What would be considered as part of sickness response? Does it have to be feeling awful or does feeling just slightly worse but actually still quite fine and good enough to ride the Tour de France count? How does one a "sickness response in ME/CFS" which leaves people disabled compare to others that feel good enough?
There's also plenty of people that feel perfectly fine after getting a vaccination whilst others feel symptoms of malaise and infection, does that mean something was too weak if they develop antibodies ect appropriately? What about people who have a delay between viral infection and feel quite ok during it but develop symptoms of ME/CFS, how do you tie those 2 together? In the case of Covid don't we think most ME/CFS follows mild infections? Would one say that their infection was strong enough to cause a sickness response or not?
On the other hand I also wouldn't be suprised if there's people that feel little fatigue or malaise during/after infections and others that feel more for rather complicated genetic dynamics similar to those that don't feel pain. People with CIPA can apparently have a fever without nothing any symptoms and many die of hyperthermia, does that count? Maybe something similar applies to neuropathies?
That seems a bit circular to me: You only consider infections that already cause sickness behaviour and ignore those that don't. I think there are plenty of counterexamples in real life where the infections were in fact severe enough: Attend enough major amateur sporting events and you will often find someone that died as a result of participanting whilst being actually dealing with an infection but they clearly weren't desplaying much sickness behaviour, as they were competing. I also think that things like myocarditis can often go unnoticed. Weren't there also cases of organ damage in Covid that went fairly unnoticed, at least until a certain point? I'm also unsure why AIDS would not fit into the picture, why would that be considered too local when it can be measured in blood fairly simply and causes issues in many bodily systems whilst something like post-viral fatigue as of yet cannot be captured by any test at all, why should that not just be a local immune response?Seems that this sort of condition hasn't been described or doesn't exist? It might fly under the radar as asymptomatic infection but there you have the problem that the infection might simply not be severe enough to cause sickness behavior.
There's also plenty of people that feel perfectly fine after getting a vaccination whilst others feel symptoms of malaise and infection, does that mean something was too weak if they develop antibodies ect appropriately? What about people who have a delay between viral infection and feel quite ok during it but develop symptoms of ME/CFS, how do you tie those 2 together? In the case of Covid don't we think most ME/CFS follows mild infections? Would one say that their infection was strong enough to cause a sickness response or not?
On the other hand I also wouldn't be suprised if there's people that feel little fatigue or malaise during/after infections and others that feel more for rather complicated genetic dynamics similar to those that don't feel pain. People with CIPA can apparently have a fever without nothing any symptoms and many die of hyperthermia, does that count? Maybe something similar applies to neuropathies?