Wondering what the community consensus is on this, in light of the current scientific evidence
I've seen examples of a few people that have managed to cure or mitigate their CFS symptoms with certain discoveries and interventions for example one found it was due to a thyroid issue, another found that taking nitrous oxide helped, then there was a guy from china just this week that found he had a documented type of neurological autoimmunity, others have success with antivirals etc
Thoughts on how this relates to the development of seemingly accurate diagnostic tests ?
maybe the underlying cell behavior is the same despite different underlying causal factors,
or perhaps these people would be the outliers, such as the % of non responders to rituximab ?
Or do we think there is a 'core' of CFS which is as yet untreatable, and the people that have been cured don't have this 'core' CFS, would it be fair to say that is the 'real' disease and the others are just similar looking ?
That doesn't seem particularly fair to me though because it seems to downplay their experiences and its also reminiscent of a ' no true scotsman' fallacy.
I've seen examples of a few people that have managed to cure or mitigate their CFS symptoms with certain discoveries and interventions for example one found it was due to a thyroid issue, another found that taking nitrous oxide helped, then there was a guy from china just this week that found he had a documented type of neurological autoimmunity, others have success with antivirals etc
Thoughts on how this relates to the development of seemingly accurate diagnostic tests ?
maybe the underlying cell behavior is the same despite different underlying causal factors,
or perhaps these people would be the outliers, such as the % of non responders to rituximab ?
Or do we think there is a 'core' of CFS which is as yet untreatable, and the people that have been cured don't have this 'core' CFS, would it be fair to say that is the 'real' disease and the others are just similar looking ?
That doesn't seem particularly fair to me though because it seems to downplay their experiences and its also reminiscent of a ' no true scotsman' fallacy.