEM) that presence/absence of PEM specifically makes it a different disorder (in my opinion).
Why is that your opinion? We need an explanation of the underlying logic here, on a meta level. Does my explanation in the previous post make sense? Is it a correct representation of your opinion?
For example, a quick Google search indicated there's a study that found 47% of a sample of GWI patients endorsed PEM. Let's just presume this is a good study for the moment (I haven't looked into it); I don't think 47% of GWI patients having PEM mean that 47% of GWI patients have a separate/additional underlying disorder (ME/CFS) in addition to whatever is causing their GWI while those w/ just fatigue/pain/cognitive dysfunction/disturbed sleep/etc. w/ no PEM only have GWI.
Can you share the paper? We might already have a thread on it, or one could be made
That's my personal opinion (that I am trying to convince others of the validity of).
Others might need to see the underlying logic in order to assess the validity of the opinion.
 
Natalies idea, assuming I am understanding it correctly, does make sense to me. A disease can have very different presentations, and I think it could very well be possible that a certain group of some unexplained disorder or symptom that doesn't currently fall under the criteria of what we consider me/cfs, could have the same underlying cause. Once we have a diagnostic marker, we might consider a big portion of people with disorders like IBS to actually have whatever we call "me/cfs" at that point.
 
I can't keep up with all these posts. I just want to make one point. Natalie, you keep referring to PEM as a symptom. I think that's wrong. I think it's an episodic phenomenon of a change in the severity and sometimes number of symptoms.
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).
 
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 dont think saying that not having symptoms at baseline means they do not have me/cfs. I would just call the me/cfs, even if it may be (very) mild. It's just nearly impossible to make a diagnosis in those cases, as the majority wouldn't even go to a doctor for such things and just think they struggle with sports, or not even realize it is triggered by exercise and think they have a bad immune system and getting the flu all the time.
 
Why is that your opinion? We need an explanation of the underlying logic here, on a meta level. Does my explanation in the previous post make sense? Is it a correct representation of your opinion?
Your explanation honestly lost me a little, I'm not gonna lie lol (so I can't say whether it's a correct representation of my opinion). But thank you for laying it out in that level of detail; I may try to come back to it.
Can you share the paper? We might already have a thread on it, or one could be made
This study I glanced at refers to another study that supposedly found "Despite observing that Gulf War Veterans (GWV) with GWI who endorse PEM (~47%) have poorer health-related functioning and cardiopulmonary responses to exercise, we also showed that PEM is not uniformly present for all GWV with GWI at 24 hours post-exercise."

I haven't actually looked at either study in any depth (pretty tired right now).
 
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