I noticed an article about changes in glucose metabolism in the brains of Alzheimer's victims ( https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-020-0815-6 ) That led me to find https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4237995/ , which as about how insulin regulates some brain functions. Cerebral insulin affects food intake, which some member here have problems with. Cerebral insulin also affects cognitive function, which I think most of us have trouble with. Insulin transport into the brain is via astrocytes, whose function may be affected by ME (chronic immuoactivation).
I'm not claiming that this is the root cause of ME, or anything like that. I just thought it was a suspicious possible link, which might explain some symptoms for some PWME. Maybe someone more knowledgeable will think about it.
Another thing I noticed in the latter link was this:
"In multiple studies and several species (including humans), CSF has been used as a surrogate for brain ISF. Recent findings, however (vide infra), underscore that the composition of CSF measured in the cerebral ventricles or the subarachnoid space of the cisterna magna or lumbar spine is quite different from brain ISF. "
This makes studying ME's cerebral fluids even more challenging. Any findings from CSF samples, positive or negative, may be meaningless for what's going on in specific parts of the brain. I think ME involves glial cells, and the finding above means that working with CSF samples isn't enough.
Testing ISF is probably more expensive too. 


Just stuff to think about.
I'm not claiming that this is the root cause of ME, or anything like that. I just thought it was a suspicious possible link, which might explain some symptoms for some PWME. Maybe someone more knowledgeable will think about it.
Another thing I noticed in the latter link was this:
"In multiple studies and several species (including humans), CSF has been used as a surrogate for brain ISF. Recent findings, however (vide infra), underscore that the composition of CSF measured in the cerebral ventricles or the subarachnoid space of the cisterna magna or lumbar spine is quite different from brain ISF. "
This makes studying ME's cerebral fluids even more challenging. Any findings from CSF samples, positive or negative, may be meaningless for what's going on in specific parts of the brain. I think ME involves glial cells, and the finding above means that working with CSF samples isn't enough.
Just stuff to think about.