Thanks for the replies,
Have the WPI put forward any recommendations? I guess not if people are trying different medications. Also am I right in thinking that you have to be closely monitored while on anti-virals?
It would be interesting to know if peoples viral load drops while taking them etc?
1) The WPI didn't put forward recommendations about taking antiretrovirals. However, they really want to do clinical trials with such drugs.
2) You're right, I believe - you have to be monitored by a doctor, and I guess that would be twice as true if you'll have significant side effects.
3) Well, there almost haven't been studies about viral load drops with antiretrovirals (regarding XMRV) until now, but there is one interesting study that was performed by the WPI and the NCI, as well as by an oncologist who has Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL) which wasn't treated for 3 years, and also have CFS. He started taking antiretrovirals (AZT, soon after that raltegravir, and I think that in some point also tenofovir) and there seems to be some improvement in his cancer measurments (still not enough time and not clear enough to tell that this is a real improvement) and there is also what seems as a big improvement on measurements of cytokines and chemokines that are realted to ME/CFS. He also feels better, and it's just 100 days (not long enough, I believe). Regarding your question, an interesting thing in that study was that before the study XMRV was detected in that doctor in his plasma and CLL cells, and after 100 days and infectious XMRV dissapeared.
You can see details about this study in the following PowerPoint file:
http://files.me.com/jdj88/p4f821