Thank you for the kind and quick reply!
Here are two of the papers by the Otago researchers. I can only find the first one as a poster presented at a conference but I'll keep looking
1. Immunocytology and in vitro reverse-transcriptase activity in CFS
Abstracts of Papers Presented at
The Bi-Annual Research Conference of the
American Association for
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (AACFS)
October 10-11, 1998 -- Cambridge, Massachusetts
Authors M.I. Holmes, R. Easingwood, J. Cross, and J. Faed
Objective:This paper describes two blind clinical trials of paired, age, sex and ethnically matched patients with CFS; 24 pairs of patients and controls in the first, and 18 in the second. In the first, the range of duration of symptoms was 1 to 3.5 (mean 1.5) years and in the second 1 to 5 (mean 1.7) years. Peripheral blood lymphocyte (PBL) cultures were assayed in triplicate for reverse-tran scriptase (RT) activity, and examined by EM for the presence of virus-like structures at days 0 and 12 and CD2, 3, 4, 8, 16, 20, and 31, and B1 phenotypes were counted at day 0 by FACScan.
Methods:A single dose of 1 µg ml-¹Concanavilin A (Con A) was given to all cultures at day 0. At days 4, 8 and 10 they were given 4.5 ng ml-¹ human recombinant IL-2. Cells were harvested at day 12 for EM studies, and ultracentrifuged supernatants and cells for RT assay using a poly rA
ligo dT template-primer and measuring RT activity by uptake of tritiated thymidine triphosphate.
Results:In Trial 1, RT activity up to 3 times background was observed in 9, and virus-like structures in 7 of 24 patients, and not in controls. Group means showed a significant CD4 cytopenia. In Trial 2, RT activity at levels of 2 to 4 times background were observed in 5 patients, and virus-like structures were observed in 4 of these, and not in controls. Group means showed significantly reduced CD4/CD8 ratios and an NK cytopenia. RT activity and EM virus-like structures were seen almost exclusively in the cohort of patients who identified the onset of their condition with a non-specific, acute febrile illness and whose duration of symptoms was 2 years or less.
Conclusion: These studies suggest the
in vitro RT activity and the presence of virus-like structures in PBLs may correlate in CFS with patients who relate the onset of their condition to a non-specific, acute febrile illness.
2. Electron microscopic immunocytological profiles in chronic fatigue syndrome.
Holmes MJ,
Diack DS,
Easingwood RA,
Cross JP,
Carlisle B.
J Psychiatr Res. 1997 Jan-Feb;31(1):115-22.
Source
Department of Microbiology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
mike.holmes@stonebow.otago.ac.nz
Abstract
Structures consistent in size, shape and character with various stages of a Lentivirus replicative cycle were observed by electron microscopy in 12-day peripheral-blood lymphocyte cultures from 10 of 17 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome patients and not in controls. Attempts to identify a lymphoid phenotype containing these structures by immunogold labelling failed and the results of reverse-transcriptase assay of culture supernatants were equivocal. The study was blind and case-controlled, patients being paired with age, sex and ethnically matched healthy volunteers. Prescreening of subjects included the common metabolic and immunological disorders, functional conditions and a virus-screen against hepatitis B and C, Epstein-Barr Virus, Cytomegalovirus and Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
PMID:
9201653
[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]