Jesse2233
Senior Member
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Hey everyone,
I spent the weekend up at Stanford talking to researchers, giving samples, as well as a good amount of time talking with Ron and Janet (a profound experience I will write about elsewhere).
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One of the things discussed at Stanford and with Ron was the electrical impedance assay which continues to accurately separate CFS patients from healthy controls.
This led me to wonder if blood conductivity is a marker for:
The major caveats here are:
I spent the weekend up at Stanford talking to researchers, giving samples, as well as a good amount of time talking with Ron and Janet (a profound experience I will write about elsewhere).
---------
One of the things discussed at Stanford and with Ron was the electrical impedance assay which continues to accurately separate CFS patients from healthy controls.
- It's not yet known why this is happening, and the assay has not yet been tested on other diseases (e.g POTS, Lyme, MS, Lupus, Hep C, HIV), or healthy individuals in fatigued states (e.g. students post finals, athletes after competitions).
- While researching ozone therapy I discovered a study indicating ozone (O3) treatment can help improve the electrical conductivity of stored blood by modulating levels of ATP, Na+ / K+ / Cl- (1).
- A separate study found that as the shelf life of stored blood increased, its electrical resistance dropped along with the capacitance of cell membranes and the product's viability for blood transfusions (likely due to RBC lesions) (2).
This led me to wonder if blood conductivity is a marker for:
- Overall health, illness, and energy states
- A distinct biomarker for CFS
- Levels of ATP and electrolytes
- Statistical noise due to electronic variance
- A complex combination of factors relating to measuring instrumentation, genetics, subject health (e.g. mito function, blood flow, chronic pathogens, autoimmunity, biotoxicity), inscrutable fluctuations in biochemistry, and random electronic variance
- Something else entirely
The major caveats here are:
- More research needs to be done as sample sizes have been small and limited in scope
- The two studies above were looking at stored (ex vivo) whole blood conductivity whereas Stanford is looking at individual cell impedance under induced stress
- Biochemistry and electrical engineering are two disparate fields whose connections are still in the nascent stages of understanding