InitialConditions
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Have just skimmed through this and will watch in full at a later date. Very telling. Very brazen about all the little slight of hand tricks his posse have used over time.
Have just skimmed through this and will watch in full at a later date. Very telling. Very brazen about all the little slight of hand tricks his posse have used over time.
"What is ME? It was first described in 1956 by [Inaudible] Acheson in a Lancet editorial. And he was describing a different thing that what I've just been talking about. He was describing epidemics of fatigue with [Inaudible] neurological signs and symptoms, something he later regretted he did because he thought he confused them [Inaudble]. He probably did. So let's give you a bit of Melvin Ramsay. This is the royal free epidemic of 1955. This is Ramsay: "74% showed objective evidence of involvement of the central nervous system." I'm not giving you the whole picture, just a flavor. Heavy involvement of the cranial nerves, objective evidence of the brain stem and spinal cord involvement, paralysis, not just the fact but other areas, in just under 20%.
In other words, this is a different illness. This is not the same. do you see your patients with facial paralysis? Do you make a diagnosis of CFS if your patient has facial paralysis? So I'm suggesting that the original definition of ME is different from what I've just been talking about.
How did this happen? I'm afraid we're responsible. There it is. 30 years ago this very month, I think it was in this building it didn't look like this in those days, we did it. We transmogrified, we changed, we transposed epidemic ME into endemic ME. So we actually got a definition of a different illness that we transposed onto this illness. So I think this is where our problem comes from."
eta2:
transcript of first 6 minutes by Suzy Chapman
https://dxrevisionwatch.files.wordpress.com/2015/11/rsmpeterwhitetranscript5.pdf
That is interesting. He places the blame for confusion on a meeting held 30 years before in that building. That would have been 1978. Time to revisit those papers.
In a minority of cases frank neurological signs can be detected by careful clinical examination: there may be nystagmus, diplopia, myoclonus, bulbar weakness, motor weakness, increased or decreased tendon reflexes, disturbances of the sphincters, and extensor plantar responses. Fasciculations, cranial nerve lesions, and extrapyramidal signs have also been reported.
+1 here.I have had all these symptoms despite being a sporadic case. I can't be the only one here.
But where is White's evidence for this? As far as I'm concerned this is dangerous non-sense.If people with more of these symptoms are more likely to have psychiatric problems as well then it doesn't help.