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How many of you started the me/cfs after having epsteinn barr?
A good example of how PWME are similar and different. I developed those intolerances (but no digestive problems), then got food poisoning which stopped the type IV sensitivity. I had a second correction of an intolerance from food poisoning recently, so food poisoning can be an effective treatment for me.I honestly don't know besides that I started getting bad digestive issues in 2012 and slowly started losing tolerance to most food forcing me to go vegan, then I had some food poisoning event
ME is infectious. The term was invented for the Royal Free outbreak. Royal Free can't be tied to EBV, since EBV hadn't been discovered yet. CFS was named after the Incline Village outbreak. Also infectious. This was associated with EBV. Research over the years has found EBV-associated immune deficits. The immune systems of patients are hyporesponsive to EBV, but not other viruses or bacteria. ME/CFS is associated with increased lymphoma risk in several studies. EBV is associated with lymphoma. It was discovered in lymphoma patients, actually, and only later discovered to cause infectious mononucleosis/glandular fever.AFAIK, my ME started as a type IV sensitivity to oranges. I had that reaction slightly for decades, then it blew into full flu-like symptoms. I managed to stop that reaction, but the symptoms persisted, and I eventually realized they fit the criteria for ME. I don't know whether that immune reaction triggered my ME, or if I triggered the ME some other way and it caused the type IV sensitivity.
A good example of how PWME are similar and different. I developed those intolerances (but no digestive problems), then got food poisoning which stopped the type IV sensitivity. I had a second correction of an intolerance from food poisoning recently, so food poisoning can be an effective treatment for me.
FWIW, eliminating EBV hasn't proven itself an effective cure for ME. Viruses of various types seem to be common triggers of ME, but don't seem to be the cause of it. I think it's an immune response that commonly triggers ME, but what triggers the immune response doesn't really matter.
It might be useful to figure out the commonality of those immune responses that do trigger ME. I can't recall anyone reporting that their trigger was a type I allergy, so that might rule out some immune responses. T-cells might be more likely, but maybe there's a common subset, or a ratio between one type of t-cell and B-cells or some such thing. I think that line of research might be more rewarding than focusing on EBV.
That is a funny thing to say since it isn't possible, therefore hasn't been tried.FWIW, eliminating EBV hasn't proven itself an effective cure for ME.
from what I have gathered, the virus may not be replicating and therefore, maybe it was never "eliminated". Its possibly gone into hiding.eliminating EBV hasn't proven itself an effective cure for ME.
but EBV has existed despite whether humans knew that or not.Royal Free can't be tied to EBV, since EBV hadn't been discovered yet.
I have a NH lymphoma diagnosis (at age 70) The lymphatic system is most affected by all this.ME/CFS is associated with increased lymphoma risk in several studies. EBV is associated with lymphoma. It was discovered in lymphoma patients, actually, and only later discovered to cause infectious mononucleosis/glandular fever.
In my case I got the ebv tested positive, I received prednisone for a week or few days in order to treat sore throat, they told me rest for months but I have never been the same since then, with the years I am getting worse (even now I got IgM (VCA) ebv positives and highs IgG (VCA) titers)Mine started most likely immediately after an EBV infection - although the testing was inconclusive (which I still don't understand). In addition, they started me immediately on prednisone which was often done in the 90's I think, but then the testing was inconclusive so they immediately stopped it.
My symptoms were pretty mild after that, until about 5 years later when I got a Hep B vaccine and traveled to SE Asia and got sick. That combination over a 7-day period wrecked my health - been dealing with it every day since.
AFAIK, my ME started as a type IV sensitivity to oranges. I had that reaction slightly for decades, then it blew into full flu-like symptoms. I managed to stop that reaction, but the symptoms persisted, and I eventually realized they fit the criteria for ME. I don't know whether that immune reaction triggered my ME, or if I triggered the ME some other way and it caused the type IV sensitivity.
A good example of how PWME are similar and different. I developed those intolerances (but no digestive problems), then got food poisoning which stopped the type IV sensitivity. I had a second correction of an intolerance from food poisoning recently, so food poisoning can be an effective treatment for me.
FWIW, eliminating EBV hasn't proven itself an effective cure for ME. Viruses of various types seem to be common triggers of ME, but don't seem to be the cause of it. I think it's an immune response that commonly triggers ME, but what triggers the immune response doesn't really matter.
It might be useful to figure out the commonality of those immune responses that do trigger ME. I can't recall anyone reporting that their trigger was a type I allergy, so that might rule out some immune responses. T-cells might be more likely, but maybe there's a common subset, or a ratio between one type of t-cell and B-cells or some such thing. I think that line of research might be more rewarding than focusing on EBV.
Has that been proven? Clusters of victims doesn't necessarily mean an infectious cause; there could be other environmental factors involved (chemical in water supply, or some such thing). It could be an environmental factor that made people more susceptible to a specific microbial strain, but the disease itself isn't infectious. I don't recall any proven cases of it being transmitted through body fluids.ME is infectious.
It wasn't an allergic (type I hypersensitivity) reaction. Type IV is more similar to a viral response.So your allergic reaction to oranges does not fit ME diagnosis.
Other people report similar on/off responses (not at will) and ability to do physical exertion far beyond my bike rides and hikes (one did serious bodybuilding). If we knew what ME's mechanism was, I expect the diagnostic criteria would allow a lot more cases that don't fit the present criteria. When you have a malfunction involving a lot of interacting subsystems, there's potential for some individuals to have a variation in those subsystems that bypasses, blocks, or otherwise alters the typical mechanism.Nor do your symptom patterns of going on hours long hikes and being able to turn your symptoms on and off at will.
I don't have any food allergies, and the type IV reaction disappeared after food poisoning, so I assume a microbe was responsible for the immune cell malfunction. Increased risk of lymphoma doesn't mean that all PWME must have it, so I don't see the connection.Nor would food allergies seem to be associated with lymphoma
I haven't bothered to become and expert on EBV, so I assumed that there are ways to eliminate it. If the available treatments can't completely eliminate it, I would still expect the treatments that reduce it or reduce its effect on cells to show a reduction in symptom severity. PWME who are worse when they have an active infection--of EBV or other virus--don't prove that the virus is the cause of ME, but rather than the immune response might be responsible for the increase in symptoms.That is a funny thing to say since it isn't possible, therefore hasn't been tried.
Since you're interested in a link between EBV and ME, here's a question for you: what is unusual about the body's immune response to EBV? Is it causing an unusual ratio of cytokines (I say ratio, since no one has found a single abnormal cytokine level for PWME)? Is it altering a pathway involved in the immune response? Identifying such a thing could lead to understanding why ME gets triggered, and maybe to why it stays in that abnormal state.Research over the years has found EBV-associated immune deficits.
The immune irregularities in ME/CFS are similar to those seen in EBV-associated autoimmune conditions, such as rheumatod arthritis, lupus, and Sjogren's syndrome.Since you're interested in a link between EBV and ME, here's a question for you: what is unusual about the body's immune response to EBV? Is it causing an unusual ratio of cytokines (I say ratio, since no one has found a single abnormal cytokine level for PWME)? Is it altering a pathway involved in the immune response? Identifying such a thing could lead to understanding why ME gets triggered, and maybe to why it stays in that abnormal state.
No doctors ever suggested antiviral medication for my many viral assaults. Maybe they only existed in recent years.when I obviously needed antiviral medication.