I have the second copy of Maciocia's book, published in 2008. I've extracted the chapter on CFS for those who are interested:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/qmm2a6wqlyfzivr/MECFS-ChineseMedicineMaciocia.pdf?dl=0
Excellent! I'm seeing a big problem here already, in the section explaining the Western medical perspective:
In the fourth model, there is an interaction among external insult (virus), depression and fatigue in a closed circle without being able to identify what is primary (Fig. 41.5). This last model is close to the Chinese medicine view of body and mind.
It should be obvious that 1) depression is not a symptom of ME, and most patients do not have it, and 2) the use of "fatigue" evidences a complete lack of comprehension of the disease. The book also favors Western definitions and descriptions which are not in use by anyone, based on the work of authors I've never heard of.
The author also states:
Modern Chinese medicine books do not have chapters on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: therefore, the theory of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome presented below is the result of my experience in treating many patients suffering from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome over several years.
So he is not operating from methods developed over thousands of years, but rather is operating based on his own subjective perceptions. This is a problematic approach, as it especially subject to unconscious bias.
And how CFS supposedly becomes CFS after an infection:
What causes the formation of a residual pathogenic factor? Why are some invasions of Wind expelled without any further consequence and some are not? In my opinion, there are five main causes that favour the formation of a residual pathogenic factor:
• Weak constitution
• Exposure to cold, dampness or wind too soon after an invasion of external Wind
• Irregular diet
• Not taking care during an acute illness
• Antibiotics (they neutralize bacteria but they donot resolve Dampness or Phlegm. On the contrary,
they promote Dampness or Phlegm by weakening Stomach-Qi).
So why doesn't everyone end up with ME when they're eating crap, not resting during illness, and going out into the cold after being ill? It's the American lifestyle in a nutshell right there. And conversely, why didn't those of us who eventually developed ME instead develop it earlier when exhibiting exactly the same behavior during previous viral infections?
The metaphor of a burglar is used to describe the activity of a pathogen. Supposedly the burglar breaks in, and everything is fine once we get him out. But if he's killed then his body (the bacteria) somehow continues to be a "residual pathogenic factor". Chinese herbs are touted as being superior in that they supposedly help the immune system to do its job instead of killing the bacteria and leaving its polluting corpse behind.
This is quite a bizarre claim. How does the author think that the immune system gets rid of bacterial infections? By scaring them into running out of a bodily orifice? The immune system kills bacteria, just as antibiotics do. And supporting the immune system isn't going to work very well if the immune system is doing the wrong things in the first place.
And the author's view of CFS, plainly stated:
I personally consider the essential manifestations of true Chronic Fatigue Syndrome to be in four main groups:
1. A pronounced muscle fatigue and ache
2. Poor memory and concentration
3. Exhaustion
4. A persisting, intermittent, general flu-like feeling.
No mention of PEM. I guess there's not an element or herb for that?
Case Study #1 doesn't sound at all like ME to me:
After the meningitis she felt extremely tired and experienced a feeling of heaviness and ache of the limbs. She also felt hot and thirsty. On interrogation, she said she experienced a sticky taste in her mouth and had an excessive vaginal discharge. She also had some abdominal pain and her stools were always loose. Her memory and concentration were poor and she sweated at night sometimes.
Case Study #2 could very well be OI, not ME:
A 53-year-old woman complained of exhaustion, muscle fatigue and ache, a quivering of the muscles, poor memory and concentration, a feeling of muzziness and heaviness of the head and headaches. All these symptoms started after a viral infection 3 years previously. . . .
Cast Study #3 can also explained entirely by OI:
A 33-year-old man had suffered from exhaustion for the previous 4 years. He felt especially tired after eating, he sweated at night and his limbs felt heavy, tired and achy. He also experienced dull headaches when tired. . . .
Case Study #4 hasn't even been sick long enough to be diagnosed with ME/CFS. Post-Viral Fatigue Syndrome is quite likely:
A 28-year-old woman complained of total lack of energy, aches and fatigue of the muscles for the past 3 months. . . .
Case Study #5 somehow has had CFS for 2 years, but only had consistent viral symptoms for the past two months. So it sounds like two years of chronic fatigue followed by two months of post-viral fatigue syndrome:
A 31-year-old man had suffered from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome ever since he caught a viral infection 2 years previously. He had had another viral infection 2 months before he came for treatment, from which he had not recovered and experienced severe muscle fatigue and ache. . . .
Case Study #6 again is of insufficient duration and completely inapplicable symptoms:
A 59-year-old woman suffered from exhaustion, weakness and aching of the muscles, weight gain and craving for sweets. All her symptoms had started 5 months previously, soon after returning from Thailand.
Case Study #7 again sounds pretty different from ME:
Case history A 22-year-old man had been suffering from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome since the age of 8 . . . . He came for a consultation when he was 21. At that time, his main symptoms were as follows. • Muscle ache • Extreme fatigue • “Brain fog” • Dizziness • Blurred vision • Insomnia, irritability • Poor memory and concentration • Mouth ulcers • Abdominal fullness and pain • Thirst, dry lips
Case Study #8 ... no idea, but it's not ME:
A 47-year-old woman had been feeling extremely exhausted for the previous 10 years. She had had acupuncture for a long time but this did not help her consistently. Her other symptoms included: a feeling of heaviness, a feeling of heat, hot feet in bed at night, thirst, slight ache in the muscles, insomnia and scanty-dark urine.
Case Study #9. This is getting ridiculous:
An 11-year-old girl had come down with a sore throat and tonsillitis 2 months before she came for treatment.
Case Study #10. Duration too short, post-viral fatigue syndrome at most:
A 13-year-old girl had had an influenza-like viral infection 4 months previously. This persisted and was not treated for 1 month, after which she was given antibiotics.
Case Study #11. It might actually be ME! I've changed the paragraphing so it makes slightly more sense:
A 40-year-old woman had been suffering from what had been diagnosed as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for the previous 6 years. All her symptoms started after contracting influenza during her second pregnancy. During this acute infection she felt completely exhausted and could hardly walk.
She never recovered after this infection and continued to feel exhausted, shivery and experiencing a general flu-like feeling. Her muscles ached and felt very quickly fatigued after the slightest exercise. Her head felt muzzy and her short-term memory was poor.
Four years after the initial infection she contracted a new one that severely aggravated her symptoms. She had a pain in the spine and occiput, a numbness of her face, headaches, sore eyes, breathlessness, palpitations, a weakness of the right arm, diarrhea, and weak legs. She felt shivery and sweated.
This condition lasted for 5 months during which time she was in bed most of the time. At the time of her consultation these symptoms had disappeared but she still felt exhausted and shivery and had a flu-like feeling most of the time. The ache in the muscles had subsided while the fatigue remained.
Case Study #12. Sounds like a mood disorder + OI, perhaps:
A 59-year-old woman had been diagnosed as having had Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for the previous 4 years. She could not say exactly how it started. Her main symptoms when she came for treatment were: feeling “flat”, constipation, “racing feeling” with palpitations, ache and fatigue of muscles after the slightest exertion, exhaustion, “lacking energy and incentive”, passing water three times a night, backache, dizziness, tinnitus, feeling cold, breathlessness with palpitations, cold hands, flu-like feeling like a “burning coldness”, prone to catching colds after a shower or washing hair.
It sounds like approximately 1 out of every 12 of the "CFS" patients he sees actually have something resembling ME/CFS. So he's probably not a good source for theories about ME/CFS diagnosis, pathology, or treatment.
My general impression of TCM from the book is that there is a lot of philosophy or mysticism involved, and little science. Much as with homeopathy and similar treatments, I think that's just fine for people who desire that sort of treatment. And as with homeopathy, I get a little annoyed when baseless scientific claims are made or implied.
It's one thing to say that Chinese Medicine doesn't operate in the same framework as Western Medicine, but there is no Chinese Science versus Western Science. There's just science, and I'm not seeing any of it here. The Chinese Medicines explanation fall quite flat when they try to venture into scientific explanations and justifications, and it's probably much more honest and less provocative to simply understand and describe those unscientific mechanisms as beliefs or philosophies.