ScoutB
Established Member (Voting Rights)
For what it's worth, I definitely have loss of appetite (I say, as I force myself to eat a bowl of perfectly good soup). I wonder if it could be more common than we know because it's not as acutely debilitating as other symptoms?Perhaps a bit off-topic, but was wondering if ME/CFS is like sickness behavior, why we don't see more loss of appetite.
This would definitely validate what it feels like is going on for me. Also, there's so much variability even in one person with how they react to different bugs (sometimes you get a fever, sometimes not, sometimes your muscles ache, other times you're just utterly physically exhausted). I figured there must be a lot of flexibility around which particular pathways get triggered when your body decides it's time to feel sick.So a possible answer is that during normal infection multiple pathways normally occur in tandem that affect the brain, but only particular ones are active in ME/CFS.