Hi, all.
The more I read and hear from people, the more I believe that the role of Rituximab and other immune suppressants in ME/CFS is to lower the inflammation, and hence the oxidative stress, allowing glutathione to rise. If it rises enough to break the vicious circle involving the B12 functional deficiency, the partial methylation cycle block and the folate draining, the person recovers. If not, when the drug treatment wears off, down they go again. It has occurred to me, and some others have suggested this also, that doing methylation treatment while suppressing the immune system, at least somewhat, might help more people to achieve recovery. This is just a hypothesis, and would have to be entered upon very carefully, with supervision of a licensed physician. I would be leery of continuing to suppress such an important part of the immune system indefinitely.
I think that concluding from this study that ME/CFS is an autoimmune condition would be following a red herring. It could cause a lot of effort to be wasted in the wrong direction. That's just my opinion, and as always, I could be wrong.
Best regards,
Rich
The more I read and hear from people, the more I believe that the role of Rituximab and other immune suppressants in ME/CFS is to lower the inflammation, and hence the oxidative stress, allowing glutathione to rise. If it rises enough to break the vicious circle involving the B12 functional deficiency, the partial methylation cycle block and the folate draining, the person recovers. If not, when the drug treatment wears off, down they go again. It has occurred to me, and some others have suggested this also, that doing methylation treatment while suppressing the immune system, at least somewhat, might help more people to achieve recovery. This is just a hypothesis, and would have to be entered upon very carefully, with supervision of a licensed physician. I would be leery of continuing to suppress such an important part of the immune system indefinitely.
I think that concluding from this study that ME/CFS is an autoimmune condition would be following a red herring. It could cause a lot of effort to be wasted in the wrong direction. That's just my opinion, and as always, I could be wrong.
Best regards,
Rich