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A short sad history of ME/CFS

143 replies

clouty · 23/07/2010 13:23

I'm posting a history lesson, because it has huge implications for public health, and that includes the health and well being of you and your family. I was never one for a conspiracy theory, preferring to favor the muck-up theory of misdirection and error, but I have done a lot of studying in the last eighteen months, since I have been ill, and I am afraid the evidence is all there to support the following hypothesis. I am fighting for effective treatment, and that will take an increased awareness of the problem, hence this post.

For more than two decades, a deliberate muddying of the diagnosis of a serious chronic neuro-immune disease has misdirected much research. The disease Myalgic Encephalomyelitis was renamed Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, by the Centre for Disease Control in the USA, in the late 80's.

Because the criteria for diagnosis of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis has been weakened to the point that the people diagnosed as could include those without neurological symptoms, because the criteria (CDC's Fukuda 1994(1) and worse, the 2005 revised version(2) and the British Oxford definition(3)) diagnosed as people who had unrelated illnesses, the common ground being chronic fatigue, the research could not and did not reliably study Myalgic Encephalomyelitis.

The fake diagnostic criteria mentioned above also deliberately proscribed the many tests that would allow for a positive diagnosis, rather than a diagnosis of exclusion.

Meanwhile, people who actually had myalgic encephalomyelitis were misunderstood, mistreated and marginalised.

This process of confusing a specific biological disease with the very common symptom of Chronic fFatigue began at about the time that the financial impact of another illness caused by a retrovirus, HIV/AIDS, was becoming clear. The patients with ME/CFS were not dying like flies, and their illness helped make them invisible, as most were housebound and unable to protest, impoverished by years of illness. The disease became a stigma, patients were assumed to be depressed and lazy, yet ironically and conversely they were also and at the same time accused of being type A personalities who had burned out.

Neither of these explanations were true, for those placed in the ME/CFS patient cohort who actually had Myalgic Encephalomyelitis by the Canadian Consensus Criteria(4). These patients were suffering a neuro-immune disease caused by an unknown pathogen, perhaps viral, perhaps retroviral. It was a devastating disease, described by some patients as a living death. A percentage of patients were bed bound, tube fed, on morphine pumps and unable to tolerate light or noise. Many of the infected were teachers or medical professionals, and some families had two or more people who were ill with CCC ME (Canadian Consensus Criteria / Myalgic Encephalomyelitis).

The cost of treating these patients (there were more of them than in the HIV crowd) was something that governments were happy to avoid, dealing as they were already with HIV/AIDS, and helping to avoid tackling this illness head on created a career path for the unscrupulous, deluded and greedy.

Two and more decades on, private funding into ME/CFS by the parents of a young sufferer helped to refocus some (not all, more later) of the scientific community on seeking the true causation of CCC ME. The Whittemore Peterson Institute at last held out some hope, for people who had been seriously ill for decades. They published a study in Science in October 2009(5), showing by one method that 67% of those CCC ME patients tested had a retrovirus, Xenotropic Murine leukemia-virus Related Virus. A second testing method showed XMRV in 95% of the patient cohort.

Within weeks, another study was published in PlosOne(6), (7), after allowing 3 days for peer review. The WPI study was under peer review for six months. This new British study was commissioned by the notorious psychiatrist, Simon Wesseley, who had managed, over the last couple of decades, to become the pundit on all things CFS. Here are some quotes from him:

Professor Wessely has said:
"In Britain, people with chronic fatigue think that if they do too much the virus that caused it is still there and will come back and make them worse. That is catastrophising the illness. They don't think like that in France and they don't have the same outcomes. It is how you respond to symptoms that determines the outcome."

"We?re not going to go doing more and more tests to find out, well what was the virus, because frankly, even if we found it, there?s nothing we?re going to do about it.?

" What lies behind all this talk of viruses and immunity ?... In consequence, talk of viruses and the immune system is now deeply embedded in popular consciousness ... Viruses are an attribution free from blame ... there's no blame, no shame and no stigma ... and here is the virus research doctor himself to protect us from that shame... And what is it he delivers? Respect!"

"Many patients referred to a specialized hospital with chronic fatigue syndrome have embarked on a struggle. This may take the form of trying to find an acceptable diagnosis, or indeed, any diagnosis. One of the principal functions of therapy at this stage is to allow the patient to call a halt without loss of face. ..... [M.E. patients are in] a vicious circle of increasing avoidance, inactivity and fatigue....... "

"Most CFS patients fulfil diagnostic criteria for psychiatric disorder. Other symptoms include muscle pain and many somatic symptoms, especially cardiac, gastrointestinal and neurological. .... Do any of these symptoms possess diagnostic significance? The answer is basically negative... The description given by a leading gastro-enterologist at the Mayo clinic remains accurate. 'the average doctor will see they are neurotic and he will often be disgusted with them.' "

"Validation is needed from the doctor. Once that is granted, the patient may assume the privileges of the sick role (sympathy, time off work, benefits, etc)"

The man's cruelty knows no bounds. It would not be that extreme to accuse him, and his American counterpart, Bill Reeves (of the CDC), of a crime against the human rights of a seriously physically ill group of patients.

Since the Imperial College/Wessely paper was published in PlosOne, there have been other negative studies, and other positive studies. All the negative studies have two things in common. They used the loosest definition of the disease, either the Oxford or the Amended Fuduka (CDC 2005), and they failed to use the methods that were used by the WPI, despite having been given access to the techniques and positive control samples.

As someone said "They forgot to take the lens cap off the microscope"

The really sad thing about all this is that if good research had been allowed centre stage in the late 80's and early 90's, when Dr. Elaine DeFreitas(8) first found a retrovirus in CCC ME patients, and if related research had been given the backing that it warranted, then many many fewer people would now be infected with XMRV.

This gamma retrovirus, XMRV, was first found in cases of Prostate Cancer (>30%), and has also been found in other sarcomas and Autistic Spectrum Disorder patients. It is possible that this, or other retroviruses are responsible for causing Parkinsons Disease, Alzheimers, Multiple Sclerosis, and other brain and nervous system malfunctions.

A retrovirus is distinguished from other viruses by it's ability to insert genetic material into the host's DNA, effectively hijacking the host cells for its own ends. They are sneaky, lazy, and they make you ill. To date, we know of three exogenous human retroviruses: HIV, HTLV and XMRV. They all make people sick.

There is a lot of work to do yet before we discover the full impact of exogenous retroviruses on humans, but a great start has been made. And yet, in the UK, all public Medical Research Council funding for ME/CFS goes to psychological research.

When questioned why this is, the MRC say that "no applications of sufficient quality asking for funding for medical research into CFS have been submitted". This is patently untrue(9). Between 2002 and 2008 there were 33 applications for funding for biomedical research into CCC ME.

The truth is that the Department of Health, umbrella department of the MRC and the NHS, rely on Simon Wessely, Peter White, Trudy Chalder and other psychiatric types for advice, and this group have built an influential empire on muddying the definition and mistreating the patients with CCC ME.

They believe that exercise and CBT is all we need to get well. Currently, there is a study in process at Bristol University of the Lightning Process® under Dr Esther Crawley(10). They are going to subject children, some of whom really will have CCC ME, to a positive thinking regime sold by a pyramid selling technique, and invented by Phil Parker, who is doing very nicely thank you. This cannot be said for those CCC ME patients who have been through this process. As with the NHS program of Graded Exercise Therapy, the course encourages patients to ignore the symptoms of their disease. If this was all in the mind, then yes, it may work. But for children with a serious neuro-immune disease, it can, and has, aggravated symptoms to the point where they can no longer function independently at all, and are consigned bed, relying on others for all personal care.

Esther Crawley's study will include 90 children between the ages of 8 and 18. This is unethical, when there has yet to be a study of the Lightning Process® in adults. The strange thing is, Phil Parker does not allow criticism of his results on his website (and there is criticism, oh yes(11)).

People do die of complications of CCC ME: of cancers, of heart disease, of suicide because they can't stand the pain any more. Here is a list in memorium. It is by no stretch of the imagination extensive, or comprehensive.

1/ www.annals.org/content/121/12/953.full?guid=on (Fukuda 1994)
2/ www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/3/19/ (Reeves 2005)
3/ www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1293107/pdf/jrsocmed00127-0072.pdf (The Oxford Definition)
4/ www.co-cure.org/ccpccd.pdf (Canadian Consensus Criteria)
5/ www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1179052 (WPI study, 10/09)

6/ www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/340/feb25_1/c1099 (Wessely/McClure Imperial College XMRV study - I see no ships!)
7/ www.bmj.com/cgi/eletters/340/feb25_1/c1099#231969 (be sure to expand the comments section)

8/ www.ncf-net.org/forum/revelations.html (on the DeFreitas study,1991)

9/ www.meresearch.org.uk/information/publications/casetoanswer.html (MRC funding bias explored)

10/ www.bris.ac.uk/news/2010/6866.html (Bristol Lightning Process study)
11/ www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7015/3/19/0 (criticism of the Lightning Process)

OP posts:
LC9 · 27/07/2010 17:24

Here is a link to H Johnson's article:
oslersweb.com/blog.htm?post=718351

"Last week, after news broke that a paper confirming the Lombardi et. al. study of last October was about to be published by the journal, The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a cabal of top government administrators decided to suppress it by demanding it be sent out for yet more peer review. I am told by at least one scientist who I consider to be ?in the loop? that the decision was made at least in some part by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director and ?AIDS Czar,? Anthony Fauci, and the director of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, along with administrators at the CDC. It was Fauci, recall, who persuaded then NIH director Harold Varmus, to move ?cfs? to the Office of Women?s Health Research, an office in the NIH Director?s office without funds, laboratories or ability to fund studies into the disease, where it has languished unattended. In May, President Obama announced Varmus will be returning to the NIH as the director of the National Cancer Institute. "

H Johnson was the reporter who uncovered the theft of millions from the CDC's CFS program back in the late 90's. This led to the CDC having to pay the money back.

clouty · 27/07/2010 17:44

DBennett, surely you know that journalists cannot reveal their sources of controversial information, if they wish to remain in business? It is standard journalistic practice to protect sources.

Have you read the comments on the recent CDC study, published in Retrovirology? www.retrovirology.com/content/7/1/57/comments If you had, you might take a different view of the politics of XMRV research.

OP posts:
DBennett · 27/07/2010 17:57

I'm not asking for the confidential ones, several individuals have been mentioned but when followed up have no comment.

Were they off the record?
Did they think they were off the record?
Were they speaking off the cuff?

Even if the DHHS is ensuring that two ends of government come together before announcing data, not a terrible idea by the way, we still need to wait for the publication.

Then we'll have more data not supposition.

LC9 · 27/07/2010 18:01

They will not make a statement saying that they pulled the paper, because they cannot say they have a test, they cannot say the blood supply is protected, but also they cannot deny the paper was put on hold. The date is immanent, it supports XMRV being in CFS patients.

clouty · 28/07/2010 12:20

Roll on publication of Alter's paper for the NIH/FDA. There are only two more days left before it is too late to include it in discussions at the first international conference on XMRV, in Bethsesda USA www.virology-education.com/index.cfm?vid=1FFB67A9-CD5E-A0A3-9AC6CD211AC52D81&faqview=206C3A3A-90F1-D C27-60025BE1DC8F5DFD#206C3A3A-90F1-DC27-60025BE1DC8F5DFD

So the cynic in me expects publication next week, after the deadline for abstracts submission.

OP posts:
thumbwitch · 28/07/2010 17:44

clouty, LC9, if you don't mind, would you please email me on thumbwitch at live dot co dot uk? Thanks very much

andromeda13 · 29/07/2010 15:00

Thank you Clouty for the brilliantly well-written piece which began this thread.

We live in a world that's controlled by paternalistic old boys netoworks and I am definitley convinced that the ignorance and abuse of ME patients is at some level being controlled.

My research has led me to believe that the stealth pathogens which are being shown to be implicated in Gulf war Syndrome, ME/CFS, Lyme disease, Alzheimer's disease, Bipolar and obsessive-compulsive conditions, schizophrenia, MS, ALS and motor neurone disease, ADHD, Autism, Parkinsonian syndromes, and other less well-known conditions such as Behcet's disease, are the result of military science developed since the 1930s in the search for vector borne diseases as biological weapons.

What we have is AIDS-on-wings, or on 8 legs in the case of ticks and mites. Imagine if the truth came out about this.

How else can the truth have been so carefully controlled, without the help of top levels of control by those who rule us and maintain secrecy. All they have to do is quote National Security as the reason to tell newspaper and scientific journal editors to ignore information, and the health protection agency too, as they feed us total lies about what's going on.

There are 9000 papers quoted in pub med on borreliosis alone and all of the evidence points to Lyme borreliosis as being a persistent infection which evades the immune system.
This is readily available evidence yet our HPA and all consultants in Infectious Diseases maintain that there is no such thing as chronic Lyme disease. Most people with Lyme are buying their own antibiotics and maintaining some improvement, with some actually able to recover almost completely.

Have a look at this well-referenced info on bio weapons and the military importance of the infections causing neuro-immune diseases, with Borreliosis as a prime example:

www.elenacook.org/bwsept06.html
www.elenacook.org/spirowarfare.html

Mouse leukaemia viruses were actually sought after by scientists in the 1930s and were used to promote cancer in experiments, all the while that scientists and doctors were maintaining that cancer was not caused by viruses.

We are just plebs to those in control, those who really run this world, and they are the military, they even tell the president what to do and the prime minister in the UK.

Mouse retroviruses have been used as vectors to introduce bits of DNA into patients with genetic diseases, but then scientists discovered that they could be deadly and have only just stopped using them.

There is so much research out there. The famous TV journalist Jeremy Paxman co-authored a book in the 1980s all about chemical and bacterial warfare. It's called A Higher Form of Killing and details how live viruses and bacteria were being sprayed offshore in Scotland in the 1950s over rafts with many species of animals on them. What's to say that the sea birds and their fleas, ticks etc were not picking up all the nasty viruses and bacteria?

We need to open our eyes to all possibilities and recognise that many stupid and downright immoral and evil decisions were made in the past, or shall we just continue to turn a blind eye like the top and middle layers of doctors and consultants and scientist who know that there is something really fishy going on but who are too scared of the implications of telling the truth.

Yes, National Security is involved in all of this - witnessed by all those who know of the Gresham College lecture incidents and aftermath. And National Security can be the only reason why the MRC's papers and grant applications from 1988 onwards, re ME, are being kept secret for another 70 years.

I remember Clouty you quoted Wessely as saying that ME is not a problem in France. I can see one reason, and that is that Borreliosis cases are being picked up and diagnosed there in France at 100 times the number of cases here.

100 times, yet we have the same number of cases here, I am sure, especially after what Klaus Kurtenbach found before his sudden death, from his research in Somerset, ie that we have the same number of ticks and they are infected at the same rate as in France.
In France it's still difficult to get chronic Lyme treated, but at least the patients there have an acknowledgement of what made them ill.

I always think to myself, the country with the most secretive behaviour has the most to cover up, so perhaps the UK was the lead source of these stealth pathogens.

checkagain · 29/07/2010 16:42

Conflicting views are the norm about this dreadful illness, which is potentially chronic and severe and has no cure. I'd suggest this link for good info about ME in children: www.tymestrust.org

Kids with ME have a horrible time and one of the worst things is being disbelieved. One of the biggest causes of relapse is being made to go to school too often and too soon.

ME is classified by the World Health Organisation as a neurological disease - it's not in the mind and you can't just think yourself better from this one.

clouty · 31/07/2010 10:10

ME is the biggest cause of absence from school. Children often miss years of schooling, and many children are bedbound .

I just looked at the TymesTrust web page, but I couldn't stay long - animated web pages hurt! So it's a worry that an ME support site uses them. I am not alone in my intolerance of animation online.

Thank heaven for the internet and the ability to research, and connect with like-minded folk :D

IMHO it's appalling that these days the NHS does not offer more than CBT and Graded Exercise Therapy, which is pretty much sure to make CCC ME people worse, when there are treatment regimes (nutritional supplements, LDN, herbal anti-virals, antibiotic therapies etc) that can help control the disease (not a cure, but a management system) especially in the early stages. Unfortunately, you can only access these (with a doctor's supervision) if you have the money to go private, and if you can find one of the the few doctors that understand this disease.

One of these private doctors, Sarah Myhill, has recently had her licence to prescribe recinded by the General Medical Council, on the back of a single anonymous email. Mind you, they have been gunning for her for years. Her website is a source of information for us, but it is not to be swallowed whole. Some of her recommendations are not suitable for following without supervision. However I know (online) several PWME who have benefitted from her advice.

The crazy thing is that effective symptom management has to be cheaper than supporting a quarter of a million PWME in their disability.

The other mad thing is the amount of control Simon Wessely and his cohort, who wish to stifle research into the cause and cures for this disease, have over the media. The Science Media Council, a part of the Royal Institution, refer all journalist's queries to Simon Wessely.

OP posts:
LC9 · 31/07/2010 11:23

In 2003 a report by the Survey and Statistical Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University, showed the annual cost of ME to the UK economy to be around £3.5billion.

DBennett · 01/08/2010 07:16

I'm not sure that's an accurate way .

The only report I can find matching this is here.

This is a report by Action For M.E., a patient advocacy group.

Now this doesn't automatically bias the data but the methodology might.

Especially when you consider that the data from affected individuals is from 1994, yet this is matched with a prevalence estimate from 2002 and census data from 2001.

I could also mention that a response rate of 30%, that of the 1994 survey would be considered by most scientists to invalidate the results.

It's also difficult to identify what role the Survey and Statistical Research Centre, beyond publishing one of the data sources it appears to be minimal.

Not the most convincing number to bring up. And, although I don't think anyone should dismiss the financial (or social) costs of CFS, relying on a source with so many flaws seems unhelpful.

DBennett · 01/08/2010 07:21

Sorry, first sentence should read:

I'm not sure that's an accurate way of describing that information.

ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 08:54

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DBennett · 01/08/2010 09:15

Obviously this is at risk of going widely off topic, but what do you mean by "thyroid patient " when the serum levels are normal?

What alternate test are you suggesting?

ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 10:15

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DBennett · 01/08/2010 10:52

Hmmm, that doesn't tie with my understanding of thyroid testing, which admittedly could be a bit rusty.

My line of thinking was more along these lines

TSH is very sensitive for Hypothryoidism.
T4 can be used to confirm but is less sensitive and less specific.

T3 only really has efficacy in detection of Hyperthryoidism.

And I though rT3 was only warrented for non-thryoid disease.

Had a quick glance at pubmed, can't see anything that really contradicts that.

Have you got a reference to help me out.

ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 13:26

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ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 13:28

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sharbie · 01/08/2010 13:31

that's interesting leonie - how ill were you and how much better are you now ?

ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 13:37

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ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 13:47

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ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 13:53

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clouty · 01/08/2010 19:26

Leoni, thank you so much for your clear informative posts. Once again, it brings up the need for positive diagnostic tests being used for suspected ME. There are people with an ME Dx that actually are hypothyroid, as you say. And now I hear that the NHS will not do the correct tests to Dx that. The clinical guidelines approved by NICE specifically exclude the tests that would show a clear diagnosis of CCC ME.

Why? What are they scared of? Why do they not take into account the costs of supporting people in their illness?

We would all much rather be happy, energetic, working and paying taxes.

OP posts:
ArthurPewty · 01/08/2010 21:47

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DBennett · 01/08/2010 22:13

@LeonieDelt

I've taken the liberty of adding some units, I think they're the right ones (please correct me if they're not)

TSH was 1.61 mU/L (0.5 - 4.2).
FT3 was 3.8 pmol/L (3.9 - 6.8)
FT4 was 9 pmol/L (12-22)

Now those values would generally be considered normal, bottom end of normal but still normal.

But some labs do set different reference marks, can I confirm that's what the bracketed numbers are.

If they are the reference numbers, they are a little on the narrow side (trying to avoid pubmed so we'll go here for a reference.

With values like this, you'd expect a retest and probably some free (sometimes known as resin uptake/thyroid-binding globulin) hormone tests to confirm.
Was this done?

Also, couldn't your low TSH be just what we would expect to see after treatment with T3 & T4.
TSH is produced by a regulatory negative feedback loop regulated by T3 & T4, with which you are supplementing yourself.

You mention the importance of treating people with both T3 & T4, this seems unsupported by the best quality literature and the studies done by the people you mention seem to be of poor methodology.

Skinner, unusual choice of journal and a non-controlled study finding largest, unusual dose response pattern and mainly subjective results.

Thyroid about has mention of some studies but in the context of mixed results and that standard practice should be T4.

Lowe treated 7 patients back in the late 90s, none of which made it into a medline indexed journal. He did get a paper in the un peer-reviewed, slightly bizarrejournal Medical Hypothesis though.

TPA make a big deal out of two unpublished conference papers by Das & Lewis. These came out 2007 & 2008 so I guess there is still time for them to appear but it would seem premature to rely on them just now.

You end one of posts with an appeal that your case should be taken as evidence of the value of T3 treatment in non chemically proven hypothyroidism.
But it is impossible for one individual to rule out all the sources of bias that could confound these experiences:

Natural History
Regression To The Mean
The Hawthorne Effect
Limitations of Memory
Variable Attrition
Placebo Effect

Which is why we test therapies in very controlled conditions.
And T3 therapy (and biochemically unproven hypothyroidism) seems to be found lacking when we do.