Does anyone know of research into sensory sensitivities in ME? (I know MERUK have something in motion, but is there anything already published?) Or anything that outlines possible causes?
Thanks very much. I’ll look into this.Michael van Elzakkar at his recent talks at Harvard is studying the brain doing neuroimaging. He mentioned the similarities between post concussion cognitive dysfunction and sensitivities and gave a chemical reason for this in those conditions (I think!) and said it might be the same In ME. Previously in a talk to llewllen king he said his neuro imaging research was finding low activity of the thalamus. He suggested the thalamus had an important stimulus filtering role in the brain including in sleep which might be why we are light sensitive etc and also wake at the slightest noise, I do anyway. Please check yourself as I’m going by my interpretation and memory but he is one of leading CFS researchers doing neuro Imaging afaik and it’s encouraging he’s very aware of our sensitivity issues in relation to his findings, even if not researching them directly.
The microphages of the brain, the “ big eaters” which eat up particles and pathogens, part of the immune system, are called microglia
When they detect cytokines or pathogens or anything to do with damage they activate, and change shape and all these little arms kindoif retract, the cells themselves become thicker, this is called the state of activation and when that happens then produce a whole bunch of stuff and that includes things that excite neurons, that includes more cytokines and that includes a protein called trans locator protein. The trans locator protein is what we look for in these PET scans to see if there’s neuroinflammation
and importantly the neuro excitation modulators, (glutamate, prostaglandins...etc a whole bunch of stuff that excite neurons ) part of what that does is to make it really hard to concentrate, that’s the reason for example when someone’s has a concussion they can’t think straight, that’s the reason when someone’s had a concussion they are really sensitive to light and sound, these cells act as amplifiers of normal nerve signals and so we think that if neuroinflammation , as measured by microglia activation, is happening in this condition then that may explain some of the cognitive symptoms.
And importantly for a sort of sepsis model, these cells can enter a state which is known as primed. Which means that if they have previously encountered something really bad, whatever infection or injury they actually become kind of sensitised, a little bit hyper vigilant if you will,& we can not actually measure this yet, we don’t know how to do that, but it’s a functional thing we ... if we deliver the exact same level of stimulation to a primed microglia you get a huge response, even bigger than the previous one, and so this might explain for example why people in this condition have an extra big response to small stimuli, so for example if your microglia were primed that could explain why you are sensitive to chemicals,why relatively small subsequent infection can cause a really bad crash, why any provocation can cause an ongoing lengthy crash, so it is one of the things that we are trying to figure out. “
I had a test a few years ago that used an eye drop that dilates the pupils and it didn't make light particularly more sensitive, just blurry. I doubt this part is mechanical, most likely lowered neuron firing threshold or something that amplifies the normal signal.Migraine can cause light sensitivity.
Also, some ingested drugs can cause the pupils to dilate, which I would assume would cause light sensitivity similar to the topical dilation you'd receive from an optometrist in a retinal exam.
So, there'd be at least two possible mechanisms for light sensitivity - over-sensitivity of the nervous system (like in hangover), and actual pupil dilation that allowed in too much light.
Do you mean something similar to what happens in epilepsy? Just affecting perception of, well, perception?I had a test a few years ago that used an eye drop that dilates the pupils and it didn't make light particularly more sensitive, just blurry. I doubt this part is mechanical, most likely lowered neuron firing threshold or something that amplifies the normal signal.
I had a test a few years ago that used an eye drop that dilates the pupils and it didn't make light particularly more sensitive, just blurry. I doubt this part is mechanical, most likely lowered neuron firing threshold or something that amplifies the normal signal.
I don't think it's perception, more of an excess signaling. Like lighting a fire with way too much gas, a small match will make a big boom. Likely a similar process to whatever happens in a migraine, ordinary headache, hangover or being suddenly woken up from REM. It's probably a common process that just goes uncontrolled.Do you mean something similar to what happens in epilepsy? Just affecting perception of, well, perception?
My unreliable memory tells me it was cloudy that day, no bright sun, but I really did not notice any difference at all. Even if it hadn't been painful, it should at least have been noticeably brighter but it wasn't. Also blue eyes.That's interesting. Sensitivity to the eye drop may vary from person to person. Every time my eyes are dilated (most recently a month ago), I'm effectively blinded by the bright sunlight when I step out of the optometrist's office. I have to wear one of those disposable sun shields they give you and a pair of sunglasses over that (and it's still pretty bright).
Apparently, people with blue eyes are more sensitive to the atropine drop than those with brown eyes.
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A few years ago my doctor offered to give me an eye drop that would - mostly - reverse the dilation before I left the office. I think it was either new or experimental. I got the impression that it might be expensive, too - but he didn't charge me for it. He just seemed interested in seeing how effective it was. It probably cut the light sensitivity in half and shortened its duration. The "reversing" drop may not have caught on, since I was never offered it again.
[I believe a dilated eye is blurry for the same reason that a camera lens with a wide aperture can be blurry if not carefully focused, i.e. reduced depth of field. Atropine probably also inhibits the muscles that adjust the lens of the eye, making you farsighted.]
but as sensory sensitivity occurs in many illnesses – all the way from life-threatening conditions to hangovers and colds – might it be difficult to characterise it specifically in ME?
Is there no research working on this at the moment?
This is certainly my experience...I don’t know whether what I have is true sound “sensitivity”, but the inability to distinguish one sound from another, all sound just being “blah” and volume being disproportionate to normal seems to get worse in PEM and sometimes isn’t present at all when I’m having a good day. I frequently need ear plugs when others are talking if I need to concentrate on something.I suspect it's thought to be part of the whole 'broken battery' phenomenon, since sensory stimulation consumes a lot of energy resources. Even people who're not chronically ill find it becomes a great deal less tolerable when they're exhausted.
If we can find ways to increase energy levels in ME, that will tell us whether sensory sensitivity also improves. If it doesn't, then maybe it is something separate.
Perhaps this is a different experience to others and there is confusion in terminology for different experiences/symptoms?
I don’t think so. Because the sensory sensitivity that appears in other conditions is very different to that which appears in ME, and especially in severe and very severe ME. As far as I know, in no other condition does it cause drastic and severe deterioration, ie a few minutes or seconds (in v severe) causing extreme distress but also leading to reduced / inability to talk, sit up, eat, swallow, etc.. severe increases in pain... reduction in functioning. And then that can carry on for many days or weeks etc.
Yes, it's pain and deterioration, as @lunarainbows says.
Much less of a deterioration in function for me, I suspect, as I'm not severely affected. It just burns though a day's energy in minutes.
However, my autism means that pain from sound – and especially light – can be as acute as someone piercing your skin with a nail.