Hi everyone,
I've just finished my third day at the conference and my brain is FRIED. It has been very exciting for me to see and meet so many of the great people in the field of ME/CFS research and medical practice as well as bloggers, tweeters and fellow patients. It's a bit like being amongst rock stars or royalty! Hi Cort
I have been taking copious amounts of notes and now find myself totally overwhelmed about what to report and where to start.
As discussed previously the attendance has been good for both the patient day and professional days. I counted at least 4oo people for the patient day and slightly less for the other days.
I really liked the session on exercise in today's program. Betsy Keller from Ithaca College gave an excellent presentation about CPET- cardio-pulmonary exercise testing- and its ability to produce objective values that illustrate PEM. She started her talk by mentioning the previous discussions about definitions and the need for biological markers to determine whether a patient has ME/CFS .She then said that doing an exercise challenge as per the method done by the Pacific Fatigue Lab produces results that are like a biological marker for ME/CFS. She described her study in which patients did a CPET on day 1 to induce PEM, and then repeated the testing on day 2, in which she could determine the effect of PEM on functional ability. By looking at the outcome measures of VO2 max, HR max, Workload max, Anaerobic threshold, AT work, and the respiratory exchange ratio (RER) and comparing the 2 days of data they could VERY CLEARLY identify the patients with ME/CFS and also be able to document how this affected the patients ability to function.
Christopher Snell then gave a talk entitled The Importance of Exercise Challenge in which he went over hoe NOT to have an exercise challenge done. He stated that there are many indirect methods that are not good. He said the Pace Trial used one of these indirect methods and that the study was very poor. In order to get a proper exercise challenge it must have a direct assessment of aerobic capacity and must be done on calibrated equipment. He said that CPET is uniquely able to quantify the changes in efficiency with measures of both workload and metabolic activity. CPET has the ability to OBJECTIVELY document PEM in ME/CFS patients .
In the question section someone asked if these procedures are written somewhere and Dr. Snell said there are no guidelines written up. I want to look into this further since I am interested in having this type of testing done. I asked Dr. Keller if she takes patients from Canada and she said as far as she knows there would not be a problem with this. I'll be emailing her soon and will report back what happens.
OK, I'm really tired now and must go. I'll try to report in again about some of the other talks.
Gamboa