Hip
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An ME/CFS patient discovered that high doses of an easily-digestible protein such as whey protein 160 to 200 grams daily, in combination with zinc 25 to 100 mg daily, completely eliminated his "horrible paralysing dehumanising fatigue".
He did not obtain any benefits from taking these two supplements individually, but noticed major effects when taken in combination.
He wrote:
His theory is that ME/CFS is a catabolic state, and in this state there is not enough albumin in the blood, which means zinc is not transported efficiently via the blood circulation (albumin is the main transport protein for zinc in the blood).
He thinks by consuming a lot of protein, you increase albumin levels, thus allowing zinc to be transported again. One study found that whey protein consumption does increase albumin.
My guess is the benefits he obtains from the protein + zinc protocol might be somewhat idiosyncratic, and may not work for most other ME/CFS patients (but that's true of all ME/CFS treatments). Nevertheless, if anyone has a supply of digestible protein and a zinc supplement at home, it might be worth trialing this combo.
Low blood albumin (hypoalbuminemia) is a recognised medical condition, often found in hospitalised individuals, critical illness, kidney disease, heart failure and sepsis.
Symptoms of low albumin include: fatigue, weak muscle tone, frequent urination, dark-coloured urine, loss of appetite, difficulty breathing, swelling in the feet and legs, jaundice.
He did not obtain any benefits from taking these two supplements individually, but noticed major effects when taken in combination.
He wrote:
So it looks like the improvements manifest very fast, within a day or two.The improvement of my symptoms set in after one or two days after increasing protein on the first day and starting zinc on the second day. Now I’m getting both each day for the past 14 days and this is the result.
His theory is that ME/CFS is a catabolic state, and in this state there is not enough albumin in the blood, which means zinc is not transported efficiently via the blood circulation (albumin is the main transport protein for zinc in the blood).
He thinks by consuming a lot of protein, you increase albumin levels, thus allowing zinc to be transported again. One study found that whey protein consumption does increase albumin.
My guess is the benefits he obtains from the protein + zinc protocol might be somewhat idiosyncratic, and may not work for most other ME/CFS patients (but that's true of all ME/CFS treatments). Nevertheless, if anyone has a supply of digestible protein and a zinc supplement at home, it might be worth trialing this combo.
Low blood albumin (hypoalbuminemia) is a recognised medical condition, often found in hospitalised individuals, critical illness, kidney disease, heart failure and sepsis.
Symptoms of low albumin include: fatigue, weak muscle tone, frequent urination, dark-coloured urine, loss of appetite, difficulty breathing, swelling in the feet and legs, jaundice.
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