Esther12
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I haven't seen one. I was just told about the briefing.
Interesting that there isn't anything on the Science Media Centre website about their briefing.
I haven't seen one. I was just told about the briefing.
well done; just listened.
eta: just goes to show that it is possible to get the right info out there, and ask the right questions.
I've just caught up with this. The interview is from 16.44 to 16.51. @JohnTheJack I thought you did brilliantly.
You were excellent, well done.
You did great @JohnTheJack !
Sorry to hear you've been sick for so long.
CP - “Yes. I think, that actually that experience, that personal experience that we just heard, links perfectly into the research there we’ve done, because we’ve been able to use a group of people that have a high risk of developing chronic fatigue syndrome, in this case, following an activation of the immune system through a medication that they take for a therapeutic purpose, which in reality is very similar to what happens to many patients at the time at which they have a strong viral infection. And what our research shows is that people who go on to develop chronic fatigue syndrome later on have a hyperactive immune system already even before encountering these immune challenges. So it is part of their, if you like, genetical personal make-up. And when they encounter the immune activation, let’s say for example a viral infection, I think as we just discussed, then their immune system will respond even more. And the uniqueness of our study is that we have been able to study people at this early stage of the illness, um, at a time where, you know, as we’ve just heard, symptoms can be confused just as part of the normal infection process and so these people would not normally be involved in research.”
Interviewer - “What will this mean in practice? Will there eventually be some kind of screening process?”
CP - “Well I think it is two-fold. I think first of all, and again as we’ve just heard, and I totally agree that chronic fatigue syndrome/M.E. should be considered as a multisystem disorder and many organs are involved. And we don’t know what does this increased immune activity early on does to the rest of the body – the brain, the muscles, the liver, other cells in the body – so, and, which then creates the fatigue and the post-exertional malaise, which remains long-lasting. So the first thing is to try to understand what is downstream of this increased activity of the immune system.”
JP – “I’d just like to ask the Professor to clarify something. We’re not certain that the people in this study do in fact have ME/chronic fatigue syndrome, are we, because they are not actually ME patients but people who had fatigue after interferon-alfa. Is that correct?”
CP – “Well, they have chronic fatigue, err, 6 months after stopping interferon-alfa. So the qualitative experience is very similar to the experience of patients with chronic fatigue, including the fact that they no longer have an immune activation by the time that they have this chronic fatigue.”
JP – “But there is not, for example, post-exertional malaise, and you can’t actually say for sure that these people have ME. But I do think it is interesting that someone is having an illness, and there is no obvious biomarker, and that perhaps could be seen as similar to those people with ME. Is that correct?”
CP – “Absolutely. And, you know, for us this is some kind of light in the fog – you know it’s a direction of travel for research – it is not a conclusive study .”
JP – “You could confirm that there are no psychosocial factors in who develops a chronic fatigue, is that correct?”
CP – “In this study, we found a clear distinct between, for example, depression or other aspect of mental disorders and the patient that developed chronic fatigue.”
I’m not sure that’s correct. The paper shows no correlation between pre-illness psychosocial factors and persistent fatigue, but, as far as I understand, it does not specifically refute the notion that a similar immune response could be triggered by acute emotional stress. Participants were not predisposed to persistent fatigue due to psychosocial factors, but that does not rule out the possibility that a normal emotional response to a very stressful event could be a trigger for an immune response which leads to persistent fatigue in patients with predisposed immune systems.The Telegraph article (and its syndicated spin-offs) has a serious error. They say infections or emotional stress can trigger the illness, while the paper specifically refutes the latter.
That may be so. Thanks for the clarification.I’m not sure that’s correct. The paper shows no correlation between pre-illness psychosocial factors and persistent fatigue, but, as far as I understand, it does not specifically refute the notion that a similar immune response could be triggered by acute emotional stress. Participants were not predisposed to persistent fatigue due to psychosocial factors, but that does not rule out the possibility that a normal emotional response to a very stressful event could be a trigger for an immune response which leads to persistent fatigue in patients with predisposed immune systems.
I’m not saying that that is true. I’m just saying that, as far as I understand, such an idea is not specifically refuted by the paper.
However, it is certainly wrong for the report to claim that the study suggests that CFS can be triggered by an out-of-control immune system which overreacts to emotional distress. The study provides no evidence to support or refute this idea – as far as I can see.
To put it another way: this is useful because it shows that illness can persist despite the absence of obvious markers. It's a major nail in the coffin of the 'no abnormalities = no problem' narrative.
Fabulous, just fabulous.I'm on BBC Wales at 4:40 discussing illness and this paper. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0079gdh/broadcasts/upcoming
Yes, I thought that they just wanted to get the words "Carol Monaghan" and "emotional" in the same sentence, inviting the reader to think "she's hysterical", but considering how the sentence was constructed I didn't feel I could make such a bold claim. I'm pretty sure it's what was going on though, especially as it was immediately followed by the bare-faced lie:The implication is that her arguments were from emotion rather than facts, or that women arguing in general should be thought of as emotional. I like your joke about all of Westminster being emotionally motivated, @TiredSam but I think we know what the author is implying here. Morally repugnant use of language.
Others defended the treatment.
That may be so. Thanks for the clarification.
Interesting analysis of the study by @sTeamTraen
https://steamtraen.blogspot.com/2018/12/have-scientists-found-explanation-for.html
I was made aware of this article by a journalist friend, who had received an invitation to attend a press briefing for the article at the Science Media Centre in London on Friday 14 December.
Interesting analysis of the study by @sTeamTraen
https://steamtraen.blogspot.com/2018/12/have-scientists-found-explanation-for.html
Interesting analysis of the study by @sTeamTraen
https://steamtraen.blogspot.com/2018/12/have-scientists-found-explanation-for.html
Thanks.Interesting analysis of the study by @sTeamTraen
https://steamtraen.blogspot.com/2018/12/have-scientists-found-explanation-for.html
Well done @JohnTheJack !
Very interesting to hear what Carmine Pariante had to say:
And good questioning from John:
Fabulous, just fabulous.