Barry
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I'll have a forage tomorrow ... if I remember! I think it related to some trial or other - non ME.Nor can I. Is this a measure of something?
I'll have a forage tomorrow ... if I remember! I think it related to some trial or other - non ME.Nor can I. Is this a measure of something?
ahh, yes, so that then puts the onus on them to prove objective benefit?With pointing out that there is no benefit - the PACE trial shows that.
I think we have enough evidence now to be talking about the response to energy demand, not just exercise. This might also include immunological, emotional and cognitive energy demands. What seems to be lacking is what many call respiratory reserve, the capacity to ramp up aerobic energy production on demand. We go to anaerobic energy production far too quickly. Even the cellular evidence, both Seahorse testing and the nanoneedle, suggest this is the case. Its not just CPET. WHY this is the case is still an open question, though the pursuit of whatever is in the blood is likely to be fruitful.I also think that although PEM is a very valid indicative symptom of ME/CFS, it may be simply a subset of the broader symptom - the body's abnormal response to exercise.
They avoid this like the plague. EVERY study that uses objective outcomes for CBT/GET has failed, either showing no benefit or a decrease in capacity.Because you can't prove objective benefit either.
Its the objective outcome in scientific studies that is indeed lacking. Its only been since about 2007 that this idea has started to be pursued.activities that are a demand to the brain (thinking, talking, conversing, calculating) compounded by the demands of being vertical (standing worse than sitting) are a significant part of my disease and disability. I wish we could convey this in scientific literature- backed up by objective measurements.
This is the post I was thinking of. Not a trial, but @Jonathan Edwards' thoughts regarding possible investigations:I'll have a forage tomorrow ... if I remember! I think it related to some trial or other - non ME.
I think we have enough evidence now to be talking about the response to energy demand, not just exercise. This might also include immunological, emotional and cognitive energy demands.
Exactly. It would be interesting to know if the physiological responses to energy demand for pwME is unique, or if similar to some other illnesses. And although PEM is a significant symptom, it is not the only one. @Jonathan Edwards?I think we have enough evidence now to be talking about the response to energy demand, not just exercise. This might also include immunological, emotional and cognitive energy demands.
I am not sure what energy demand is. I prefer to think in terms of molecular signals rather than 'demands'.
My wife used to get behind me and push when I was walking, especially if going up an incline or up the stairs. I've just realised that she hasn't done that for a long time, so I must be improving.I'd noticed that with our dog on her lead, my wife strides out pretty smartly, and was wondering what was going on. But she still struggles when walking on her own, with the effort that involves. Which fits with what I've always concluded regarding my wife's ME/CFS - that her body cannot deliver the energy to wherever it is needed at the rate it is needed, whatever the reasons for that may be. Basically when our eager little dog is tugging on the lead, she is (trust me!) very powerful, and very likely provides more motive power than my wife can. So for the same power from my wife, she can go significantly faster with our dog than without. So her ME/CFS does seem to be more about power availability than about locomotion capability.
I don't see why. All you have to do is pass us some questionnaires, get us to assign numerical values to how much harm exercise causes us, and there's your evidence. For the giggling psychologists to demand a higher standard of evidence than that would be pure hypocrisy.If I were to stand up and say we know that exercise causes harm the psychologists in the audience would turn to each other and giggle and say 'well the patients have pulled the wool over his eyes, haven't they'.
Maybe. But if a given undertaking (by a person or any other energy consumer) requires energy to be supplied at a given rate, then that is down to physics. If the energy being demanded is not met then the undertaking cannot be fulfilled at the required rate.I am not sure what energy demand is. I prefer to think in terms of molecular signals rather than 'demands'.
Yes, I would be very surprised if an illness like ME/CFS did not lead to secondary issues that might easily be confused.My wife used to get behind me and push when I was walking, especially if going up an incline or up the stairs. I've just realised that she hasn't done that for a long time, so I must be improving.
I occasionally go for a short walk if I feel up to it, not for exercise, but because after a couple of days of being sedentary it does me good to move a bit - fresh air, get the blood circulating etc. I've recently come to suspect that sometimes some of my symptoms (stiff neck, headache) aren't necessarily from ME, but from slouching on the sofa for days on end, so a short walk every few days counters that.
I have wondered where the physicists are in ME research.Maybe. But if a given undertaking (by a person or any other energy consumer) requires energy to be supplied at a given rate, then that is down to physics. If the energy being demanded is not met then the undertaking cannot be fulfilled at the required rate.
I am not sure what energy demand is. I prefer to think in terms of molecular signals rather than 'demands'.
In a person who doesn't have ME, what happens when the metabolism can't meet the energy demand?The required ATP flux to achieve exertion/maintain activity. The type of metabolism that is used to maintain this flux depends on the kinetics of the demand. Anerobic glycolysis for example, is used when oxidative phosphorylation/citric acid cycle, fatty acid oxidation etc are too slow to meet the energy demands. (if there is insufficient supply, then obviously there will be a loss of expected function. Gee, I wonder if the brain has some sort of sensory mechanism to warn of this potential loss of function? Hmm)
And for any system where power (=> rate of energy transfer) is regulated, then signal paths are involved. So if energy flow is being limited below what is expected, then it is not inconceivable it is being regulated too low - due to some signalling fault within the regulation mechanism. Regulation mechanisms rely on the signaled information fed into them, and if the signals are screwed then so is the regulation. But I hasten to add, all speculation. Though I am truly convinced my wife's essential problem is power being restricted below what her body requires at any given time.The required ATP flux to achieve exertion/maintain activity. The type of metabolism that is used to maintain this flux depends on the kinetics of the demand. Anerobic glycolysis for example, is used when oxidative phosphorylation/citric acid cycle, fatty acid oxidation etc are too slow to meet the energy demands. (if there is insufficient supply, then obviously there will be a loss of expected function. Gee, I wonder if the brain has some sort of sensory mechanism to warn of this potential loss of function? Hmm)