Bob
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Just an observation of my own illness, which perhaps fits with the auto-immunity hypothesis...
ME patients are supposed to have a higher statistical chance of having thyroid problems than healthy people.
I can't remember the exact details, and I can't find the information, but I think there's a slightly higher risk.
Dr Dan Peterson, a well known expert ME clinician in the US, observed it in his ME patients:
Dr Peterson hypothetically associates the autoimmunity with EBV, but that's not the point I want to make here.
I developed autoimmune hypothyroidism about 3 years after the ME.
After another two years, at the same time as the ME was gradually improving, the hypothyroidism corrected itself, so I no longer needed medication.
A while ago, for a year or two, with careful pacing, my ME had been relatively stable, gradually improving over time, and then, one regrettable day, feeling over-confident over-optimistic, I massively over-exerted myself, with a major relapse to follow a few days later, after a short period of mild flu-like symptoms.
At exactly the same time as the ME relapse, my thyroid functioning seemed to go haywire, with alternating symptoms of low and high thyroid levels over a monthly cycle. (NHS tests have only detected abnormal TSH readings, and normal thyroid levels, for my latest blood tests, so I am making some assumptions.)
I don't know if it's significant, especially as we each have our own different set of symptoms, but I think it's an interesting observation.
Edit: I'm not suggesting that thyroid disease is in any way a causative factor for ME, or that it causes ME symptoms. The two conditions are completely separate diseases, although there can be similarities in symptoms with ME and hypothyroidism. I just mean that a subset of ME patients have co-morbid ME and a thyroid disorder.
ME patients are supposed to have a higher statistical chance of having thyroid problems than healthy people.
I can't remember the exact details, and I can't find the information, but I think there's a slightly higher risk.
Dr Dan Peterson, a well known expert ME clinician in the US, observed it in his ME patients:
He noted that many of his patients have autoimmune thyroiditis and recent research has indicated that some of the proteins that EBV produces look very much like thyroid proteins. If the immune system targets those EBV proteins for destruction it could end up targeting the thyroid as well: i.e. autoimmune thyroiditis.
http://phoenixrising.me/archives/12042
Dr Peterson hypothetically associates the autoimmunity with EBV, but that's not the point I want to make here.
I developed autoimmune hypothyroidism about 3 years after the ME.
After another two years, at the same time as the ME was gradually improving, the hypothyroidism corrected itself, so I no longer needed medication.
A while ago, for a year or two, with careful pacing, my ME had been relatively stable, gradually improving over time, and then, one regrettable day, feeling over-confident over-optimistic, I massively over-exerted myself, with a major relapse to follow a few days later, after a short period of mild flu-like symptoms.
At exactly the same time as the ME relapse, my thyroid functioning seemed to go haywire, with alternating symptoms of low and high thyroid levels over a monthly cycle. (NHS tests have only detected abnormal TSH readings, and normal thyroid levels, for my latest blood tests, so I am making some assumptions.)
I don't know if it's significant, especially as we each have our own different set of symptoms, but I think it's an interesting observation.
Edit: I'm not suggesting that thyroid disease is in any way a causative factor for ME, or that it causes ME symptoms. The two conditions are completely separate diseases, although there can be similarities in symptoms with ME and hypothyroidism. I just mean that a subset of ME patients have co-morbid ME and a thyroid disorder.