His name escapes me at the moment but he was an amercian psychiatrist who treated cfs/me and he classed it as a neurosomatic illness(Alex u will remember his name) and he had success in using drugs like ketamine etc. Now i wonder if drugs like this and being anaethatized helps our little brain by reducing inflammation etc. There has been occassions where people have had surgeries unrelated to cfs/me and have recovered or greatly improved. I think we have to remember that not only do we have infection/immune issues but also neurological(not psychological) problems too. Our body is under alot of stress from cfs/me, so turn off our brain and body may just gives us a break and a second 'wind'.Sometimes these drugs that affect our minds/brain can help us.
I dont think ketamine will reduce brain inflammation (aldo it could theoretically reduce excitotoxity)This is something i think some of us don't realise enough; every type of cell in our brain is in some way connected to the immune system or its messenger molecules.
Bellow are some scentences i got out of a review.
First of all the cells in the brain; Astrocytes, Microglia, Oligodendrocytes, endothelials cells (on BBB), neurons
Astrocyes are capable of expressing the full aray of immune signaling and detection systems.
In addition astrocytes play a role in maintaining glutamate homeostasis. The 2 main glutamate transporters who actively re uptake glutamate are primaily expressed by astrocytes.
...any change in local or general central immune signaling can have a profound impact on astrocyte function
Microglia; phagocytic cells
Oligodendrocytes; very sensitive recipients of immune signaling
Endothelial cells migth contribute to immune signaling within the CNS. After a tissue insult and the ensuing release of peripheral and central immune signals, the thight junctions become leaky, exposing the CNS to peripheral immune signals.
Neurons; the following neuronal changes have been reported in response to proinflammatory cytokines: up-regulation of cell surface expression of AMPA receptors, upregulation of NMDA receptor, down regulation of GABA.
Cytokines receptors exhibit high affinity.
Because of this high affinity, very low concentrations
of cytokines can cause a biological effect,
often at levels undetectable by current quantification
techniques. Within the CNS, cytokines can bidirectionally
communicate with each of the cell populations outlined
above, performing critical roles in homeostasis,
physiological responses to stress and immunological
challenges, and pathological conditions. These actions
occur via specific cytokine receptors and via direct cytokine
modulation of other receptor functions, such as
NMDA receptor cell surface expression and phosphorylation
So what i basically mean by this, is that the immune system can easily mess up the brain, which is probably going on in our cases.
At that time (when Goldstein designed his theory) not that much was known about the (chronic) effect of the immune system on the brain.
He started treating from a very distal point in the pathway, on symptomatic level, which was not healing but maybe the best he could do at that time.
I think he still deserves a massive amount of respect for what he has done.