See below.
There are going to be more new ME/CFS cases if people get infected far more often than they used to. That’s different from covid having an increased rate of new onset ME/CFS compared to other viral infections.
Edited for clarity.
I don’t understand what you mean «pathway to ME/CFS». Can you clarify?
Good question. Reduced ability to generate ATP. If that was the case, we’d have seen it on the day 1 CPETs. Those results are about normal.
Other stuff related to mitochondria might be going wrong, but I have no idea if that’s upstream or downstream or just part of a self-sustaining cycle.
I’m not sure I understand what you mean by rare causes of ME/CFS.
My layman’s thinking is that you need some kind of pathology that everyone with ME/CFS has in common. I’m sure there are hundreds of factors that make it more or less likely that you end up with ME/CFS, including rare genes.
It might be that there are two or three diseases that would all fit what we now think of as ME/CFS, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard about a syndrome that was based on reasonable clinical and scientific judgement that turned out to be dozens or hundreds of different diseases. (So excluding FND, etc. that are just territory-grabbing attempts by the BPS crowd - they are not reasonable).
———
Thank you for all for all of the studies, and thank you
@Sly Saint for linking the threads!