Ninan
Senior Member
- Messages
- 526
Thanks so much @Jonathan Edwards for being here and answering questions. It really means a lot.
I am trying Methorexate, beginning next week, for ME/CFS. I’m a pretty severe case, bedbound most of the time with extreme sensitivity to noise and light (I’m on a kind of weird combo of drugs right now and that’s why I can use my computer, but it only lasts for a couple of months at a time). I also have a mild case of psoriasis, I’ve had double sided joint inflammation (when exercising, so I obviously don't have them anymore) since I was ten and lots of autoimmunity in my family (RA, AS, MS etc). I know there are lots of different opinions on whether trying a drug like this is a smart move or not but I haven’t had a cold or a flu for seven years (I felt much better when I did) and I haven't found anyone with ME/CFS who got worse from methotrexate. Not expecting much more than nausea though. (I have a wonderful doctor who’ll be keeping an eye on my blood works etc.)
My question which I’m sure you’ve heard before is about what medicines out there could be worth studying. We’re all pretty anxious about getting on with our lives and if there are any relatively cheap, easy administered immunomodulators or -suppressants maybe we could have some more trials like the Dutch one with Anakinra.
Methotrexate is one. We know it helped one of the patients who responded to rituximab in the first Norwegian trial (not sure what dose they got, though) and there are stories of people recovering completely even though most ME/CFS-patients who receive it for psoriasis etc don’t seem to have much of an effect. Another one that I’ve found while following the MS field is Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate). It’s a drug that’s been used to treat psoriasis and is now approved for relapsing forms of MS.
Do you think Tecfidera could be a candidate for ME/CFS-treatment? And are there any other drugs out there that fit the description? I understand completely that you cannot recommend anyone to try drugs when there is no research (some say we have nothing to lose, but I'm bed bound and still have a lot) but it would be interesting to hear if there are more like these out there and if you have any idea whatsoever about which ones would be worth a study. Thanks!
I am trying Methorexate, beginning next week, for ME/CFS. I’m a pretty severe case, bedbound most of the time with extreme sensitivity to noise and light (I’m on a kind of weird combo of drugs right now and that’s why I can use my computer, but it only lasts for a couple of months at a time). I also have a mild case of psoriasis, I’ve had double sided joint inflammation (when exercising, so I obviously don't have them anymore) since I was ten and lots of autoimmunity in my family (RA, AS, MS etc). I know there are lots of different opinions on whether trying a drug like this is a smart move or not but I haven’t had a cold or a flu for seven years (I felt much better when I did) and I haven't found anyone with ME/CFS who got worse from methotrexate. Not expecting much more than nausea though. (I have a wonderful doctor who’ll be keeping an eye on my blood works etc.)
My question which I’m sure you’ve heard before is about what medicines out there could be worth studying. We’re all pretty anxious about getting on with our lives and if there are any relatively cheap, easy administered immunomodulators or -suppressants maybe we could have some more trials like the Dutch one with Anakinra.
Methotrexate is one. We know it helped one of the patients who responded to rituximab in the first Norwegian trial (not sure what dose they got, though) and there are stories of people recovering completely even though most ME/CFS-patients who receive it for psoriasis etc don’t seem to have much of an effect. Another one that I’ve found while following the MS field is Tecfidera (dimethyl fumarate). It’s a drug that’s been used to treat psoriasis and is now approved for relapsing forms of MS.
Do you think Tecfidera could be a candidate for ME/CFS-treatment? And are there any other drugs out there that fit the description? I understand completely that you cannot recommend anyone to try drugs when there is no research (some say we have nothing to lose, but I'm bed bound and still have a lot) but it would be interesting to hear if there are more like these out there and if you have any idea whatsoever about which ones would be worth a study. Thanks!
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