The Concept of ME/CFS

Noting that there are two components helps to make clear what the 'both' in the second sentence is referring to.

Maybe it would be clearer just to add an 'and' - myalgic encephalitis. and chronic ... Then the both follows.

It's just that I want a person with ME/CFS who is having a really hard time emotionally to have the same rights as a person with MS to get access to someone with specific expertise in helping people with a debilitating disease talk through the issues and find ways to cope.

I agree. Everyone should have access to a counsellor. What I see as entirely negative is making this counsellor part of a 'team'. As soon as you have a team you have gossiping about patients (called an MDT meeting) and group think all about their personality failing and god knows what. A good counsellor is someone apart who doesn't natter about you to colleagues. Counsellors are around everywhere, if in short supply on the NHS. You might argue that it would be useful for counsellors to have special knowledge of the needs of ME/CFS patients but I doubt it. Patients and carers can tell them their needs and counsellors tend to take stuff at face value rather than psychologists.
 
Unpleasant symptoms in ME/CFS include nausea, orthostatic intolerance, pain, (hence ‘malaise’) and sensitivity to environmental stimuli such as light, sound, physical contact and odours.
Does the 'malaise' relate to pain here? Because I thought malaise was a more general term, covering a feeling of being unwell. If malaise relates to the combination of nausea, OI and pain, I'm not sure that that is right either. Nausea isn't a big feature of my illness, even when in PEM.

More recently cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) on two successive occasions suggests that there can be a fall in respiratory function during exercise in people with ME/CFS, but it remains unclear how this relates either to muscle function or symptoms.
That could be read by people unfamiliar with the repeated CPET test and not paying attention as meaning that on two occasions CPET testing has found a fall in respiratory function - perhaps leaving the reader thinking, well that doesn't sound like much evidence. I think the sentence needs to be reworded to make things clearer. It might be worth highlighting PEM as an example of a symptom where it remains unclear how the CPET finding relates, given we have seen researchers confuse the CPET finding with PEM.



Differences in temporal profile may also be critical. Active EBV infection can produce severe malaise for several weeks and post-EBV ‘fatigue’ may be seen simply as a failure of resolution of those symptoms with normalisation of the blood picture. Long term ME/CFS is recognised after EBV infection, but it may not be merely a longer version of a ‘PVFS’ category that does not include ‘crashes’ and sensitivity to light and sound. When ME/CFS occurs after infection there may be a symptom-free window with subsequent ‘crash’, suggesting a new process. Even if there is no window it is typified by a fluctuating course.

Covid-19 has joined the group of infections with a high rate of post-infective problems, much like EBV. Sifting out different clinical patterns may be crucial to useful explanatory research, and detailed time course may be as important as symptom categories.
I think the issues around timing (i.e. differences between PVFS and ME/CFS) are overstated here. I'm sure that if you asked a substantial number of people whose PVFS resolved in a couple of months, some would say that their symptoms didn't start until a week or two after the illness. Maybe that has something to do with the speed of attempting to resume normal activity levels.

The third sentence is ambiguous. It isn't completely clear if you are suggesting that ME/CFS has crashes and sensitivity to light or sound or it doesn't, or if PVFS has those symptoms. Neither is it completely clear whether the diseases must have those symptoms. I don't really have a sensitivity to light and sound - do I not have ME/CFS?

You seem to be suggesting that a fluctuating course typifies ME/CFS, distinguishing it from PVFS. But, again, I think if you asked people who turn out to have a short term illness (PVFS?), they will talk about good days and bad days. Of course, there's more time scope for fluctuations in a longer term illness than in a shorter term one.

Sifting out clinical patterns is important, and it is worth noting that it should be done, but I think there is not yet strong evidence for PVFS and ME/CFS being completely different things with no overlap. The only important temporal pattern difference that we have decent evidence for is that ME/CFS, by definition, goes on longer.
 
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But, again, I think if you asked people who turn out to have a short term illness (PVFS?), they will talk about good days and bad days.

I think you are splitting hairs and elsewhere I make it clear that I am not expecting any of these distinctions to be cut and dried. I talk about extensive grey areas and the similar overlap in arthritis that still do not stop us from thinking that something different is going on in a certain group. In arthritis we have found out exactly what different is going on and we still cannot always separate patients into groups without measuring antibodies or whatever.

The idea is to justify a separate syndrome concept - yes a concept - that one day we think will reflect a distinct biological process. I think it is important to go through just how uncertain the PVS relation is - it isn't clear at all - because we are now seeing again papers saying that 50% of people with Long Covid have ME because they tick a few symptom boxes. In other contexts time profiles of symptoms are just as relevant as the symptoms so maybe that is true here. Maybe not.
 
The rub is how do we get that to happen, any ideas?:) I have started giving talks at Cambridge university to 1st year students but it may take a long time to get to where we need to be.

The other idea is the John Peel centre in Stowmarket a sort of lived experience conference which involves this very subject. Its a long shot but worth a go.... I think
 
I didn't invent the term PEM so I don't know exactly but it presumably refers to more general symptoms than 'fatigue'. In its original sense malaise implies a state that can include nausea, OI and pain (generally widespread muscle pain) yes.
PEM for me is very head / brain based if brought on by socializing — an increase in intensity of my baseline symptom of inability to process information (be it visual, reading, TV, talking), and the attempt to process information causing major discomfort . The discomfort is increased light and sound sensitivity, visual disturbances, tinnitus, pressure in head, or headache, increased feeling of illness / flu-like physical weakness / fatigue / brain vibrating to the point where I cannot be anything but prone in a dark quiet room. If I continue to try and push through PEM to stay in a social setting I will feel progressively iller, almost drunk or stoned. A lot of the symptoms feel brain related but general physical flu-like weakness also intensifies (not muscular). When I can get to bed I sometimes crash into a deep 20 minute sleep. Wake unrefreshed still crashed for rest of day and maybe for days.

My symptoms feel like what I imagine a brain injury or concussion are.

PEM after physical activity can involve more OI feeling — like I must get horizontal quickly. Panting as if have physically exerted when I haven’t. The brain symptoms come on too.
 
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Well I am rounding up the wagons so to speak, CEOs of Healthwatch, Co production and Commissioning, MPs and councillors with a couple of Charities that have more to do with education, disability and those that are showing Fabrication or inducing illness (FII) has no foundation. Joining all those together is what is needed?

I have no money and can only offer a photo opportunity (I know you are not bothered about that but they will be). It will take some organising and have no idea how I'm going to achieve it, but that has never stopped me before lol

It will connect the professional working with the services and those that live with the condition and I think that is what is needed - understanding and respect?
 
Even Simon Wessely said to me in an email that he was worried the PACE trial would mean that all sorts of incompetent psychologists would be recruited to treat patients without knowing what they were doing.

Firstly thank you for this.

I haven't been able to read it all yet, but skimming through the comments, this comment from Wessely set off my internal BS detector alarms. Hasn't this already been deployed by someone else (can't remember where I saw it) as a counterargument to criticism of the PACE trial; if harm has occurred it is not the trial, it's not the treatment, it's the therapist or the patient.

He has stated this before in this defence of PACE by him back in 2015. The PACE Trial for chronic fatigue syndrome (nationalelfservice.net)


Furthermore the treatments are safe, so long as they are provided by trained appropriate therapists who are properly supervised and in a way that is appropriate to each patient.

and

Some patients deteriorated, but this seems to be the nature of the illness, rather than related to a particular treatment.

In other words false illness belief that we have an illness called ME and deconditioning is the reason we deteriorate...
 
His agenda was to maintain the claim that highly trained psychotherapists and psychiatrists knew what they were talking
That would be far more convincing if there were such a thing. It's not as if PACE featured that, at least outside of a definition that is "trained according to Wessely's beliefs", which is an ideological position. Chiropractors are highly trained in the sense of years of schooling and have good incomes. Means nothing. But ultimately even Wessely used the fact that PACE produced similar results to small cheap trials, in fact pretty much all trials have roughly the same uninterpretable outcomes.

So if any cheap trial with random therapists produces the same outcomes as the very expensive trial he claims is the standard by which to judge, the only way his argument would make sense would be for him to be delusional, his argument ignores inconvenient facts. Which he isn't, leaving the only alternative being that he simply lies because it's good for him. And it has been very good for him to lie a lot, without it he would never have reached the influence and privilege he has.

As you say, this was his agenda. For his self-benefit. It features no principle or cause other than his ideology and self-interest.
 
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Even Simon Wessely said to me in an email that he was worried the PACE trial would mean that all sorts of incompetent psychologists would be recruited to treat patients without knowing what they were doing.

I think that is very interesting. For their model to work then there had to be some kind of transferable treatment. There had to be a form of CBT-GET that was more than just 'we worked with some patients and were able to help them to do more'.

But they've never been able to define that transferable model or at least they keep changing their minds what it is. They keep going back to a specific patient-specific therapist approach.

It explains why they get themselves caught up going round in circles with GET. It's incremental increases set out in advance, except when the patient with the unhelpful beliefs says it's too much and the therapist agrees, in which case they don't do the planned incremental increases, but do when it's possible, so it is about planned increases but isn't and the patient is unreliable but not always.

I did an FOI and asked for the data for patients on whether they stuck to the plan agreed at the start of the intervention. There wasn't any.
 
Apologies for just popping in as not being able to read through the thread.

About the title.

I like to have the phrasing "the Concept of ME/CFS" in the title, also as it could appear still interesting to those who think there is no valid concept.

Just think it needs an addition so that those who generally aren't interested in the discussion on ME/CFS, -- those who I guess are the majority of doctors who appreciate if they just don't have to deal with pwME/CFS -- see there will be some practical suggestions for them in the article that could be of use if they don't easily manage to get rid of us.

So how about something along the lines:

"The Concept of ME/CFS and its implications for delivering health care"?
 
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But they've never been able to define that transferable model or at least they keep changing their minds what it is. They keep going back to a specific patient-specific therapist approach.

Maybe it's the Special Insight that can't be taught on a course. Or tested in an exam. Or even known by an individual themselves.

Only those with Really Special Insight can ever know whether Special Insight has been achieved.

It's a fair bet people have been pulling this one since before Homo sapiens.
 
Jonathan Edwards said:
These features make ME/CFS a typical syndrome concept, in the sense of a pattern of clinical symptoms and/or signs that suggest some common mediating process, even if that remains unknown...
It is time for physicians to take ME/CFS seriously as an unsolved disabling illness, with no presuppositions about causal mechanisms.
I think that defining ME/CFS as a syndrome like this is a great idea, and could help research as well as clinical practice.

What remains unclear is to what extent the majority of cases of post-viral fatigue resemble ME/CFS or are more like the fatigue associated with conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and heart failure.
If we are talking PVFS (rather than PVF), I'm not sure if it is different from ME/CFS.Mulitple survey studies find around 2/3 of people with ME/CFS report infectious onset (forum thread somewhere). It is closer to 60% (I think) for DecodeME, which uniquely offered a "don't know" answer option to the infectious onset question. And 100% of DecodeME participants reported not only an ME/CFS diagnosis, but also PEM (using a better definition of PEM than provided by the usual option of DSQ).

Of course, there may be many PVFS cases that don't meet ME/CFS criteria. But PVFS seems to be a vague construct with no clear criteria, and primary care diagnosis rates, at least in the UK, vary wildly over time.

Popular quips about ‘mind-body interaction’ replacing Cartesian Dualism simply reveal as deep an ignorance of great philosophers as of human biology
I laugh every time I read this.
 
If we are talking PVFS (rather than PVF), I'm not sure if it is different from ME/CFS.

I think I have avoided considering PVFS as a category although no doubt it once was. I agree that it is too vague to be useful. Categories are of course allowed to overlap even by as much as 66%. In rheumatology we have lots of overlapping diagnostic categories that are all useful because they divide patients up different ways for different purposes.
 
That would be far more convincing if there were such a thing. It's not as if PACE featured that, at least outside of a definition that is "trained according to Wessely's beliefs", which is an ideological position. Chiropractors are highly trained in the sense of years of schooling and have good incomes. Means nothing. But ultimately even Wessely used the fact that PACE produced similar results to small cheap trials, in fact pretty much all trials have roughly the same uninterpretable outcomes.

So if any cheap trial with random therapists produces the same outcomes as the very expensive trial he claims is the standard by which to judge, the only way his argument would make sense would be for him to be delusional, his argument ignores inconvenient facts. Which he isn't, leaving the only alternative being that he simply lies because it's good for him. And it has been very good for him to lie a lot, without it he would never have reached the influence and privilege he has.

As you say, this was his agenda. For his self-benefit. It features no principle or cause other than his ideology and self-interest.
Plus not only did he have the power of running some of the trials and picking the therapists but he ran the royal colleges for these professions and had his hand in being able to make decisions on ‘untrained’ being pushed through the system.

I’m not sure his definition of untrained is the same as mine tho - mine involves scientific psychology base, therefore critical thinking, understanding of methods, the basics of how the brain and other things work so you know what to control for and an overview of scandals and themes behind them

I assume his is like Chalder thinking being professor of CBT teaches you more than how to force brainwashing in someone ‘effectively’ when it doesn’t seem to cover whether that ‘what’ harms or helps like the old days of brainwashing experiments. Who knows what they were really trying to achieve tbf
 
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