No, however I lack the knowledge level of biology to properly understand many (most?) of those research papers. When I read about something like endothelial permeability, based on some p-value threshold, I cannot judge it properly. When it's a small study and a small effect, I don't place strong value on it. A study might claim evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction in muscles, but even when my ME symptoms were awful (for me), I could still lift heavy things or ride my bike 40 km in hilly terrain, so I consider that strong evidence that my mitochondria were pumping out ATP without problems. I'd expect vascular dysfunction to limit physical capacity too, so a study showing small effects in some people is less convincing to me than my own experience.You literally ignore ALL evidence that refutes your narrow-minded, niche, unusual, and unsupported view of how ME/CFS works. You are deliberately ignorant of the research that has been published.
As for the brain being a likely cause, that's easy for me to accept, since I can liken humans to computer-driven robots: one transistor failure in the CPU can cause major problems, yet be extremely difficult to locate the failure. I could imagine the robot showing overheating motors, or power supply fluctuations, or other analogs of connective tissue or vascular dysfunction, caused by that single transistor failure. You can claim that it's obviously a motor or wiring dysfunction based on some measurements, but replacing those components wouldn't fix the problem.