Guest guest Posted December 6, 2005 Report Share Posted December 6, 2005 Dr Cheney often had suggested comas that he wants to put CFS patients into (and i believe had 2 patients who went into 2 CFS- unrelated ones and fully recovered) which he thinks would cure them if it were safer, he would. > > > The truth is, leave it up to the people who can do it , Dr De > Meirlier, Dr Kerr, Cheney, . Let them represent us. > > > > > > When Dr diagnoses someone, he often says " You have CFS, > this illness is just as real as you describe. You're not crazy, or > at least, you may be crazy, but craziness has nothing to do with > this disease. A person can have CFS and still be crazy too " . > > Dr has written that people with CFS live less functional > lives and in more pain than people with HIV and that the prolonged > and chronic suffering in CFS is comparable to an AIDS patient in the > last year of life. > And you consider this illness to be some kind of a " learning " > disorder? > > If mental self destructive factors are such a driving force in CFS, > then the treatment is easy. Render the brain unconscious and > deprive the neuroreceptors of the programming resulting from this > negativity. Deprived of behavioral interference, the body should > soon heal itself and the patient can be revived. Of course, unless > the patient is mentally reprogrammed or placed on antidepressant > chemotherapy to eliminate their self destructive thinking patterns, > it will be necessary to render the person unconsicous at regularly > scheduled intervals - the longer, the better. > If you are serious about letting these particular doctors represent > us, please do so. > > None of them represent the illness model in this manner. > - > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2005 Report Share Posted December 7, 2005 " jasonlbreckenridge " < wrote: > > Dr Cheney often had suggested comas that he wants to put CFS > patients into (and i believe had 2 patients who went into 2 CFS- > unrelated ones and fully recovered) which he thinks would cure them if it were safer, he would. > Dr Cheney's reasons for coma being a healing state were increased HGH and cortisol produced during REM sleep, which is so hard for CFSers to achieve - NOT that it was a respite from behavioral stresses and normal life stressors. Dr Cheney clearly states that CFSers have a dysregulated HPA response causing a susceptibilty to stress, instead of the opposite notion of stress causing a susceptibility. The basis of the " Yuppie Flu " derision was that people made fun of the " rich spoiled yuppie Type A whining hypochondriacs " . Although no such relationship ever existed, the lingering memory of that derision left it's imprint in the same way that doctor still speak of Chronic EBV even though Dr Cheney ruled out EBV before " CFS " was coined. Dr 1999 study of the Original CFS cohort found that not a single PWC had completely recovered, so I presume that those who have made a complete recovery have a different variant of CFS from the type originally identified. This illness went through decades of doctors fighting their way through a dozen or more doctors before finding one that would even admit the possibility that such an illness might be possible. Even now, it is still rare to find a doctor who recognizes the term Myalgic Encephalomyelitis or can pronounce it, let alone spell it. The notion that this illness was well known is completely contrary to the experience of CFSers and the written history of their extreme difficulty in obtaining recognition and medical assistance. Since we cannot count upon the ability of doctors to recognize this illness, we are forced to rely upon our personal experience to gain a sense of former prevalence. Prior to 1985, I never saw half of a group of people suddenly succumb to a flu like illness and never recover, and neither had anyone else I've spoken to. My conclusion is that this illness was rare enough to escape observation even though the consequences are spectacularly difficult to forget. If CFSers wish to ensure that doctors continue to treat CFS as a stress induced illness, the certain way to accomplish that is to present it as a stress induced illness. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 8, 2005 Report Share Posted December 8, 2005 Hello, is right on in his discussion about the need to stop associating M.E./CFS with stress & Type A personality. Number one because Dr. Byron Hyde clearly shows the 70+ epidemic outbreaks of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/CFS in 70 different locations which are most certainly not stress related (Dr. Hyde's definition is below). Number two is that whenever this subjectcomes up in our support group here in the Sacramento area, a former park ranger mentions that eight other Park rangers came down with the disease at that same time as he did, and only one of those was a Type A personality. Number three is that we are playing into the hands of the psychologizers in the US (Dr. Wayne Katon & Dr. Buchwald) who are following the example of Simon Wessely in UK--- a UK psychiatrist is even doing some consultation work with the CDC. Number four are studies like the recent study of cognitive dysfunction in M.E./CFS patients in China which showed that the cognitive dysfunction was different from that experienced by those with psychological diseases: " Cognitive function and psychological characteristics of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, " Journal: Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi. 2005 Nov;85(41):2926-9. Authors: Li YJ, Gao XG, Wang DX, Lin T, Bai XL, Yang FZ. Dr. Byron Hyde, a Canadian specialist in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis offers this definition of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis: " Myalgic Encephalomyelitis is a measurable, diffuse post-encephalitic illness. The illness is characterized by (1) its acute onset, (2) the diffuse, non-focal persisting nature of the encephalopathy, and (3) the chronicity of the resulting symptoms. These symptoms consist of the rapid exhaustion or loss of stamina of motor, sensory, intellectual, and cognitive abilities. M.E. is of infectious/autoimmune origin and less commonly, a toxic/autoimmune origin. M.E. occurs in epidemics and sporadic cases. " Du Pre Website: http://www.angelfire.com/poetry/soareagle/index.html " By words the mind is winged. " Aristophanes wrote: Dr Cheney's reasons for coma being a healing state were increased HGH and cortisol produced during REM sleep, which is so hard for CFSers to achieve - NOT that it was a respite from behavioral stresses and normal life stressors. Dr Cheney clearly states that CFSers have a dysregulated HPA response causing a susceptibilty to stress, instead of the opposite notion of stress causing a susceptibility. The basis of the " Yuppie Flu " derision was that people made fun of the " rich spoiled yuppie Type A whining hypochondriacs " . Although no such relationship ever existed, the lingering memory of that derision left it's imprint in the same way that doctor still speak of Chronic EBV even though Dr Cheney ruled out EBV before " CFS " was coined. Dr 1999 study of the Original CFS cohort found that not a single PWC had completely recovered, so I presume that those who have made a complete recovery have a different variant of CFS from the type originally identified. This illness went through decades of doctors fighting their way through a dozen or more doctors before finding one that would even admit the possibility that such an illness might be possible. Even now, it is still rare to find a doctor who recognizes the term Myalgic Encephalomyelitis or can pronounce it, let alone spell it. The notion that this illness was well known is completely contrary to the experience of CFSers and the written history of their extreme difficulty in obtaining recognition and medical assistance. Since we cannot count upon the ability of doctors to recognize this illness, we are forced to rely upon our personal experience to gain a sense of former prevalence. Prior to 1985, I never saw half of a group of people suddenly succumb to a flu like illness and never recover, and neither had anyone else I've spoken to. My conclusion is that this illness was rare enough to escape observation even though the consequences are spectacularly difficult to forget. If CFSers wish to ensure that doctors continue to treat CFS as a stress induced illness, the certain way to accomplish that is to present it as a stress induced illness. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2005 Report Share Posted December 9, 2005 , , et.al. Cheney had two patients who recovered from CFS while in a COMA. That's stress reduction. There are other notable cases in which recovery came about thru stress reduction. Mel Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2005 Report Share Posted December 9, 2005 Hmm maybe ill start using my Xyrem again :-) > > , , et.al. Cheney had two patients who recovered from CFS while in a COMA. That's stress reduction. There are other notable cases in which recovery came about thru stress reduction. Mel > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2005 Report Share Posted December 10, 2005 Mel Baldwin < wrote: > > , , et.al. Cheney had two patients who recovered from CFS while in a COMA. That's stress reduction. There are other notable cases in which recovery came about thru stress reduction. Mel > Do you have references to that story? My understanding is that Dr Cheney believed the state of coma inhibited neurological damage from excitotoxicity and was seeking to simulate the effects with Klonopin. I am not proposing that reducing stress is without benefit, just that statements which give the impression that stress is causative engenders the public perception that stress is causative - and that failure to recover is your own personal failure to control your mental state. If you report stories of CFS recovery through stress reduction to your doctor, he might very likely consider this the first line of therapy - and apply this view to other CFS sufferers as well. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2005 Report Share Posted December 10, 2005 A cardiologist in the UK believed that hyperventilation caused ME/CFS, he used a coma-like state to treat this. Many ended up more ill as a result of his claimed cure for ME/CFS. I wish stress reduction was all I needed, it would be a lot cheaper than my current Tx. Stress reduction can help in any chronic illness, but that does not make it curative. Now that the diagnostic criteria for ME and CFS has become so watered down, especially in the UK, it's even being used for those who complain they're tired all the time. This has led to further confusion over what the illness is how it should be treated. PWME have been left to suffer other treatable health issues because doctors have been told we're catastrophising, need a sickness role, or are scroungers. I'm one of them and there's many more like me. If you want to see what too much emphasis on stress and " it's all in the mind " can do just look at what's happening in the UK. Tansy > > > > , , et.al. Cheney had two patients who recovered from > CFS while in a COMA. That's stress reduction. There are other > notable cases in which recovery came about thru stress reduction. > Mel > > > > Do you have references to that story? > My understanding is that Dr Cheney believed the state of coma > inhibited neurological damage from excitotoxicity and was seeking to > simulate the effects with Klonopin. > I am not proposing that reducing stress is without benefit, just > that statements which give the impression that stress is causative > engenders the public perception that stress is causative - and that > failure to recover is your own personal failure to control your > mental state. > If you report stories of CFS recovery through stress reduction to > your doctor, he might very likely consider this the first line of > therapy - and apply this view to other CFS sufferers as well. > - > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2005 Report Share Posted December 10, 2005 And that's all a COMA is, stress reduction? Come on. There's a lot more going on when a person is in a COMA than stress reduction. ----- Original Message ----- Cheney had two patients who recovered from CFS while in a COMA. That's stress reduction. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2005 Report Share Posted December 10, 2005 H Doris and everyone, Dr Nixon of Charing Cross Hospital, London had a similar thought when he used large quantities of drugs to put PWME to sleep for weeks - in his expensive private practise. He said that all PWME were hyperventilating and the long artificial sleep would help them recover by cutting stress etc. He tried to get me into his clinic. I met some of the survivors of his clinic in my London ME support group. All were harmed. One women I met went into straight into a Psychiatric Hospital from his clinic. She was still a wreck when I met her afterwards. Dr Cheney may be right about people in a genuine Coma but as Doris said there is a lot else happening there. Kindest regards, Annette --------------------------------- Play Santa's Celebrity Xmas Party, an exclusive game from Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2005 Report Share Posted December 11, 2005 this must have happened because of the drugs. resting definitely helps. I was sick but did not know that I had CFS 8 years ago. I hurt my back. Orthopedist made a manipulation and wanted me to be in bed for 20 days. Did not even get up for eating and did not go to toilet. At the end of this period I felt much better as far as CFs symptoms were concerned. so,this was something like Aggressive Rest Therapy for me.My energy level increased for a year time. best wishes nil Re: Re: Finally, it's official - stress depresses immune function via neuropeptide Y >H Doris and everyone, > > Dr Nixon of Charing Cross Hospital, London had a similar thought > when he used large quantities of drugs to put PWME to sleep for weeks - > in his expensive private practise. > > He said that all PWME were hyperventilating and the long artificial sleep > would help them recover by cutting stress etc. He tried to get me into his > clinic. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2005 Report Share Posted December 11, 2005 annette barclay <al_barclayuk@y...> wrote: > Dr Nixon of Charing Cross Hospital, London had a similar thought when he used large quantities of drugs to put PWME to sleep for weeks - in his expensive private practise. > > He said that all PWME were hyperventilating and the long artificial sleep would help them recover by cutting stress etc. He tried to get me into his clinic. > There absolutely HAS to be some lower limit to STUPID: Signs of Thoroughly Unmistakable Physician Intellingence Deficiency below which a doctor proves his mental inability to deal with reality and is shown to be unfit to practice medicine, but it seems like there is none! After AIDS was shown NOT to be an accumulation of " anything and everything " in gays, did a single doctor who FAILED to see that his " theory didn't fit the facts " suffer the slightest reprimand for professional oversight? After Barry Marshall rammed through H Pylori despite total medical intrasigence, did a single doctor ever question himself as to how he could have been so blind as to NOT NOTICE that ulcers were striking people who weren't under abnormal amounts of stress and that the entire " Stress causes ulcers " NEVER corresponded to peoples true behaviors, demographics, and lifestyles? I read that many years ago there was a hospital in which certain doctors noticed that certain antibiotics seemed to " cure " ulcers and started to prescribe them for that very purpose. And rather than having this anomaly induce an investigation, they were forced by medical authorities to STOP their " Inappropriate use of antibiotics " because " It is well known that stress causes ulcers " . After each " stress induced illness " is wrested from the grasp of psychologizers, do they ever ONCE look back over their misguided thinking and have even the slightest misgivings about applying their concepts to any other victims of " unexplained illness " who are unfortunate enough to have no immediate identified etiology? I want to see a study of what is going on in psychologizer brains that makes them so psychopathologically blameful toward patients and unable to learn from history. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2005 Report Share Posted December 11, 2005 I did not try that again mainly because I don't like the idea of being in bed for long hours. This is like being put into prison.Mind works. it is so difficult to put oneself in bad with racing thoughts in mind.Requires good amounts of will power. I had another experience similar with that unintentionally. In 2003 I was in very bed situation. I was at the point of dying. I had given up everything,giving my goods to others,tearing away my personal things,doing some necessary clean up to get ready for dying. After I finished my work and was waiting death to come. There was a village that I liked very much. I told myself I had to see that place once more before dying. I went to a hotel with great difficulty.I was not being able to think anything. So,exhausted.Just laid down,I asked for food to be brought to my room when I wished to eat. No calls,no reading.About three days later I started noticing my surroundings. Wished to get some air and check the view. Started to go out to the balcony from time to time but still I was not being able to go outside the room. About after two or 3 more days I started to be able to take small walks outside. After total of 10 days I was able to have some of my thinking back.That was the start of my second birth,I would call.From that time on I am feeling myself as I have died and reborn at that period.I stayed there for about 20 days that time. I must say that air was very fresh and there was also thermal waters that helped me to detox faster than normal. As far as I know resting gives time to adrenals to regenerate. glutathione production and other bodily systems will probably also benefit from this. best wishes nil Re: Re: Finally, it's official - stress depresses immune function via neuropeptide Y > This is very interesting. Have you ever tried anything like this again? > Yet another clue perhaps, so many of these clues get ignored. Maybe you > were 'banking up' something like glutathione, or something else, by > resting so long. > > --Kurt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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