List of ME/CFS Recovery and Improvement Stories

Wishful

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Which criteria are you looking at?
I forget which one in the past had mention of exceptions, which is sensible since we vary so much. Maybe they've dropped that to tighten up selection for cohorts?

Whether you have cognitive or physical PEM doesn't matter, pacing applies to either or both.
I can't remember whether pacing actually made a difference for me. My PEM was short, just feeling lousy for part of the next day, so I didn't make much effort to pace myself. If I really needed to be functional the next day, I'd avoid obvious triggering activities.

Pacing wouldn't have applied to my cognitive-induced PEM, since it might have taken less than a minute of chatting to trigger it. Pace by only saying part of a sentence? I can't remember whether doing income taxes or trying to solve a difficult computer problem was affected by pacing, since those were necessary tasks and I just accepted having a lousy next day.
 
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I forget which one in the past had mention of exceptions, which is sensible since we vary so much. Maybe they've dropped that to tighten up selection for cohorts?


I can't remember whether pacing actually made a difference for me. My PEM was short, just feeling lousy for part of the next day, so I didn't make much effort to pace myself. If I really needed to be functional the next day, I'd avoid obvious triggering activities.

Pacing wouldn't have applied to my cognitive-induced PEM, since it might have taken less than a minute of chatting to trigger it. Pace by only saying part of a sentence? I can't remember whether doing income taxes or trying to solve a difficult computer problem was affected by pacing, since those were necessary tasks and I just accepted having a lousy next day.
Here's a great list of the different diagnostic criteria that have been used and are used now if you're interested.

Yeah, that's fair. Pacing can fall apart when you're severe. At that point I read it more as "stop, rest" rather than "stop, rest, pace" since the idea is to stay in your energy envelope, not just to take breaks. That's only part of it
 

Wishful

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since the idea is to stay in your energy envelope
There's the problem: I never had an energy envelope. My physical triggers seemed to be due to muscle damage (using muscles unusually) rather than duration of exertion, so pacing wouldn't apply. For cognitive activities, it also seemed to be due to unusual activities, such as chatting or dealing with a really challenging/frustrating problem, so again, pacing wouldn't apply.

I don't mind if the ME criteria exclude me from studies that are trying to find common elements. I wouldn't want to screw up a study by throwing numbers off. Since having an official diagnosis of ME wouldn't make any difference for me (no official treatment options or disability benefits, etc), I also don't care about fitting the criteria.

I wouldn't want the criteria to be so restricted that it predisposes decisions about how PWME are dealt with. Imagine if in order to get disability benefits, you had to prove that you had 28 specific symptoms, many of which were hard to actually measure. Likewise, unethical researchers could "prove" their theory by restricting cohort selection to whatever fits their theory.
 

Wayne

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@Hip -- I just did a Forum Summarizer query on this thread, and thought I'd post it here. Please feel free to delete if you don't think it's appropriate. -- Wayne

Please summarize the stories and testimonials and accounts of recovery on the following thread: https://forums.phoenixrising.me/threads/list-of-me-cfs-recovery-and-improvement-stories.80502/ Are there any common themes or treatment strategies that worked? Please make this summary as long as needed to get a good understanding of the various healing strategies employed by these people who have recovered.

The Phoenix Rising thread titled "List of ME/CFS Recovery and Improvement Stories" compiles patient accounts of treatments that led to full recovery or significant improvement in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) symptoms. Below is a detailed summary of the stories and testimonials, followed by an analysis of common themes and treatment strategies. The summary draws from various posts within the thread, focusing on specific cases and the approaches they used, while noting the diversity and individualized nature of the outcomes.https://forums.phoenixrising.me/threads/list-of-me-cfs-recovery-and-improvement-stories.80502/

Summary of Recovery and Improvement Stories​

The thread, initiated in 2020, is a repository of ME/CFS recovery and improvement stories, curated primarily by a user named Hip and supplemented by contributions from other forum members. It includes accounts of full recoveries (reaching remission) and substantial improvements (moving up at least one level on the ME/CFS severity scale: very severe, severe, moderate, mild, remission). The stories cover a wide range of treatments, from pharmaceuticals and supplements to lifestyle changes and alternative therapies. Below are key examples organized by treatment or approach, with details on the outcomes and context.

1. Pharmaceutical Interventions

2. Supplements and Nutraceuticals

3. Diet and Lifestyle Changes

4. Infection-Targeted Treatments

5. Alternative and Experimental Therapies

6. Other Notable Stories


Common Themes and Treatment Strategies​

The thread highlights a striking diversity in treatments, with no universal cure emerging. However, several themes and strategies recur across the stories, reflecting both the complexity of ME/CFS and the individualized nature of recovery. Below are the key patterns:
  1. Targeting Underlying Infections:
  2. Immune Modulation and Inflammation Reduction:
  3. Gut-Brain Axis and Microbiome Support:
  4. Mitochondrial and Energy Metabolism Support:
  5. Personalized and Multi-Pronged Approaches:
    • Most stories involved combinations of treatments tailored to individual triggers (e.g., infections, diet, stress). Patients often experimented extensively, adjusting protocols over months or years. For example, the patient using antivirals, diet, and gut treatments took four years for initial remission and nearly three more for sustained recovery.https://forums.phoenixrising.me/thr...ecovery-and-improvement-stories.80502/page-11
    • Key Observation: No single treatment worked universally; what helped one patient often failed for others, emphasizing the need for personalized medicine.
  6. PEM Management as a Gateway to Improvement:
  7. Dietary and Environmental Trigger Avoidance:
  8. Alternative Therapies and Idiosyncratic Successes:
  9. Time and Persistence:
  10. Potential Subclinical Conditions:

Critical Analysis and Limitations​


Conclusion​

The Phoenix Rising thread offers a rich tapestry of ME/CFS recovery and improvement stories, showcasing both hope and complexity. Treatments range from pharmaceuticals (Mestinon, antivirals, LDN) to supplements (NAG, thiamine, C60), dietary changes (trigger avoidance, autoimmune protocols), and alternative therapies (oxygen, cavitation surgery). Common strategies include targeting infections, modulating immunity, supporting gut health, enhancing mitochondrial function, and managing PEM, often in combination over years. However, the idiosyncratic nature of responses—no treatment works for everyone—underscores the need for personalized, experimental approaches backed by comprehensive testing. While inspiring, the stories also caution against expecting quick fixes, as relapses and variability are common. For patients, the thread suggests persistence, adaptability, and a willingness to explore multiple avenues as the path to recovery or meaningful improvement.https://forums.phoenixrising.me/threads/list-of-me-cfs-recovery-and-improvement-stories.80502/https://forums.phoenixrising.me/threads/list-of-me-cfs-recovery-and-improvement-stories.80502/page-7https://forums.phoenixrising.me/thr...ecovery-and-improvement-stories.80502/page-11
2025-04-13 22:05:59
 
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Wishful

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Alberta
You can add me under LDN. It completely blocked my ME pain, and after 2 years on it, the effect was permanent (at least that pain hasn't returned).

One problem with your list is that it gives the impression that these are the only recoveries known for each treatment, or that these are verified, since the list doesn't include claims for success from magnetic bedding, colored lights, or other alternative treatments that few people would believe.

Another problem: you are ascribing the recovery to a given treatment, but the patient was actually trying several treatments at the same time (also leaving out the possibility of an unknown factor being responsible), which gives a false impression that one specific one was responsible for the recovery.

I'm not convinced that this summary will help more people than it will harm by its biases.
 

Rufous McKinney

Senior Member
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13,739
I just did a Forum Summarizer query on this thread, and thought I'd post it here. Please feel free to delete if you don't think it's appropriate. -- Wayne
very clever, and this is valuable and it might be feasible to read it, versus 14 pages on the thread.

I've discussed LDN in different threads: I guess the computer/query can't determine that.

A huge challenge in this Forum is threads vanish, sometimes for years. And threads proliferate a bit like Paramecium. I wonder how many Success story improvement story recovery story threads exist in this place?
 
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