I have come late to this thread but have found it very interesting. One neurologist told me I had a psychologically induced movement disorder, after I spent a week in a neurology ward being treated appallingly
(and which left me feeling traumatized
). Later his registrar went as far as a doctor can to apologise for how I had been treated, muttered about atypical MS and suggested I not come back to neurology.
I became ill in 1968 when I took a summer flu. I was diagnosed with ME before CFS was invented and have all the classic symptoms such as sudden onset and high titres to Coxsackie B3 and B4 but my symptoms have always been mainly neurological with episodes of paralysis, lack of speech and, as a teenager, absence seizures. I could not stand still for any length of time, it was easier to walk than to wait for a bus, and I have the classic ME response to exercise of being able to lift a heavy bag once, but not a spoon to my lips over and over.
I became very disabled in my thirties, the technical terms would be kinesogenic and non-kinesogenic paroxysmal dyskinesia with dystonia and also periods of blindness that were most likely MS (I have acquired autoimmune diseases over the years such as psoriasis, frontal fibrosing alopecia and sjorgens syndrome, my immune system is really shot) I have been going to hyperbaric oxygen treatment since then which has stopped a deterioration and baclofen controls the movements enough to allow me to feed myself and not give my husband too many black eyes
Over the years I have come across a few people with ME who have developed paroxysmal dyskinesia and I became friendly with an MS patient who had it. She was told that there is a genetic propensity and her doctor felt that a person at risk will develop it if they get another neurological disease.
I have read widely over the years and came across some interesting things but I cannot really give references, sorry. One paper about eyes was quite jargon dense but I think what he was saying is that nerve signals travel from the eyes to the brain but if the nerve is damaged the growth factor which begins healing lets signals travel back up the nerve as well. Also read that damaged nerves can regrow with lots of smaller weaker nerves (imagine the arm with the fingers at the end) This magnifies pain signals but could apply to other things as well.
All this leads me to believe that what is happening to me is that the virus is damaging my nerves but when they heal the signal is no longer "pure" and I get a wobble that gets worse the more I repeat an action. Years of this has led to all the connections being loose so that the signals get screwed up.
I am sure that mitochondrial damage is at the root of all our problems and the biochemistry of that is going forward
in leaps and bounds so hope exists even after all these years. My GP treats me symptomatically and I ask no questions because I do not want to know what he thinks is causing my problems.
As for psychogenic illness!!! The "pseudocoma" really did it for me - if your eyes roll the wrong way then it is psychological!!!
Blood clotting takes something like 12 steps, each genetically controlled and a recent New Scientist headline read "Blood clotting - not as simple as we believed" yet we are asked to accept that an organ as massively complex as the brain can only go physically wrong in a few ways and the rest is to fill an emotional need. I wonder if they listen to themselves.
Any claim that a treatment will only work if you believe in it is not scientific whether you are a homeopath, a faith healer or a neurologist. I have never been able to work out what I was expected to do when they said I had no physical need to be in a wheelchair. Should I have said "thank you doctor" and got up and walked out? Not even a laying on of hands!
I have lived long enough that I have seen scientific certainties come and go. Do not let them make you doubt yourself - or label you.
love Mithriel