Martial
Senior Member
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- 1,409
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- Ventura, CA
I think this is the BIG question. While the LYME/M.E debate rages across the forums and FB groups this is the one question that would help to answer the bigger question - are M.E and Lyme the same thing, or does Lyme cause M.E?
@Martial it sounds very much like a form of GET that you are arguing for. Unfortunately for a vast majority of us on this forum who have M.E and Lyme we are too sick to consider making ourselves feel worse before we feel better. I haven't been able to exercise in 6 years AT ALL and that usually also includes normal walking. When you are so ill that just being out of bed or talking on the phone for too long causes PEM, or having a shower or getting dressed can set you back months or years how on earth can those patients even consider ANY form of exercise?
I tried for a few years to add in ONE yoga stretch, even 3 times a week and it was too much. Hell, my whole life is too much! there is no way I would now try and add in any kind of exercise - im living on the edge all the time as it is.
I am not too familiar with the ins and outs of GET, but exercise itself will not solve issues without the accompanying Lyme treatment in this case. Although sometimes I have heard it helping or resolving some peoples symptoms, but yes that is exactly why I said you need a strong assessment to figure out if you can handle taking on any kind of physical exertion first. People that are bed ridden are not yet ready to take on any kind of physical activity program for those obvious reasons, first being able to at least have some level of functioning that would at least allow someone to be able to go on walks is important.
People with severe M.E. are obviously not in this category though, and their focus if treating lyme would be solely on the treatment itself until they can sustain a better level of functioning, and have at least minimal exercise without setting themselves further back. In terms of speculation between M.E. and Lyme disease it seems that both categories have such vast differences in symptoms, and clinical presentation with patients that it is very hard to be able to tell distinct differences between the two groups of people.
However between the two severe M.E. is definitely in a level of severity and illness above and beyond the typical cases of Chronic Lyme, and CFS diagnosis that is more commonly seen. Between the two diagnosis' it seems there are similar issues and dysfunction that affect the body in the same way though i.e. Neuro/immune and cognitive dysfunction are common in both. Perhaps then in each case the difference is the driving factor that sets these cascading factors of dysfunction that needs to be solved, which seems to be a bit different between each patient case. I believe a cure could effectively neutralize these issues though, regardless of too much variations between trigger or ongoing causes in symptoms. Perhaps then a coinciding treatment would just vary case by case?