G
Gerwyn
Guest
I was reading an article Kurt recommended about the search for retroviruses in various illnesses. (See my HERV and XMRV thread in this subforum.)
The odd thing about this study is that Kurt's article talks about how people with various autoimmune/ inflammatory conditions commonly produce antibodies to a retroviral/ HERV fragments leading to false-positive antibody results. I think CFS, whatever the cause, is a chronic inflammatory state (supported by some prior studies). If so, the odd thing is the ABSENCE of antibodies in the whole CFS group (except one person) in this study. I would expect more CFS subjects to have antibodies, even false-positive antibodies. Or, as discussed earlier, if by entirely random chance, the same percentage of antibodies as the controls.
Which leads me to think about the one sentence the researchers give about CFS subjects unable to produce antibodies due to poor immune status. Here's a truly wild thought............they did mention a very small number of controls having neutralizing antibodies specific for XMRV. What if they could characterize that antibody more and produce it as vaccine therapy for CFS sufferers? I'm skipping a whole bunch of steps here but this makes me wonder.........................
I recently posted my concerns re the abnormally high levels of endogenous retroviruses in the control group due to the various ilnesses they suffered from---these are all associated with high levels of endo proteins--I could not understand however why they included pregnant women as well but------
Endogenous retoviruses are involved in placental differentiation and immunosuppression during pregnancy So the entire control group had massively greater expression of endogenous retroviuses than the normal population.The chance of any PCR test not producing positive results in this control group would be microscopically small!