• Welcome to Phoenix Rising!

    Created in 2008, Phoenix Rising is the largest and oldest forum dedicated to furthering the understanding of, and finding treatments for, complex chronic illnesses such as chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), fibromyalgia, long COVID, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), and allied diseases.

    To become a member, simply click the Register button at the top right.

From the 1st annual XMRV conference

bullybeef

Senior Member
Messages
488
Location
North West, England, UK
Could someone also explain the following, please:

Dr. Coffin I mean its still possible to entertain the idea that the disease causes the virus, and not other way around in a sense... or makes visible a virus thats actually very prevalent, but its really such a low level in some, couple of cells somewhere in people, it only comes up because of the conditions surrounding these diseases

Based upon this possibility, if healthy people are XMRV+, they must have the disease, or ME. Now if these healthy people have no symptoms, then there is a contradiction.
 

August59

Daughters High School Graduation
Messages
1,617
Location
Upstate SC, USA
Goose Bumps!!

This is what's occurring over in Sandra Ruscetti's lab...I think the following paragraph sums up what is actually going on far better than the conference Q&A did...it kind of cuts the bs and lets us know where we are and what the next steps are...happy days!!!


We are currently using knowledge and reagents obtained from working with mouse retroviruses to study the xenotropic MuLV-related human retrovirus XMRV, which was recently discovered through an association with prostate cancer. In collaboration with the laboratories of Judy Mikovits and Frank Ruscetti, we were able to use antibodies developed against the envelope protein of SFFV to detect infectious XMRV in the blood cells and plasma of patients suffering from the neuroimmune disease chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). We were further able to develop a seroconversion assay using cells expressing the SFFV envelope protein to detect antibodies against the virus in the plasma of CFS patients. We now plan to apply our knowledge of the pathogenesis of mouse retroviruses that cause cancer and neurological disease in rodents to study the molecular basis for similar diseases associated with XMRV. We are in the process of developing rodent models for determining the biological effects of XMRV in vivo, which if successful will provide a small animal model for preclinical testing of potential anti-XMRV drugs. In addition, we are testing both in vitro and in vivo the biological effects of the envelope protein of XMRV, which like its related SFFV counterpart may be responsible for the pathogenicity of XMRV.

Collaborators:

Collaborators on this research are Dr. Frank Ruscetti, Laboratory of Experimental Immunology, CCR, NCI; Dr. Larry Keefer, Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis, CCR, NCI; Dr. Judy Mikovits, Whittemore Peterson Institute; Drs. Candace Pert and Michael Ruff, RAPID Pharmaceuticals.

Now is not quite the time to lose hope, we are on the radar!!!

It sure would be a great day when we get a time line on how all this will play out. I haven't ever heard of Comparitive Carcinogenesis or Rapid Pharmaceuticals?
 

Esther12

Senior Member
Messages
13,774
Based upon this possibility, if healthy people are XMRV+, they must have the disease, or ME. Now if these healthy people have no symptoms, then there is a contradiction.

What if XMRV is endemic, but there's something about CFS patients which means that the virus is easier to detect within them?

If this were the case it would hopefully lead to more clues about the nature of the condition.
 

Otis

Señor Mumbler
Messages
1,117
Location
USA
I think it would knock peoples socks off. That phrase right there really re-invigorated my support of the Campaign. We need to go on the OFFENSIVE! We have put up with crap for so long - I think we have to as bold as possible. If we go over the top a bit we go over the top but we have to catch peoples attention!

Yes! I was confounded by the lack of the light-bulb moment that this virus is in the healthy population and blood supply when the Lo-Alter paper came out. It was almost all about the history of CFS, confusing studies, blah, blah, blah.

I had really hoped that another, more urgent message, would come to the fore. "Holy crap this is a big deal for ALL people and we should figure out how this is transmitted and how it makes people sick". Then CFS and prostate cancer patients benefit as a byproduct of the general concern of protecting public health. After all, we didn't need the press to tell us what it meant, we alrady knew!

The shot wasn't heard down the block. let alone around the world.
 

shannah

Senior Member
Messages
1,429
Collaborators on this research are Dr. Frank Ruscetti, Laboratory of Experimental Immunology, CCR, NCI; Dr. Larry Keefer, Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis, CCR, NCI; Dr. Judy Mikovits, Whittemore Peterson Institute; Drs. Candace Pert and Michael Ruff, RAPID Pharmaceuticals.



It sure would be a great day when we get a time line on how all this will play out. I haven't ever heard of Comparitive Carcinogenesis or Rapid Pharmaceuticals?

Very Interesting Info on Their Site:

http://www.rapidpharma.com/front_content.php

RAPID Pharmaceuticals is a modern biotech company focused on the use of small-chain amino acids to stop the spread of immune and inflammatory diseases, including HIV, within the body. These amino acids, known as cell receptor active peptides, work by attaching to the same receptors in healthy cells used by these diseases to invade the unaffected cells, thereby blocking the diseases' spread and progression.


RAPID's peptide breakthrough, patented in 2008, came with the discovery of a way to synthetically produce stable cell receptor active peptides which mimic the active and natural state of the body's naturally occurring peptides. Unlike naturally occurring peptides, however, which dissolve almost instantly once they are released in the body's bloodstream, RAPID's patented technology keeps them active for up to 16 hours through its synthetic production process. This provides constant protection for the body's healthy cells.



RAPID's peptide treatments aim to be non-toxic and highly effective because the peptide's small size allows to fully attach to a healthy cell's receptor and therefore to a great extent block the disease's contamination of that cell.



Rapid's peptide research shows promise for treating some of the major chronic degenerative and inflammatory illnesses of our time, and which so far are largely untreated:



HIV/AIDS

Schizophrenia
Alzheimer's

Autism

Neuro-Inflammation

Psoriasis

Atherosclerotic Heart and Vascular Disease

Multiple Sclerosis

Rheumatoid Arthritis

Malaria
 

pine108kell

Senior Member
Messages
146
What if XMRV is endemic, but there's something about CFS patients which means that the virus is easier to detect within them?

If this were the case it would hopefully lead to more clues about the nature of the condition.

This assumes they keep following the path and don't throw up their hands if XMRV is a passenger. They need to keep digging further and find out WHY we have these abnormalities even if it is not the big smoking gun. This is critical.
 

shannah

Senior Member
Messages
1,429
More on Rapid Pharmaceuticals
http://www.rapidpharma.com/front_content.php?idcat=60

RAPID is developing a novel class of small stable peptides with few or no side effects that target specific chemokine receptors, which are important in blocking the spread of AIDS, psoriasis, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis and other inflammatory diseases. Since all viruses use receptors to infect cells and chronic inflammation underlies many degenerative conditions, RAPID's technology is generally applicable to other viral diseases. This is in particular of great interest due to the pandemic nature of these ailments.
 

Otis

Señor Mumbler
Messages
1,117
Location
USA
George said:

The problem I have with the PMLVs being in the same family of Gamma viruses they all have similar sequences in the LTR's (long term repeaters). If you don't isolate and cross reference several hundred sequences you really don't know what you've got. I was ecstatic that Dr. Coffin said it out plain and simple that the sequences that Dr. Alter and Dr. Lo pulled tell us absolutely nothing. They may be Polytropic or they may be Xenotropic. There are less than 700nt per each sequence and you really can't tell from that. Even going off of the env sequence is questionable because many MLV's in the Gamma grouping share the some of same env sequences.

This is a very, very important point. Half (4) of the sequences are close to 700nt and the other half were 206-314nt. In playing around with these in BLAST and comparing them to each other and to mouse sequences it was obvious that these were far too short to classify with confidence.

The WPI must have some additional sequences, I sure would love to know more about them.
 

leela

Senior Member
Messages
3,290
I wonder if the RAPID people are doing what Kary Mullis (inventor of PCR) is talking about here...I think it would be great to get him involved at RAPID, WPI, anywhere there is a sincere interest in defeating retroviruses. I posted a link to his interview in a another thread (it's fun to watch the video) which is here:
http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/mullis10/mullis10_index.html I wish I knew how to get him in touch with the Players in XMRV/MLVs....

EAT ME BEFORE I EAT YOU! A NEW FOE FOR BAD BUGS

[KARY MULLIS] We're working on a way to manipulate the existing immune system so it can attack things it's not already immune to. We've been controlling bacteria for years with antibiotics, but the bacteria are catching on. We've never been good at controlling viruses unless we prepare for them well in advance by vaccination, but now we can use the same method for them too, and in both cases the cure is not administered until you are infected, and it works right away. It sounds to good to be true, so did antibiotics—they called them "miracle drugs."

In order to understand what we're doing, I should explain how the immune system works. Most people know you've got this system, but not how it actually functions down on the level of molecules and cells.

It's a collection of lots of different kinds of cells, each with their own purposes. There are about as many as you have in your brain distributed mostly in special areas all over your body. The business end of the system is a set of hungry cells that will destroy and ingest things that are designated by the whole system as being "other." The rest of the system is charged with preventing them from eating anything else. New cells are always being born. And they are right away tested for their ability to make antibodies that attach themselves onto things that are "other". Antibodies are molecular markers.

If they make antibodies that attach too something that's "you," the immune cells are killed and also eaten. Not much goes to waste. There is a very clever selection process underway. Right after an immune cell, is born, a special part of its DNA is scrambled uniquely. The scrambling is done largely by an enzyme we picked up from a retrovirus we got infected by maybe 60-80 million years ago--not "we" actually but rather something maybe slimy but with teeth, which was dreaming about becoming us in the long course of evolution. The virus managed to get into the genome of our germ plasma. About half of our genome, by the way, is picked up from viruses: used genes. It's shocking and a little humbling to hear this. As a result of DNA scrambling, every new immune cell is genetically uniquely encoded, in one region, to produce a particular protein structure which has never been seen before and that hopefully will have the ability to bind to some structure which at the time is unknown.

If it makes a protein which binds to anything currently in your body, that anything is most likely going to be "you," and so the cell is killed. But if the protein, which is referred to now as a B-cell receptor, can't bind tightly to anything presently around, then the new cell is allowed to live. These young immune cells are escorted around your body looking at various tissues to make sure there's nothing native in you that its B-cell receptor will bind hard to.

After that, it's just left alone, or it hangs out in a lymph node. It probably gets a medal indicating it's legal. If now something foreign appears in your body that it CAN bind to, a reasonable assumption is that the thing is not you. There are other cells that sense when there are increasing numbers of this foreign thing, indicating that it could be a threat, and an immune response gets underway. What began as a lone cell, with the ability to make an antibody resembling its unique B-cell receptor except that the antibody can be excreted in quantity, gets a new medal or two and is instructed to divide itself as fast as possible, and the daughter cells start pumping out the antibodies. The antibodies attached to the invader are an invitation for all kinds of specialized immune cells to have their way with it.

The elapsed time since the foreigner arrived could have been weeks.

It took a long time for scientists to understand how it is that from a limited genome, we can make antibodies that bind tightly to anything at all. Something from Mars could show up in your body and you could make an antibody to it. It didn't make sense. There wouldn't be enough information in your DNA to make a strong binding site for all possible entities. Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet came up with the explanation just offered.

It generally works.

One of the problems is that the immune system might not figure out that there is a foreign entity present until that entity has already multiplied rapidly. A bacteria can reproduce itself every 30 minutes, and so the numbers go up really fast when you get infected with a bacteria. If the right cells are not there in the little spot where the bacteria is, it may take quite a while before your immune system responds.

This long bureaucratic process by which the right cell is put to work can be described as a hierarchy of immune cells having to make a lot of decisions. The question would be whether this thing is reproducing rapidly enough that we need to make a response at all? And if so, what kind of a response? And every single action your immune system takes causes some collateral damage. It's like you're going to go to war or you're not going to go to war. And so it's not a cheap thing to do, for one thing. It's a serious decision.

It usually takes a couple of weeks before you really have a strong immune response to any particular new thing.

This immune response lasts until there are many antibody receptors on the growing clone that are left empty. When the system senses an abundance of these, it realizes the foreign thing is gone. It is like an army withdrawing from war. Most of those cells, specifically suited to fight the defeated entity, are slowly eliminated. A few of them are kept, like keeping a reserve. They're called memory cells, so if you ever run into that thing again, there's at least a thousand cells to start with instead of one. This way, you can make an immune response faster.

I started thinking about this and how we might help it along. It occurred to me that there are certain powerful immune responses that we have from shortly after birth, and we keep them powerful, prepared to act at any time. They target things that are fairly common in our environment.

One of these things is called the alpha-Gal epitope. It's a fairly simple trisaccharide which happens to be chemically synthesizable in a lab. About one percent of our immunity is devoted expressly to it.

What if you could chemically alter those antibodies with a drug, such that they would bind to something else? Something that you had just contracted, and you would like to be immune to today.

Instead of your immune system having to figure out what you have — a hospital lab could figure it out. Perhaps a patient has staphylococcus aureus. Chemists could devise a linker molecule which on one end would bind to some part of Staph, and on the other end, it would sport an alpha-Gal epitope. The alpha-Gal antibodies would bind to the alpha-Gal and thereby to the Staph.

It's a clever trick and so far, it works. It is applicable to any organism that has something specific on its surface, and all organisms do. It's a matter of pride.

We can now easily look through the literature of the ten or twenty different organisms that are starting to escape antibiotics to determine what their surface proteins are. You always find some little fragment that stands out. Just like if you were looking at a person, you could say this person has got a funny little ear, and he's always going to have it when I run into him. If I can get something to clamp to his ear, that itself is attached to an alpha-Gal epitope, I've got him. That's the way the immune response works. It doesn't stick to the whole organism but basically finds some feature on it that's sticking out somewhere.

So I'm looking for something that's always going to be on an organism that I expect to be a problem soon. Staph has a neat little spot where it has to have a receptor for picking up iron when it's living in a human. It has one kind that picks up the haem group from our hemoglobin, and takes it inside the staph cell. It's got to have that all the time. The reason for this is because Staph has to interact with a protein, created by the Staph, that goes out and gets the haem, brings it back, and docks with it. This feature of the Staph is always present on its surface, always conserved in the structure. If it messed with the structure, for example mutating it fast, then it wouldn't fit with the docking protein, the thing couldn't get iron, couldn't grow inside you, and you wouldn't have a problem.

I look through the structural information that's already accumulated by a thousand people in the world who study staphylococcus in a broad sense, and I say, well, here's a peptide, a ten amino acid peptide that looks like an unstructured kind of loop. It's wonderful that all that information is there, without having to go into a laboratory. Some people might find it boring, but I find it really exciting. I'm looking for the Achilles heel of any organism that needs to be taken off the street.

Once I find a possible target, colleagues can employ processes to discover relevant aptamer molecules to bind it. Our system uses 'aptamers', a relatively novel class of DNA/RNA binding molecules, which were originally discovered in a systematic manner using the clever Selex process, invented by Craig Tuerk twenty or so years ago, and are now being explored for a variety of applications through use of Selex and other methods.

Aptamers will bind very specifically to the target, and with high affinity — meaning that they attach to the given target but not to other targets, and to that given target strongly. It is fairly complicated, but chemists have come a long way from turning lead into gold. They use a machine to make single-stranded DNA, not the double kind in a spiral, but single strands. We want a known sequence of about 20 bases on the left end and a known sequence of 20 bases on the right end. Then in the middle we want about 30 bases, which are randomly selected from a bottle with all four bases in it. That means we have a potential for about 10^18 different molecules in the same tube. That's more than the number of stars in the visible universe. Even one copy of each of them would not fit in a test tube, so we have to be content with about 10^11, which is more like the number of stars in our own galaxy.

Some of them will bind to our target. They will be retained by a small column containing many copies of our target immobilized on a solid support. We wash the non-binders away, and using the polymerase chain reaction, we make billions of copies of the binders. We can do this because we know what sequence they all have on their ends and we can make short primers to match these. Now we sequence a few of them completely, and with the sequence in hand, we can synthesize large amounts.

All that is left to do is stick a synthetic alpha-Gal epitope on the aptamer and we have a drug. That's how it works in theory.

When I first started working on this, about ten years ago, the molecules that we made were not at all stable in serum. There are lots of enzymes that destroy foreign DNA. It also seemed likely that the kidney would dispose of such a drug right away once we started putting it in animals.

Following a suggestion from Jeeva Vivekananda we have found several innovative ways to stabilize the aptamers in the circulation, and these are currently under further investigation. Anyway, that is how we explain their serum stability to ourselves and the fact that in our first in vivo trials in rats, our drug that was designed to bind to the lethal factor, which is part of the anthrax toxin mechanism, saved the lives of the nervous rats who had been infected with a lethal dose of anthrax.

It was a very impressive experiment. We did it over and over again, and it definitely worked.

Now we are starting to work with organisms that are more likely to appear in a hospital, like staph and influenza, and we have our sights on Clostridia difficile, Pneumococcus aeruginosa, Acetinobacter baumanii and an alarming number of other bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics. We are also working on influenza, which has a convenient little feature called M2e.

It's very promising, in my opinion, because the process for making the drug is prescribed completely.

A lot of different labs had to cooperate to make it. It's not something simple like PCR, for when I invented that, I could do it all by myself. But in the case of anthrax, you've got to have a lab that's used to doing it, or you'll end up killing yourself. You need an infectious disease lab and you need people that know how to raise and medically support small animals. It's a complicated process.

What I do personally is the research, which I can do from home because of the Internet, which pleases me immensely. I don't need to go to a library; I don't need to even talk to people face to face. I do travel to the labs. At Brooks Air Force Base in San Antonio, where we did the anthrax work, we are now working on a couple of strains of e-coli that are bothersome and dangerous.

Drugs that kill lots of different organisms breed many resistant strains of bacteria. They pass little things called plasmids freely around that contain instructions for making the resistance proteins. It's like somebody standing out on the corner giving out leaflets and not just to other members of its own species. That is why resistance to organisms is spreading rapidly.

When Alexander Fleming first discovered penicillin, his boss, Almoth Roth said bacteria would become resistant to it. It took longer than Roth thought, but it is happening. The narrowly directed drugs won't make bacteria resistant to them because they don't effect every other organism: they're not going to bother your e-coli or bother all the other organisms in your mouth and in your body. Once they are out of your body, they won't be effective at all. This is an important point. If you take penicillin, you excrete half of it. It goes down into the sewer in low, sub-clinical doses. It doesn't kill all the things in the sewer, but it definitely makes them start developing a resistance to penicillin. Most antibiotic resistance may not arise in our own bodies but elsewhere.

I've gone to the pharmaceutical companies with this concept and they know it is a great idea. I expected them to buy in, but they didn't. It doesn't look like our drugs will make them $3 billion in the first year, which is their model. They like blockbuster drugs that people take on a daily basis. You spend the $200 million to get it approved, and then you have ten years or so of an exclusive market on it. During that time, resistance to the drug might start happening, but you still have a proprietary product all the way through.

That's the economic model. It's not a good long-term strategy, because once you get resistance to one drug, you have resistance to that whole class of drugs, and there are most likely a limited number of classes. We're running out of antibiotics. But people will catch on. This is a good thing. We will produce a pipeline of antibiotic-type drugs. They're not really antibiotics in the sense that they don't kill bacteria; they urge your immune system to do it. They say "eat me!."
 

julius

Watchoo lookin' at?
Messages
785
Location
Canada
Fear-monger.
If you want people to pay attention is normally best to emphasise the danger posed to themselves rather than expect a compassionate response to the suffering of others.

Yes, unfortunately that is exactly how the human animal works. So sad, but true.
 

anciendaze

Senior Member
Messages
1,841
I'm going to engage in the vile habit of quoting myself, because something I added to an earlier post got no response.
Added: In reading over the transcript, I ran across an objection to the statement that retroviruses generally don't just sit there without causing illness. (Omitting endogenous virus.) The speaker was not identified, but their specialty was gibbon ape leukemia virus, which they said produces no neoplasms. They may be right, but I want to place bounds on possible rate of incidence. Even if, as stated, every gibbon in American zoos is infected, and no neoplasms have been seen, I wonder at the total number monitored as carefully as humans. What I found in references is that there are 15 species grouped in 4 genera. This makes me think there could be an incidence of 1:10,000 in any particular species which would not be detected. Anyone have better data?
I'm trying to set bounds on our ignorance here. The statement that exogenous retrovirus infections are generally not benign was a 'rule of thumb'. The objection dealt with a particular counter-example with limited data. This might also be called a 'rule of thumb'.

What I've been getting when I translate our confidence about cancers in gibbons to humans is that the statement could be perfectly accurate and still have unacceptable implications for human health. If the incidence is 1:10,000 infections, and 20,000,000 are infected in the U.S. alone, that would mean about 2,000 cancers in the present population. NCI studies cancers affecting smaller numbers. Considering the small populations of some rarer gibbons, we might be missing an incidence of 1:1000, particularly if immune dysfunction is the first sign. The same numbers would boost this to 20,000 cases in the U.S.

The bottom line is that, yes, HMRV might not be causing cancers or neurological disease, but our confidence in data from animal studies is not great enough to rule out enough of a problem to justify a significant research effort. (And, how do you measure cognitive deficits in gibbons?) This is simply background reasoning, without considering Ila Singh's surprising statement about the apparent incidence of lymphomas in humans with infection.

This subject is going to be investigated in depth.
 

julius

Watchoo lookin' at?
Messages
785
Location
Canada
I'm guessing a bit here, but I imagine that there are many bacteria and viruses that activate our immune systems but that don't actually cause disease, illness or any symptoms.
A totally successful immune response might not have any symptoms or illness associated with it.

Doesn't any immune response involve at least some inflammatory processes? That in itself is a symptom, and one that causes actual discomfort in the patient.
 

julius

Watchoo lookin' at?
Messages
785
Location
Canada
Coffin's About Face

This is from the interview with Dr. Coffin, done by forum member Rrrr on May 14, 2010.

Q. What has to happen to prove XMRV is the cause of CFS, rather than a mere association? How many more papers would we need to establish consensus on XMRV as the cause of CFS? When will those papers come out?

A. ** How do you know if XMRV is the cause of CFS? If you treat the infection, and if you thus address the symptoms, then you know. Though others in his field may not agree the time is right, he would like to see a controlled clinical trial with antiretrovirals now: if they work to treat the symptoms, then we are on to something. Individuals doing this experimenting with antiretrovirals is not helpful like a controlled clinical trial. But with that said, he would like to read the xmrv positive doctor's blog on her ongoing self-experimentation with antiretrovirals. I should send him that link to her blog. [Interviewer's note: Better yet, maybe she should email him directly?] I asked how we could get this type of controlled clinical trial going, as I am ignorant of that world, would we need the NIH, a willing doctor, what? He said yes to the NIH and to an interested doctor. [Interviewer's note: Not sure if we NEED both or just one?] I suggested the Infectious Disease doctor I plan to see in July at Mass General Hospital and he said that would be good. When I asked how do we get a doctor on board without a paper confirming/replicating the link between XMRV and CFS, he said that this is the problem, can you get a controlled clinical trial before that association is confirmed? He said that is hard, but that he would like to see such a trial now, without more waiting.

Any thoughts on why he has changed his mind so completely since then?
 

cfsme23

Senior Member
Messages
129
Location
England
This is from the interview with Dr. Coffin, done by forum member Rrrr on May 14, 2010.



Any thoughts on why he has changed his mind so completely since then?

I don't think it's healthy to speculate, there could be 101 reasons why there appears to be a shift in position...I know it's easy to think the worst in situations like this but we are already agonising enough on this whole situation. Come the end of the Q&A yesterday Coffin was already mooting perhaps a small trial cohort so in all reality there isn't exactly a siesmic shift away from the above.
 

Esther12

Senior Member
Messages
13,774
Any thoughts on why he has changed his mind so completely since then?

Scientists love to emphasise how very sceptical, cautious and meticulous they are to one another. I think that it was just down to the culture at places like that - everyone behaves differently around different groups of people.

Maybe he's also read about some of the experiences of those on ARVs and realised how difficult it is to judge improvement with an illness like CFS where there's often some variation in subjective symptoms.

I don't think it's healthy to speculate

But it's such fun!

Thanks Esther, you've been very helpful.

Could something be endemic, and yet be within numerous other associated disease like fibromyalgia, GWS, and autoimmune diseases?

BB

I just love empty speculation. I'd have thought it's possible that their could be some shared abnormality with those conditions... but this is all increasingly wild theorising. It's very easy to say it is 'possible', but I've no idea if it's 'likely'.
 

julius

Watchoo lookin' at?
Messages
785
Location
Canada
He said in the Q&A that CFS is almost certainly not caused by the active replication of HMRV (paraphrased). He did make that point emphatically.

It's a scary prospect. It leads me to think he knows some facts we (and the rest of the people there) do not.
 

Berthe

Senior Member
Messages
136
Location
near Antwerp
Fear-monger.

"Has ignoring this group of patients allowed an incurable retrovirus to contaminate the blood supply and infect up to 7% of the American popualtion?"

There was a quote from some virologist describing CFS as a classic example of a disease likely to be caused by an unknown pathogen. Is it really a good idea to put so little research into developing a basic understanding of the illness? When it could pose a risk to normal healthy people rather than just those pathetic ill types?

If you want people to pay attention is normally best to emphasise the danger posed to themselves rather than expect a compassionate response to the suffering of others.

I totally agree!!! In a matter of fact I'm shocked that there was no news about this yesterday. I did expect some 'thrill of horor' of the scientists or the bloodbank because of the risk of getting contaminated. That they obviously didn't panic emphasizes the idea that the disease isn't that horrific in some peoples eyes.

Love,
Berthe
 

pictureofhealth

XMRV - L'Agent du Jour
Messages
534
Location
Europe
George - your post #493 A Dog's Opinion (!) blew me away.

What a brilliant hypothesis/analysis of the political manoeuverings & power struggles which could very well be going on behind closed doors. I have to say Judy Mikovits looked shattered by the Q&A yesterday evening.

And yet, the NIH, CDC, the WPI and others are also currently part of a working group, assembled specifically to be closely collaborating, sharing and checking each other's blood samples, investigating the integrity of the blood supply ..cooperating as a team on the face of it.

There's a lot at stake which could lead to a tense working environment at best - and at worst, well - its cut throat !

So I guess the only other group to add to the equation/the mix is SAIC (with the military links). Now the question is - who invited them and to which group do we suppose the SAIC will gravitate?