Wouldn't it be just as likely that these rare remission responses are due to the long anaesthetic rather than the surgery? These procedures are 4-5 hours duration.
Yes. But, we don't even have really solid evidence that these remission responses actually occurred following the surgery. That seems to me to be the first couple of dots that aren't connecting up in any sort of a solid way. i.e. was there a remission, and, if so, did it follow the surgery?
I looked into this a bit yesterday as I have no medical background with which to assess the conflicting claims about cervical instability affecting vagal nerve function and resulting in ME/CFS symptoms.
Ross Hauser and Caring Medical were the names that kept coming up in the search - they seemed to be a key primary source of this idea. I couldn't find a reliable (unconflicted) source supporting the idea.
I'm not clear on whether the idea is that there is an abnormal stretching of the nerve or a compression of the nerve.
If a compression, then the vagus nerve seems to be bundled up with other squishy things - major blood vessels to and from the brain, all wrapped with a tough protective membrane, with other squishy things around it. As far as I could see, the location of that bundle seems to be well away from the cervical spine. There doesn't seem to be a 'rock and a hard place' location where things wouldn't just move to accommodate any misalignment heading towards the vagus nerve unless there was really some catastrophic misalignment that would surely be incredibly visible on imaging. I don't know, is there anywhere where compression of the vagus nerve could occur against the cervical spine?
(Edit: Jonathan mentioned up thread the jugular foramen, an opening at the base of the skull,
"The vagus enters through the jugular foramen. Someone I know has recently had a fracture of the jugular foramen with compression of the vagus nerve. They cannot speak or cough properly because it supplies the larynx.")
If an abnormal stretching, then is the damage supposed to be permanent? In which case, how would surgery to realign the spine fix it? If it's just a temporary stretching, wouldn't the body have a lot of scope to accommodate that given we are moving all the time?