I find this study interesting because of the gluten intolerance angle in particular. I suspect some ME patients are actually undiagnosed celiacs. Many patients have resorted to going gluten-free with only minimal impact on their symptoms. However, such patients may need to remove other foods know to be
gluten cross reactive from their diets.
Although I have been gluten free for years without any real progress, I recently started a diet free of gluten cross reactive foods (in addition to gluten) and had significant improvement to my gastro issues, to the extent that I have been able to reduce my medications by 80% within a matter of weeks.
My personal history may be of interest to those with similar symptoms. I have gastro intestinal issues along with cognitive and PEM and OI and meet ICC. I was diagnosed non-celiac by biopsy and gluten intolerant by blood test.
I was able to moderate the gastrointestinal bloating and reflux by taking proton pump inhibitors and H2 blockers as well as going gluten-free. However my GI issues were still significant. I have been gluten free for about 10 years. I noticed no reduction in any other symptoms.
My ME symptoms in general have slowly worsened to the extent that I am out of bed for at most 2 hrs a day and even then I am unsteady, weak and have some vertigo.
By chance, I recently came across an article about
Dermatitis herpetiformis, a blistery rash associated with CD, particularly during teen age years. I recall that I did have this issue for about five years, mainly on my hands and feet during my teenage years. Doctors said they believed it was something caused by stress (meaning they didn't know what it was).
Suspecting that I may have CD, I also chased up material on diagnosing celiac disease and now believe that testing for CD can be very unreliable, due to many factors, including false negatives, new understandings of the disease pathways, whether or not the sufferer has begun a gluten-free diet, and methodology.
Furthermore, there is also a body of research that links neurological issues to gluten intolerance, with some research suggesting that there is more than one pathway to celiac symptoms.
I also came across several articles and some research that focussed on celiacs not improving after going gluten-free, but who later did improve after removing so-called gluten cross reactive foods from their diets as well as gluten.
Previously, I had tried many times to reduce the medications for my GI problems, without success. Yet within two weeks of removing cross-reactive foods from my diet I am now almost medication-free. I have less bloating and no reflux at all.
I have no relief from my other symptoms, but this may take considerable time.
Note, the diet is savage. No coffee, milk, eggs, potato, grains, nuts. Death may be preferable.

However some of the articles suggested you may be able to add these back in after some months.