Utsikt
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I think you can safely disregard her entire explanation. There is a popular theory by Noakes that when the brain gets a signal that it doesn’t expect, it produces the sensation of pain. That is just wrong.This is how my neurologist explained it to me. To put it simply, she said that the mechanisms underlying chronic fatigue are probably comparable to the mechanisms underlying chronic pain (as in: pain that can not be explained by looking at the body part that's in pain). Kind of like that your nervous system is interpreting certain signals from your body incorrectly and then goes in overdrive to protect you OR that your nervous system responds randomly. I am really not sure about all this. Just sharing what she told me.
There are systems that work in a predictive manner, like coordination. That’s because the nerve signals are too slow to give an accurate representation of where a limb is. So we use visual data and predictions as well.
It’s easy to fool that system, e.g. as seen in the rubber arm experiment. But none of the participants experience any pain or fatigue from it.
Some neurologists will tell you that the phantom pain mirror treatment shows that unexpected signals can cause pain, but it has never been established that mirror therapy actually works. It’s probably just bias due to poor trial designs.