Guest guest Posted January 6, 2006 Report Share Posted January 6, 2006 RIght on, I've been saying this lately too. I hae a couple of points of refining: 1) In some ways the kids are worse off and in some ways better off. Their brains are affected, but their immune systems are still relatively resilient. For some midlife or older adults with decades of CFS it may be much more difficult 2) I think lyme is involved in at least 50% of adult CFS situations and lyme itself downregulates immunity, allowing other pathogens to piggyback and skewing the immune system and once you have that, you may end up getting some of the methylation defects merely from overburdening of toxins. You can end up with a similar skewed pathway but for different reasons and it may be that, at least if you have lyme, if you could tolerate years of abx (which I can't) that alone would slowly get you well. Some of the autistic kids DO have lyme and this is still overlooked by DAN community 3) There will be other CFS situations where a toxic exposure (pesticides, molds) will be the primary cause. 4) No matter what, restoring the methylation pathways restores detoxification ability and that is important. Now in looking back I realize I had lyme since age 21--then when I got re-bit with a much more virulent tick with lyme and babesia later, is when I got really ill. But now I look back and realize, a summer at Yale at 21, was when my health really started going kaflooey (after that). And the amalgams I had tolerated perfectly well as a teenager, became intolerable. I couldn't detox the leaking mercury because I had biotoxins from chronic lyme, and then couldn't fight of strep and fungus as well, and had those biotoxins too. So whatever the way you get there, you need to support detox. I still think glutathione is only a piece of the puzzle, you need all those pathways working, not just the endpoint, although glutathione is useful. But for instance if I had to choose btw magnesium and glutathione, I'd choose the former, in terms of effect on my health. Luckily I don't have to choose. It seems others are having this same insight on this and other lists, and its a very useful one (autism/CFS). In fact, when I did my first hyperbaric oxygen 5 years ago, the doctor, who specialized in treating autistic kids, said exactly what you're saying now. He said, CFS is autism but without all those vaccinations. > > Hi, all. > > I am posting the following message to several CFS internet lists, > based on the experiences that many of you have shared with me. > Thank you, and I hope this really flies: > > > I have been researching chronic fatigue syndrome for over eight > years. As regular readers may recall, I had developed a hypothesis > for the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome that prominently > featured the depletion of glutathione, and I presented a poster > paper on it at the AACFS (now the IACFS) meeting in October, 2004, > in Madison, Wisconsin. This paper can be found at > > http://www.cfsresearch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm > > Anecdotal experience of people in the internet > group and others who took my hypothesis seriously and acted upon it > suggested that while some were able to raise their glutathione > levels by various means and experienced benefit from doing so, > others were not able to do so. At the time of writing my poster > paper, I was aware of this, and I acknowledged in the conclusions of > the paper that there appeared to be things that were blocking the > raising of glutathione in CFS. At that time, I was not sure > specifically what they were. I also knew that there was evidence > for a genetic predisposition in CFS, but I did not know the details > of the genetic variations involved. > > Since then, I became aware of the work of S. Jill et al. in > autism (Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Dec;80(6):1611-7). They found that > glutathione was also depleted in autistic children, that this > resulted from a partial block in the methylation (also called > methionine) cycle, that this partial block resulted in part from > genetic variations in the genes for certain enzymes and proteins > associated with the sulfur metabolism (I don't think the genetic > part is published yet), and that it interfered with the conversion > of methionine to cysteine, which is the rate-limiting amino acid for > the synthesis of glutathione. They found that by using certain > supplements they could lift the block in the methylation cycle and > restore the glutathione level. > > In response to learning of this work, I became very interested in > possible parallels between chronic fatigue syndrome and autism. I > went on to attend the conference of the Defeat Autism Now! project > in Long Beach, California in October, 2005. As a result of this > experience, I became convinced that the genetic predisposition found > in autism must be the same or similar to that in a major subset of > chronic fatigue syndrome, and that the resulting biochemical > abnormalities were also the same or similar. As far as I know, the > genetic variations in people with CFS have not yet been studied in > detail or published, but I am optimistic that this will occur soon, > because of the rapid advances in the technology for doing so, and > the current active interest of at least three groups in the U.S. and > the U.K. in genomic aspects of CFS. > > There are obviously also major differences between chronic fatigue > syndrome and autism. I believe that these result primarily from the > different ages of onset. Autistic children experience onset early > in life, before their brains are fully developed. I believe that > this gives rise to the very different brain-related symptoms seen in > autistic children from those seen in adults with CFS. However, > there are many similarities in the symptomatology and the > biochemistry of these two disorders as well, including oxidative > stress, buildup of toxins, immune response shift to Th2, and gut > problems, for examples. > > The triggering factors for autism and chronic fatigue syndrome are > also largely different. There appears to be substantial evidence > now that vaccinations (containing either a mercury-based > preservative or live viruses, many given at the same time) were > responsible for triggering many of the cases of autism in > genetically-susceptible children. In CFS, a variety of triggering > factors (physical, chemical, biological, or psychological/emotional) > have been shown to be involved in various cases. All of these > factors have in common the tendency to deplete glutathione. It > appears that once glutathione drops sufficiently in a genetically > susceptible person, the methylation cycle goes down, and the result > is a depletion of several important metabolites in the sulfur > metabolism, including S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe), cysteine, > glutathione, taurine and sulfate. The depletion in these > metabolites causes an avalanche of pathogenesis, since they all have > very important functions in the body, and I think that much of this > pathogenesis is common between autism and CFS. In autism, I think > the loss of methylation capacity because of the drop in SAMe is > responsible for much of the interference with normal brain > development. > > I think that the reason why the people who have developed CFS as > adults did not develop autism as children (even though I suspect > that they have the same or similar genetic predisposition) is that > when they were children, not as many vaccinations were required. > The schedule of vaccinations required for children in the U.S. has > grown substantially in the past two or three decades, as has the > incidence of autism. I think this is also true in the U.K. > > My main message is that a great deal has already been worked out in > autism by the people in the Defeat Autism Now! project, and that I > believe that the CFS community would benefit greatly by looking > carefully at what they have already done. They have found > supplements that will compensate for the genetic variations and > correct these biochemical irregularities. They are also detoxing > heavy metals. The results in many autistic children have been > astounding. > > So I want to encourage everyone who has an interest in CFS to look > at the results of the DAN! project in autism. You can view videos > of the talks given at the latest two DAN! conferences on the > internet at no cost (unless you are paying for the internet time!). > Go to this site: > > http://www.danwebcast.com > > You can choose either the later Long Beach conference or the earlier > Boston conference. They cover much of the same material, but both > are worthwhile to watch. If you want to see a good explanation of > the methylation cycle research, go to the Boston meeting first, so > you will be able to view the talk by Jill , who did not attend > the Long Beach meeting. > > After selecting one of the conferences, go to the lower left and > register. This is free. They will email a password to you right > away, and then you can choose a talk to watch. > > Beyond this, I also want to recommend a book. This is a new book > (Sept. 2005). It is by Jon Pangborn, Ph.D. and Sydney Baker, M.D., > a biochemist and an autism clinician, respectively. It is available > on Amazon for people within the U.S. For people outside the U.S., > it can be obtained from the following website by means of PayPal: > > http://www.autismresearchinstitute.com > > The cost for the book is $30 U.S. > > This is an excellent book. It is a reference book, full of good > information and good science, explained clearly. This book deals > very practically with developing a treatment program for an > individual child. I think that most of it will turn out to apply > directly to adults with CFS as well. > > Although I have been suggesting consideration of the DAN! treatments > to people with CFS for only about two months, and it is too soon to > draw conclusions, early feedback is very encouraging. While I am > going out on a limb in announcing this on Co-Cure now, I don't want > to wait any longer, because I think this could help a lot of > people. Of course, we should all keep in mind that with the current > case definition of CFS we have a very heterogeneous population, and > the DAN! treatments may not help all PWCs, but I am convinced that > they will help a substantial subset. So I want to encourage you to > look into this in the strongest way I can. It could be the answer > for many of you. > > Rich Van Konynenburg, Ph.D. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2006 Report Share Posted January 6, 2006 Hi, Jill. Thanks for the comments. I think you made some good points. I have a lot to learn about autism, since I really haven't studied it much until recently. I just think I've heard enough to know that there are powerful parallels with CFS. Yes, I'm not the first person to make a connection between autism and CFS. It just took me a little longer to get there. But I would say that most of the CFS research and clinical community isn't there yet, and if things continue to look good with these treatments, I'm planning to try to get the word to them. Rich > > > > Hi, all. > > > > I am posting the following message to several CFS internet lists, > > based on the experiences that many of you have shared with me. > > Thank you, and I hope this really flies: > > > > > > I have been researching chronic fatigue syndrome for over eight > > years. As regular readers may recall, I had developed a hypothesis > > for the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome that prominently > > featured the depletion of glutathione, and I presented a poster > > paper on it at the AACFS (now the IACFS) meeting in October, 2004, > > in Madison, Wisconsin. This paper can be found at > > > > http://www.cfsresearch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm > > > > Anecdotal experience of people in the internet > > group and others who took my hypothesis seriously and acted upon it > > suggested that while some were able to raise their glutathione > > levels by various means and experienced benefit from doing so, > > others were not able to do so. At the time of writing my poster > > paper, I was aware of this, and I acknowledged in the conclusions of > > the paper that there appeared to be things that were blocking the > > raising of glutathione in CFS. At that time, I was not sure > > specifically what they were. I also knew that there was evidence > > for a genetic predisposition in CFS, but I did not know the details > > of the genetic variations involved. > > > > Since then, I became aware of the work of S. Jill et al. in > > autism (Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Dec;80(6):1611-7). They found that > > glutathione was also depleted in autistic children, that this > > resulted from a partial block in the methylation (also called > > methionine) cycle, that this partial block resulted in part from > > genetic variations in the genes for certain enzymes and proteins > > associated with the sulfur metabolism (I don't think the genetic > > part is published yet), and that it interfered with the conversion > > of methionine to cysteine, which is the rate-limiting amino acid for > > the synthesis of glutathione. They found that by using certain > > supplements they could lift the block in the methylation cycle and > > restore the glutathione level. > > > > In response to learning of this work, I became very interested in > > possible parallels between chronic fatigue syndrome and autism. I > > went on to attend the conference of the Defeat Autism Now! project > > in Long Beach, California in October, 2005. As a result of this > > experience, I became convinced that the genetic predisposition found > > in autism must be the same or similar to that in a major subset of > > chronic fatigue syndrome, and that the resulting biochemical > > abnormalities were also the same or similar. As far as I know, the > > genetic variations in people with CFS have not yet been studied in > > detail or published, but I am optimistic that this will occur soon, > > because of the rapid advances in the technology for doing so, and > > the current active interest of at least three groups in the U.S. and > > the U.K. in genomic aspects of CFS. > > > > There are obviously also major differences between chronic fatigue > > syndrome and autism. I believe that these result primarily from the > > different ages of onset. Autistic children experience onset early > > in life, before their brains are fully developed. I believe that > > this gives rise to the very different brain-related symptoms seen in > > autistic children from those seen in adults with CFS. However, > > there are many similarities in the symptomatology and the > > biochemistry of these two disorders as well, including oxidative > > stress, buildup of toxins, immune response shift to Th2, and gut > > problems, for examples. > > > > The triggering factors for autism and chronic fatigue syndrome are > > also largely different. There appears to be substantial evidence > > now that vaccinations (containing either a mercury-based > > preservative or live viruses, many given at the same time) were > > responsible for triggering many of the cases of autism in > > genetically-susceptible children. In CFS, a variety of triggering > > factors (physical, chemical, biological, or psychological/emotional) > > have been shown to be involved in various cases. All of these > > factors have in common the tendency to deplete glutathione. It > > appears that once glutathione drops sufficiently in a genetically > > susceptible person, the methylation cycle goes down, and the result > > is a depletion of several important metabolites in the sulfur > > metabolism, including S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe), cysteine, > > glutathione, taurine and sulfate. The depletion in these > > metabolites causes an avalanche of pathogenesis, since they all have > > very important functions in the body, and I think that much of this > > pathogenesis is common between autism and CFS. In autism, I think > > the loss of methylation capacity because of the drop in SAMe is > > responsible for much of the interference with normal brain > > development. > > > > I think that the reason why the people who have developed CFS as > > adults did not develop autism as children (even though I suspect > > that they have the same or similar genetic predisposition) is that > > when they were children, not as many vaccinations were required. > > The schedule of vaccinations required for children in the U.S. has > > grown substantially in the past two or three decades, as has the > > incidence of autism. I think this is also true in the U.K. > > > > My main message is that a great deal has already been worked out in > > autism by the people in the Defeat Autism Now! project, and that I > > believe that the CFS community would benefit greatly by looking > > carefully at what they have already done. They have found > > supplements that will compensate for the genetic variations and > > correct these biochemical irregularities. They are also detoxing > > heavy metals. The results in many autistic children have been > > astounding. > > > > So I want to encourage everyone who has an interest in CFS to look > > at the results of the DAN! project in autism. You can view videos > > of the talks given at the latest two DAN! conferences on the > > internet at no cost (unless you are paying for the internet time!). > > Go to this site: > > > > http://www.danwebcast.com > > > > You can choose either the later Long Beach conference or the earlier > > Boston conference. They cover much of the same material, but both > > are worthwhile to watch. If you want to see a good explanation of > > the methylation cycle research, go to the Boston meeting first, so > > you will be able to view the talk by Jill , who did not attend > > the Long Beach meeting. > > > > After selecting one of the conferences, go to the lower left and > > register. This is free. They will email a password to you right > > away, and then you can choose a talk to watch. > > > > Beyond this, I also want to recommend a book. This is a new book > > (Sept. 2005). It is by Jon Pangborn, Ph.D. and Sydney Baker, M.D., > > a biochemist and an autism clinician, respectively. It is available > > on Amazon for people within the U.S. For people outside the U.S., > > it can be obtained from the following website by means of PayPal: > > > > http://www.autismresearchinstitute.com > > > > The cost for the book is $30 U.S. > > > > This is an excellent book. It is a reference book, full of good > > information and good science, explained clearly. This book deals > > very practically with developing a treatment program for an > > individual child. I think that most of it will turn out to apply > > directly to adults with CFS as well. > > > > Although I have been suggesting consideration of the DAN! treatments > > to people with CFS for only about two months, and it is too soon to > > draw conclusions, early feedback is very encouraging. While I am > > going out on a limb in announcing this on Co-Cure now, I don't want > > to wait any longer, because I think this could help a lot of > > people. Of course, we should all keep in mind that with the current > > case definition of CFS we have a very heterogeneous population, and > > the DAN! treatments may not help all PWCs, but I am convinced that > > they will help a substantial subset. So I want to encourage you to > > look into this in the strongest way I can. It could be the answer > > for many of you. > > > > Rich Van Konynenburg, Ph.D. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2006 Report Share Posted January 6, 2006 You're right, and I can think of somebody who could set up a conference with lyme experts and DAN experts. Perhaps we should do that, it could be exciting. I'll think about that. > > > > > > Hi, all. > > > > > > I am posting the following message to several CFS internet > lists, > > > based on the experiences that many of you have shared with me. > > > Thank you, and I hope this really flies: > > > > > > > > > I have been researching chronic fatigue syndrome for over eight > > > years. As regular readers may recall, I had developed a > hypothesis > > > for the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome that > prominently > > > featured the depletion of glutathione, and I presented a poster > > > paper on it at the AACFS (now the IACFS) meeting in October, > 2004, > > > in Madison, Wisconsin. This paper can be found at > > > > > > http://www.cfsresearch.org/cfs/research/treatment/15.htm > > > > > > Anecdotal experience of people in the internet > > > group and others who took my hypothesis seriously and acted upon > it > > > suggested that while some were able to raise their glutathione > > > levels by various means and experienced benefit from doing so, > > > others were not able to do so. At the time of writing my poster > > > paper, I was aware of this, and I acknowledged in the > conclusions of > > > the paper that there appeared to be things that were blocking > the > > > raising of glutathione in CFS. At that time, I was not sure > > > specifically what they were. I also knew that there was > evidence > > > for a genetic predisposition in CFS, but I did not know the > details > > > of the genetic variations involved. > > > > > > Since then, I became aware of the work of S. Jill et al. > in > > > autism (Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Dec;80(6):1611-7). They found that > > > glutathione was also depleted in autistic children, that this > > > resulted from a partial block in the methylation (also called > > > methionine) cycle, that this partial block resulted in part from > > > genetic variations in the genes for certain enzymes and proteins > > > associated with the sulfur metabolism (I don't think the genetic > > > part is published yet), and that it interfered with the > conversion > > > of methionine to cysteine, which is the rate-limiting amino acid > for > > > the synthesis of glutathione. They found that by using certain > > > supplements they could lift the block in the methylation cycle > and > > > restore the glutathione level. > > > > > > In response to learning of this work, I became very interested > in > > > possible parallels between chronic fatigue syndrome and autism. > I > > > went on to attend the conference of the Defeat Autism Now! > project > > > in Long Beach, California in October, 2005. As a result of this > > > experience, I became convinced that the genetic predisposition > found > > > in autism must be the same or similar to that in a major subset > of > > > chronic fatigue syndrome, and that the resulting biochemical > > > abnormalities were also the same or similar. As far as I know, > the > > > genetic variations in people with CFS have not yet been studied > in > > > detail or published, but I am optimistic that this will occur > soon, > > > because of the rapid advances in the technology for doing so, > and > > > the current active interest of at least three groups in the U.S. > and > > > the U.K. in genomic aspects of CFS. > > > > > > There are obviously also major differences between chronic > fatigue > > > syndrome and autism. I believe that these result primarily from > the > > > different ages of onset. Autistic children experience onset > early > > > in life, before their brains are fully developed. I believe > that > > > this gives rise to the very different brain-related symptoms > seen in > > > autistic children from those seen in adults with CFS. However, > > > there are many similarities in the symptomatology and the > > > biochemistry of these two disorders as well, including oxidative > > > stress, buildup of toxins, immune response shift to Th2, and gut > > > problems, for examples. > > > > > > The triggering factors for autism and chronic fatigue syndrome > are > > > also largely different. There appears to be substantial > evidence > > > now that vaccinations (containing either a mercury-based > > > preservative or live viruses, many given at the same time) were > > > responsible for triggering many of the cases of autism in > > > genetically-susceptible children. In CFS, a variety of > triggering > > > factors (physical, chemical, biological, or > psychological/emotional) > > > have been shown to be involved in various cases. All of these > > > factors have in common the tendency to deplete glutathione. It > > > appears that once glutathione drops sufficiently in a > genetically > > > susceptible person, the methylation cycle goes down, and the > result > > > is a depletion of several important metabolites in the sulfur > > > metabolism, including S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe), cysteine, > > > glutathione, taurine and sulfate. The depletion in these > > > metabolites causes an avalanche of pathogenesis, since they all > have > > > very important functions in the body, and I think that much of > this > > > pathogenesis is common between autism and CFS. In autism, I > think > > > the loss of methylation capacity because of the drop in SAMe is > > > responsible for much of the interference with normal brain > > > development. > > > > > > I think that the reason why the people who have developed CFS as > > > adults did not develop autism as children (even though I suspect > > > that they have the same or similar genetic predisposition) is > that > > > when they were children, not as many vaccinations were > required. > > > The schedule of vaccinations required for children in the U.S. > has > > > grown substantially in the past two or three decades, as has the > > > incidence of autism. I think this is also true in the U.K. > > > > > > My main message is that a great deal has already been worked out > in > > > autism by the people in the Defeat Autism Now! project, and that > I > > > believe that the CFS community would benefit greatly by looking > > > carefully at what they have already done. They have found > > > supplements that will compensate for the genetic variations and > > > correct these biochemical irregularities. They are also > detoxing > > > heavy metals. The results in many autistic children have been > > > astounding. > > > > > > So I want to encourage everyone who has an interest in CFS to > look > > > at the results of the DAN! project in autism. You can view > videos > > > of the talks given at the latest two DAN! conferences on the > > > internet at no cost (unless you are paying for the internet > time!). > > > Go to this site: > > > > > > http://www.danwebcast.com > > > > > > You can choose either the later Long Beach conference or the > earlier > > > Boston conference. They cover much of the same material, but > both > > > are worthwhile to watch. If you want to see a good explanation > of > > > the methylation cycle research, go to the Boston meeting first, > so > > > you will be able to view the talk by Jill , who did not > attend > > > the Long Beach meeting. > > > > > > After selecting one of the conferences, go to the lower left and > > > register. This is free. They will email a password to you > right > > > away, and then you can choose a talk to watch. > > > > > > Beyond this, I also want to recommend a book. This is a new > book > > > (Sept. 2005). It is by Jon Pangborn, Ph.D. and Sydney Baker, > M.D., > > > a biochemist and an autism clinician, respectively. It is > available > > > on Amazon for people within the U.S. For people outside the > U.S., > > > it can be obtained from the following website by means of PayPal: > > > > > > http://www.autismresearchinstitute.com > > > > > > The cost for the book is $30 U.S. > > > > > > This is an excellent book. It is a reference book, full of good > > > information and good science, explained clearly. This book > deals > > > very practically with developing a treatment program for an > > > individual child. I think that most of it will turn out to > apply > > > directly to adults with CFS as well. > > > > > > Although I have been suggesting consideration of the DAN! > treatments > > > to people with CFS for only about two months, and it is too soon > to > > > draw conclusions, early feedback is very encouraging. While I > am > > > going out on a limb in announcing this on Co-Cure now, I don't > want > > > to wait any longer, because I think this could help a lot of > > > people. Of course, we should all keep in mind that with the > current > > > case definition of CFS we have a very heterogeneous population, > and > > > the DAN! treatments may not help all PWCs, but I am convinced > that > > > they will help a substantial subset. So I want to encourage you > to > > > look into this in the strongest way I can. It could be the > answer > > > for many of you. > > > > > > Rich Van Konynenburg, Ph.D. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2006 Report Share Posted January 7, 2006 Hi, Rich. " rvankonynen " <richvank@a...> wrote: > I think that the reason why the people who have developed CFS as > adults did not develop autism as children (even though I suspect > that they have the same or similar genetic predisposition) is that > when they were children, not as many vaccinations were required. > The schedule of vaccinations required for children in the U.S. has > grown substantially in the past two or three decades, as has the > incidence of autism. I think this is also true in the U.K. ***I saw a local(Silicon Valley-California) TV news documentary about six years ago which focused on the growing epidemic of autism occurring in children in the U.S.. This documentary featured a young successful high-income couple, both engineers, who had three of their four kids come down with autism here in the valley. ***In the process of telling and interviewing this couple about their great struggle with their entrenched family health crisis, this piece underscored the fact that engineers and those in similar technical fields had a higher rate of autism occurring in their kids than the general population. They also drew attention to the fact that Silicon Valley seemed to have four times the rate of autism cases occurring compared to the national average, itself showing stunning increases. ***At any rate, when I was talking with Dr Cheney in 2002 about his suspicions about mercury and vaccines connection to autism(and mercury's link to CFS), I recalled having seen this documentary. I then spontaneously stated to him that the upswing in affluence in my area over the last 20 years, due to the tremendous upswing in world-wide demand for computers(ie, the PC and IT revolutions), has probably created this increase in autism by allowing new families benefitting greatly financially from this to go for all the gold standard and cutting edge vaccinations unlike any other group. ***At alarming rates, natural attraction to technology and having the means to turn every modern stone available to give every chance for good health in their kids backfired! Dr Cheney seemed to concur that my observation was quite plausable and it now seems to fit in with what you suspect is the case. ***Interesting to note. The thrust of that documentary at that time, in terms of a suspected etiology for autism, was leaning towards attributing genetic brain traits in engineer types as being more vulnerable to mutations predisposing autism, nothing related to vaccinations and engineer types capacity or inclination to get ALL the ones available for their kids. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 7, 2006 Report Share Posted January 7, 2006 , both can be true. As noted at conferences, DAN and Yasko's, the parents will usually have issues. After all, they're carrying the genes their kids inherited. And it is true that high functioning asperger's types, " techy nerds " , are drawn to those professions and do very well in them. At the same time, they might've just had techy nerd kids, not autistic kids, if not for toxins, vaccinations, live viruses and mercury in the vaccinations, infections like lyme and strep getting more widespread and antibiotic resistant etc. You find almost no autism in the Amish and they don't vaccinate their kids and there will be some decent studies underway soon (the research into the Amish has been fairly loose/sloppy so far). > > I think that the reason why the people who have developed CFS as > > adults did not develop autism as children (even though I suspect > > that they have the same or similar genetic predisposition) is that > > when they were children, not as many vaccinations were required. > > The schedule of vaccinations required for children in the U.S. has > > grown substantially in the past two or three decades, as has the > > incidence of autism. I think this is also true in the U.K. > > > > ***I saw a local(Silicon Valley-California) TV news documentary about six years ago which focused on the growing epidemic of autism occurring in children in the U.S.. This documentary featured a young successful high-income couple, both engineers, who had three of their four kids come down with autism here in the valley. > > > > ***In the process of telling and interviewing this couple about their great struggle with their entrenched family health crisis, this piece underscored the fact that engineers and those in similar technical fields had a higher rate of autism occurring in their kids than the general population. They also drew attention to the fact that Silicon Valley seemed to have four times the rate of autism cases occurring compared to the national average, itself showing stunning increases. > > > > ***At any rate, when I was talking with Dr Cheney in 2002 about his suspicions about mercury and vaccines connection to autism(and mercury's link to CFS), I recalled having seen this documentary. I then spontaneously stated to him that the upswing in affluence in my area over the last 20 years, due to the tremendous upswing in world-wide demand for computers(ie, the PC and IT revolutions), has probably created this increase in autism by allowing new families benefitting greatly financially from this to go for all the gold standard and cutting edge vaccinations unlike any other group. > > > > ***At alarming rates, natural attraction to technology and having the means to turn every modern stone available to give every chance for good health in their kids backfired! > Dr Cheney seemed to concur that my observation was quite plausable and it now seems to fit in with what you suspect is the case. > > > > ***Interesting to note. The thrust of that documentary at that time, in terms of a suspected etiology for autism, was leaning towards attributing genetic brain traits in engineer types as being more vulnerable to mutations predisposing autism, nothing related to vaccinations and engineer types capacity or inclination to get ALL the ones available for their kids. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 12, 2006 Report Share Posted January 12, 2006 Hi Rich, > Yes, I'm not the first person to make a connection between autism > and CFS...But I would say that most of the CFS research and clinical > community isn't there > yet, and if things continue to look good with these treatments, I'm > planning to try to get the word to them. I hope you can include the chronic Lyme research and clinical community! Sue , Upstate New York Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 Hi, Sue. I don't know yet how applicable the DAN! autism treatments will be in Lyme disease. Maybe they will turn out to be helpful there, too. If so, I certainly would plan to spread the word. Rich > > Hi Rich, > > > Yes, I'm not the first person to make a connection between autism > > and CFS...But I would say that most of the CFS research and clinical > > community isn't there > > yet, and if things continue to look good with these treatments, I'm > > planning to try to get the word to them. > > I hope you can include the chronic Lyme research and clinical community! > > Sue , > Upstate New York > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 Rich, Sue, What are your thoughts on the article below re cysteine triggering hemolysis in-vitro of blood infected with Borrelia burgdorferi? Nelly http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=pubmed & dopt=Abstra\ ct & list_uids=1639493 & query_hl=1 & itool=pubmed_docsum See full text article at: http://www.pubmedcentral.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=257305 & blobtype=pdf Hemolytic activity of Borrelia burgdorferi. LR, Austin FE. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of Louisville, Kentucky 40292. Zones of beta-hemolysis occurred around colonies of Borrelia burgdorferi grown on Barbour-Stoenner- medium containing agarose and horse blood. Blood plates were inoculated with either the infective strain Sh-2-82 or noninfective strain B-31 in an overlay and incubated in a candle jar. Both strains of B. burgdorferi displayed beta-hemolysis after 1 to 2 weeks of incubation. The hemolytic activity diffused out from the borrelial colonies, eventually resulting in lysis of the entire blood plate. Hemolysis was most pronounced with horse blood and was less intense with bovine, sheep, and rabbit blood. Hemolysis was enhanced by hot-cold incubation, which is typical of phospholipase-like activities in other bacteria. Further characterization of the borrelial hemolysin by using a spectrophotometric assay revealed its presence in the supernatant fluids of stationary-phase cultures. *****Detection of the borrelial hemolytic activity was dependent on activation of the hemolysin by the reducing agent cysteine.***** This study provides the first evidence of hemolytic activity associated with B. burgdorferi. PMID: 1639493 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Re: CFS and DAN! treatments for autism Hi, Sue. I don't know yet how applicable the DAN! autism treatments will be in Lyme disease. Maybe they will turn out to be helpful there, too. If so, I certainly would plan to spread the word. Rich > > Hi Rich, > > > Yes, I'm not the first person to make a connection between autism > > and CFS...But I would say that most of the CFS research and clinical > > community isn't there > > yet, and if things continue to look good with these treatments, I'm > > planning to try to get the word to them. > > I hope you can include the chronic Lyme research and clinical community! > > Sue , > Upstate New York > This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 They will be applicable and I " ll tell you why: 1) Most lymies have heavy metal issues, like the autistic kids. It's either a prior existing problem that was silent, and/or, something about lyme and biotoxins so downregulates the system that it begins to collect metals because its so pressured 2) Many lymies probably have methylation issues. I found it fascinating that both mercury and strep inhibit the same enzyme--I forget the initials, you may remember, RIch, dpp4-----whatever it is. A crucial enzyme in methylation/immunity. Probably lyme does too, then, why not? I'll bet there is a profound link there 3) Having a good methylation cycle can only help. What is CFS anyway? CHronic infection. What is lyme? Chronic infection. They overlap, often are the same, otherwise, they're just different bugs. The autistic kids have chronic infection too. Their guts are a mess. They often have strep, fungi etc. Some have lyme. 4) Some of the therapies they're using, targetted to immunity, like oralgam are interesting. I see nobody responded back about that bovine serum product--I'm wondering. Rich could you do me a favor I don't have the time. Can you contact Boyd Haley and interview him and post it back to us here? I want to know as much as possible about that chelator and his hopes for it. I know he can't reveal what it is. If we could get a safe strong chelator that would be great. > > > > Hi Rich, > > > > > Yes, I'm not the first person to make a connection between autism > > > and CFS...But I would say that most of the CFS research and > clinical > > > community isn't there > > > yet, and if things continue to look good with these treatments, > I'm > > > planning to try to get the word to them. > > > > I hope you can include the chronic Lyme research and clinical > community! > > > > Sue , > > Upstate New York > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 Thats very upsetting. Its bad enough babesia ruins the red blood cells. Once again, a reason hyperbaric is so helpful. > > > > Hi Rich, > > > > > Yes, I'm not the first person to make a connection between autism > > > and CFS...But I would say that most of the CFS research and > clinical > > > community isn't there > > > yet, and if things continue to look good with these treatments, > I'm > > > planning to try to get the word to them. > > > > I hope you can include the chronic Lyme research and clinical > community! > > > > Sue , > > Upstate New York > > > > > > > > > This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 Rich A+++ If you were closer, I'd plant one on your forehead. mjh " The Basil Book " http://foxhillfarm.us/FireBasil/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 Hi, Nelly, Sue, Sheila and the group. Thanks very much for posting this. It has really stimulated my thinking about why Lyme disease is symptomatologically so similar to CFS. First, some review. As we all know, it has been terribly difficult to do the differential diagnosis between Lyme disease and CFS. The symptoms overlap considerably and even the best of the lab tests do not have the sensitivity and selectivity we would all like to see. Symptoms are manifestations of the pathophysiology of a disease, i.e. how the functioning of the body of the sick person is abnormal as a result of the disease. Therefore, if we see that the symptoms of two diseases are very similar, we should suspect that they must have some aspects of pathophysiology in common. Pathophysiology is intimately involved with abnnormal gene expression in the cells of the sick person, because gene expression is a reflection of how the cell is conducting its business, and the misconduct of the business of the cell is pathophysiology. Because of this, I was quite struck some time ago when Sheila reported that Dr. Gow said in a recent talk that he had found that the gene expression pattern in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (monocytes and lymphocytes) is " identical " in CFS and Lyme disease. This implies that the pathophysiology of these two disorders in these cell types is the same. (Note that we can't say anything about what's going on in other cell types in the body in these two disorders from this work. There are no doubt different things that happen in other cell types between Lyme and CFS, and so this is not saying that the two are identical in every way. But in these mononuclear cells, this is saying that the pathophysiology of the two is the same.) As you know, I am of the firm view that in at least a large subset of CFS there is glutathione depletion. In another subset, it looks as though there are genetic variations in the enzymes that make use of glutathione (glutathione transferases and glutathione peroxidases), and the results in terms of pathophysiology are much the same, even though the first group has low glutathione, and the second group may have elevated glutathione. In either subset, the people do not have normal glutathione function. As you also know, based on the work by the DAN! project in autism, I now believe that the basic abnormalities in the biochemistry in autism and CFS are the same or similar. The glutathione depletion brings down the methylation cycle, and a vicious circle develops that produces a host of problems because of the depletion of SAMe (the main methylator in the body), cysteine, glutathione, taurine and sulfate. So, if the pathophysiology of CFS involves the inability to use glutathione effectively, whether because glutathione itself is depleted or because the enzymes that use it have below-normal activity, and if the pathophysiology of CFS and Lyme are indeed identical, then it follows that there must be a problem with the glutathione system in Lyme disease as well. With that introduction, let me now review some things I found in the literature, including the paper to which you (Nelly) drew my attention. I will give the PubMed ID numbers for the references that support these statements. (PMID 1477785) First, in in vitro experiments it has been found that the growth of Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), the bacterium that causes Lyme disease, in the culture medium is decreased by 80% if cysteine is not present in the culture medium. (PMID 147785) It has been found that cysteine diffuses passively into Bb, i.e. there is no active transporter protein that pumps it into the bacterium. (PMID 1477785) It has been found that Bb incorporates cysteine in three of its proteins. One has a mass of 22 kilodaltons. The others have been identified as outer surface protein A (Osp A), with a mass of 30 kilodaltons, and outer surface protein B (Osp , with a mass of 34 kilodaltons. (PMID 1639493) Bb produces a water-soluble hemolysin. This is a substance that is able to break down red blood cells and release their hemoglobin. It is likely that this substance incorporates a cyteine residue, and this cysteine must be in its reduced state in order for the hemolysin to break down red blood cells. (PMID 16390443) Bb does not produce glutathione, which is the principle non-protein thiol (substance containing an S-H or sulfhydryl group) in human cells. Instead, Bb cells have a high concentration (about 1 millimolar) of reduced coenzyme A (CoASH). Bb also produces a CoA disulfide reductase enzyme that has the responsibility to keep CoASH in its chemically reduced form, so it can function. This enzyme is in turn reduced by NADH (reduced nicotinic acid diethylamide), which is reduced by metabolism of Bb's fuel. (This is analogous to glutathione reductase in human cells, which requires NADPH, which in turn is reduced by the pentose phosphate shunt on glycolysis, which metabolizes glucose as fuel.) In Bb, CoASH is able to reduce hydrogen peroxide, as glutathione peroxidase, together with glutathione, do in human cells. (PMID 11687735) It has been found that when people were infected with Bb and had the characteristic erythema migrans (bulls-eye rash), the total thiol and glutathione in blood analysis were found to be significantly decreased. The activity of glutathione peroxidase was also significantly decreased. Malondialdehyde, a marker for lipid peroxidation, was significantly elevated. After antibiotic treatment with amoxycillin, which eliminated the acute symptoms of Lyme disease, both the total thiol and the glutathione levels recovered to normal. However, the glutathione peroxidase activity was still significantly below normal, and the malondialdehyde remained significantly elevated. This suggested that Bb lowers the thiol and glutathione levels in its host, and inhibits the activity of glutathione peroxidase. I think this also suggests that while antibiotic therapy eliminates acute Lyme symptoms and brings recovery of glutathione levels, the Bb infection may still be suppressing the activity of glutathione peroxidase, and this may be a mechanism involved in long-term (or chronic or post-) Lyme disease. One way in which a pathogen can inhibit its host's glutathione peroxidase activity is to hoard selenium, because this is a cofactor for that enzyme. You may recall that that is the mechanism that Prof. Harry has hypothesized for HIV and AIDS (http://www.hdfoster.com). I could not find any reference in the literature connecting Bb and selenium, and I don't know whether anyone has looked at that. Have any of you who are positive for Lyme had your selenium level measured? It seems pretty clear that Bb uses cysteine and that it depletes glutathione and total thiol (which includes cysteine and protein thiols as well as glutathione) in its host, at least in the acute phase. It also suppresses the activity of glutathione peroxidase, but I'm not sure whether it does it by lowering the host's selenium level, or by some other means. This suppression appears as though it could be chronic. I think there is a good chance that this lowering of glutathione and/or suppressing of the activity of glutathione peroxidase could very well be the explanation for the similarities in symptomatology and the " identical " gene expression in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells in CFS and Lyme disease. It may also be that a host whose glutathione has been depleted by other factors may be more vulnerable to developing Lyme disease, once inoculated with Bb. I am speculating a little here, but this is exciting! If this is true, what are the consequences for treatment of long- term Lyme disease, the subject that Sue raised? I think this remains to be seen, but it does suggest that the DAN! autism treatments may have a contribution to make in the treatment of long- term Lyme disease as I've suggested that they also do in the treatment of CFS. Before we can reach such a conclusion, though, I think it behooves us to get more data on glutathione levels, selenium levels, and glutathione peroxidase activity in people with positive tests for long-term Lyme disease, as well as some experience trying these treatments as part of the treatment of long- term Lyme disease. I'm not suggesting that they would replace other treatments for Lyme disase, such as antibiotic therapy, detoxing of neurotoxins, or other approaches to deal with the bacteria themselves or do deal with particular characteristics of Lyme disease that are not found in autism or CFS. Nevertheless, these treatments might make a significant impact. Time will tell. Thanks for rattling my cage about this, Sheila, Sue and Nelly. Rich > > Rich, Sue, > > What are your thoughts on the article below re cysteine triggering hemolysis in-vitro of blood infected with Borrelia burgdorferi? > > Nelly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2006 Report Share Posted January 13, 2006 Hi, here's a correction. NADH is actually nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, not what I said it was. The brain is getting fried. Sorry about that. Rich > > > > Rich, Sue, > > > > What are your thoughts on the article below re cysteine triggering > hemolysis in-vitro of blood infected with Borrelia burgdorferi? > > > > Nelly > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2006 Report Share Posted January 14, 2006 Hi, mjh. Wow! This is getting mushy! Too bad we're two time zones apart! Wait till my wife hears about this! Just kidding. Thank you! Rich > > Rich > > A+++ > > If you were closer, I'd plant one on your forehead. > > mjh > " The Basil Book " > http://foxhillfarm.us/FireBasil/ > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2006 Report Share Posted January 14, 2006 Hi, Jill. I think your intuition about this is good. See my other postm written a little while ago. In regard to contacting Prof. Haley about how he's doing on new methods of detoxing heavy metals, I realize that you are anxious to know as much about that as possible and as soon as possible, and I understand that. However, sorry, I don't think I will contact him. Here's why: I was an experimental researcher for forty years myself. It's a tough game, with a lot of hurdles, and a lot of uncertainty about whether one has done everything correctly. One of the things I hated most was when poeple kept bugging me about what results I had. Then there are the political aspects, especially when you are at a university. The institution puts things on you like " publish or perish, " and patent issues. They don't want you to tell people about your results until all the bases are covered. I think that we can rest assured that Prof. Haley is highly motivated to improve the situation on heavy metal detoxing and is working on figuring it out and getting the word out about it at the speediest rate he is able to. I did send him several papers in support of my suggestion to look into high-dose methyl B12 to remove inorganic mercury from the brain several weeks back, because I thought that might help him, and I haven't heard back from him yet on that, so I think he's probably busy trying to figure it all out, and I don't think I'll bother him again for a while. It's kind of like not messing with the goose that laid the golden eggs. Do you know that story? Rich > > They will be applicable and I " ll tell you why: > > 1) Most lymies have heavy metal issues, like the autistic kids. It's > either a prior existing problem that was silent, and/or, something > about lyme and biotoxins so downregulates the system that it begins to > collect metals because its so pressured > > 2) Many lymies probably have methylation issues. I found it > fascinating that both mercury and strep inhibit the same enzyme--I > forget the initials, you may remember, RIch, dpp4-----whatever it is. > A crucial enzyme in methylation/immunity. Probably lyme does too, > then, why not? I'll bet there is a profound link there > > 3) Having a good methylation cycle can only help. What is CFS anyway? > CHronic infection. What is lyme? Chronic infection. They overlap, > often are the same, otherwise, they're just different bugs. The > autistic kids have chronic infection too. Their guts are a mess. They > often have strep, fungi etc. Some have lyme. > > 4) Some of the therapies they're using, targetted to immunity, like > oralgam are interesting. > > I see nobody responded back about that bovine serum product--I'm > wondering. > > Rich could you do me a favor I don't have the time. Can you contact > Boyd Haley and interview him and post it back to us here? I want to > know as much as possible about that chelator and his hopes for it. I > know he can't reveal what it is. If we could get a safe strong > chelator that would be great. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2006 Report Share Posted January 14, 2006 Before we can reach such a conclusion, though, I > think it behooves us to get more data on glutathione levels, > selenium levels, and glutathione peroxidase activity in people with > positive tests for long-term Lyme disease, as well as some > experience trying these treatments as part of the treatment of long- > term Lyme disease. ***I certainly think GSH is a valuable treatment for some CFS patients and I dont want to be represented as someone being 'anti-GSH'. My concern is theoretical and as such it is relatively minor in the scheme of things. I dont know why, Rich, you are interested in testing GSH in Lyme patients. The evidence of GSH depletion in CFS is meager and getting more meager all the time; the recent McGregor paper reviewed in the second issue of the Phoenix Rising newsletter found normal or increased GSH levels in the erythrocytes of CFS patients. This duplicated the findings of an earlier study. Because your theory does not seem to primarily based on evidence from studies on CFS patients I dont see why GSH studies on Lyme disease patients would hold any sway. Maybe this is a moot question anyway. The better question might be does GSH supplementation work? and if so why it does it do so in the face of apparently normal GSH levels? Basically I think you should throw out the low GSH depletion aspect and concentrate that question. I think a better case for GSH in CFS, given the most contrary findings thus far and the mostly positive results from its use, would involve greatly increased oxidative stress (?) that requires supplementation even if GSH levels are normal (?) or your intriguing idea that CFS patients are unable to utilize GSH efficiently. Perhaps methylation will fit in there somewhere - I havent been able to keep up the methylation ideas. Yours truly, Cort > --------------------------------- --------------------------------- Photos Got holiday prints? See all the ways to get quality prints in your hands ASAP. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2006 Report Share Posted January 14, 2006 I agree Cort and I also don't see the point of separating lyme and CFS. CFS is a description of symptoms. Lyme almost always results in CFS. Lyme is the name of a town and the name given to a bacterial infection " rediscovered " in Lyme, Connecticut. Lyme is not a description of symptoms. There is huge overlap btw lyme and CFS because almost all CFS involves chronic infection and a lot of CFSer's main problem is tickborne illness they just don't know it. Many were active hikers and campers...in the woods... > > > > Before we can reach such a conclusion, though, > I > > think it behooves us to get more data on glutathione levels, > > selenium levels, and glutathione peroxidase activity in people > with > > positive tests for long-term Lyme disease, as well as some > > experience trying these treatments as part of the treatment of > long- > > term Lyme disease. > > ***I certainly think GSH is a valuable treatment for some CFS patients and I dont want to be represented as someone being 'anti-GSH'. My concern is theoretical and as such it is relatively minor in the scheme of things. > > I dont know why, Rich, you are interested in testing GSH in Lyme patients. The evidence of GSH depletion in CFS is meager and getting more meager all the time; the recent McGregor paper reviewed in the second issue of the Phoenix Rising newsletter found normal or increased GSH levels in the erythrocytes of CFS patients. This duplicated the findings of an earlier study. Because your theory does not seem to primarily based on evidence from studies on CFS patients I dont see why GSH studies on Lyme disease patients would hold any sway. Maybe this is a moot question anyway. The better question might be does GSH supplementation work? and if so why it does it do so in the face of apparently normal GSH levels? Basically I think you should throw out the low GSH depletion aspect and concentrate that question. > > I think a better case for GSH in CFS, given the most contrary findings thus far and the mostly positive results from its use, would involve greatly increased oxidative stress (?) that requires supplementation even if GSH levels are normal (?) or your intriguing idea that CFS patients are unable to utilize GSH efficiently. Perhaps methylation will fit in there somewhere - I havent been able to keep up the methylation ideas. > Yours truly, > Cort > > > > > --------------------------------- > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > Photos > Got holiday prints? See all the ways to get quality prints in your hands ASAP. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2006 Report Share Posted January 15, 2006 Hi Raising my Glutathione level has been FUNDAMENTAL in my recovery although i also had to include a few other things to reverse the damage caused over many years. my regime: 1) Whey protein Isolate 2) lactoferrin 3) Coconut oil & lauricidin 4)Probiotics 5)Protein enzymes 6) Sea Salt or Recup 7) Calcium 8) CoQ10 9) Vit B complex & Vit C 10) Licorice Regards CS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2006 Report Share Posted January 15, 2006 Hi, Cort. Thanks for your comments. I realize that we have differing views about how the published glutathione data should be interpreted. The best response I can give is to reiterate that one of the most difficult problems in making use of nearly all the clinical data published in CFS is that the current research case definition produces a very heterogeneous population for study. As a result, it is very difficult to obtain definitive clinical results, and any interpretation of those that have been published must be done with a great deal of judgment. I might add that I have communicated in person and by email with quite a few clinical researchers, and this is a problem I hear from them quite often. One of the extreme cases is McCully. He repeated the same type of clinical study, using the same criteria for CFS patients, and got opposite results. To his credit, he had the guts to publish both, but where does that leave us in trying to reach a conclusion about his type of study in CFS? The glutathione work isn't so different from this. As you may know, one of the Australian papers reported that there was actually a bimodal distribution. One subset was higher than normal, and the other was lower than normal. Had they averaged them together, as is done in a lot of CFS work, especially since there usually aren't a very large number of subjects, they would have gotten insignificant results. As it is, they caused me to wonder how there could be these two groups. As I started to get some gene polymorphism results for the glutathione transferase enzymes in PWCs, it hit me! That's where the hypothesis came from that you find " intriguing. " My point is that it is not just an idea out of the blue. It's based on data, and it also conforms to the science of the glutathone system, as we understand it. It's what one would expect if these polymorphisms occurred. What I'm using here is a systems approach and " gedanken " or thought experiments. These are techniques that have been very commonly used in physics for many years, but haven't been so useful in the biomedical field until recent years, because there wasn't a well enough developed body of theory to enable someone to use these approaches. But now there is, and one can. I don't know if you saw the latest issue of the newletter put out by the Wisconsin CFS Support Group. They reviewed a very candid talk that was given by Lenny there, and one of the things he said was that he had tried to get the research case definition tightened up, but the objection was that if that were done, the research performed after that could not be compared with all the research that had gone before! We are stuck with a research definition that prevents definitive work from being done, in the interest of preserving the " value " of work done with a definition that prevents definitive work from being done. Does that make sense to you? I think it's tragic. In the face of this, I have taken the position that we need to put together some comprehensive hypotheses that can be used to guide the clinical research, as a way to ferret out the various subsets in the defined population, and that's what I've been trying to do. You may think that this is purely a " blue sky " activity, without relevance to the real world. However, I don't see it that way. Any comprehensive hypothesis must be self-consistent, and it must also be in accordance with accepted science. Furthermore, there must be at least a subset of the CFS population whose characteristics conform to it, wherever " peg points " exist. One can't expect one hypothesis to fit all PWCs, because not all are the same. Does anyone on this list still doubt that, after so many here have shared their experiences? One size definitely does not fit all in CFS. There's another very good test of comprehensive CFS hypotheses. Do they lead to anyone being helped? We have heard from quite a few on this list who have been helped by raising there glutathione. I'm very optimistic that incorporating the DAN! autism treatments will help many more, and if this turns out to be true, no comprehensive hypothesis would have a better confirmation than that. I have no problem with anyone coming up with an alternate comprehensive hypothesis for CFS, in fact I encouraged the people at the last AACFS (now IACFS) conference to do just that. Maybe they can fit another subset from the ones I've been trying to fit. If so, more power to them. But they must satisfy the rigorous criteria that I outlined above: self-consistency, conformance to known science, and agreement with data from at least a subset of PWCs. Rich > > > > Before we can reach such a conclusion, though, > I > > think it behooves us to get more data on glutathione levels, > > selenium levels, and glutathione peroxidase activity in people > with > > positive tests for long-term Lyme disease, as well as some > > experience trying these treatments as part of the treatment of > long- > > term Lyme disease. > > ***I certainly think GSH is a valuable treatment for some CFS patients and I dont want to be represented as someone being 'anti- GSH'. My concern is theoretical and as such it is relatively minor in the scheme of things. > > I dont know why, Rich, you are interested in testing GSH in Lyme patients. The evidence of GSH depletion in CFS is meager and getting more meager all the time; the recent McGregor paper reviewed in the second issue of the Phoenix Rising newsletter found normal or increased GSH levels in the erythrocytes of CFS patients. This duplicated the findings of an earlier study. Because your theory does not seem to primarily based on evidence from studies on CFS patients I dont see why GSH studies on Lyme disease patients would hold any sway. Maybe this is a moot question anyway. The better question might be does GSH supplementation work? and if so why it does it do so in the face of apparently normal GSH levels? Basically I think you should throw out the low GSH depletion aspect and concentrate that question. > > I think a better case for GSH in CFS, given the most contrary findings thus far and the mostly positive results from its use, would involve greatly increased oxidative stress (?) that requires supplementation even if GSH levels are normal (?) or your intriguing idea that CFS patients are unable to utilize GSH efficiently. Perhaps methylation will fit in there somewhere - I havent been able to keep up the methylation ideas. > Yours truly, > Cort > > > > > --------------------------------- > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > Photos > Got holiday prints? See all the ways to get quality prints in your hands ASAP. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2006 Report Share Posted January 15, 2006 my glutathione tested very low, there isn't much question my health has little chance of returning (and not getting worse) without restoring it. Its crucial for me as well, and all the methylation probs Rich talks about fit the picture for me based on my organic acids and fatty acids and amino acids, vite and mins testing... so I can back up everything Rich is saying with my lab results. So dont' discount that folks. Marcia Re: Re: CFS and DAN! treatments for autism Hi Raising my Glutathione level has been FUNDAMENTAL in my recovery although i also had to include a few other things to reverse the damage caused over many years. my regime: 1) Whey protein Isolate 2) lactoferrin 3) Coconut oil & lauricidin 4)Probiotics 5)Protein enzymes 6) Sea Salt or Recup 7) Calcium 8) CoQ10 9) Vit B complex & Vit C 10) Licorice Regards CS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2006 Report Share Posted January 19, 2006 rvankonynen <richvank@...> wrote: Hi, Cort. Thanks for your comments. I realize that we have differing views about how the published glutathione data should be interpreted. ***It's difficult to understand how to interpret it other than how I have. The results are just not very convincing; of seven studies, one did find reduced GSH overall - but there was no control group, two found reduced GSH in subsets of CFS patient, one of which they believed was due to obesity and increased oxidative stress. Two have found increased GSH, not in a subset but in all CFS patients and one found a tendency towards increased GSH. In order to make a case for GSH depletion you have to start getting creative. It very well could be and I expect there are subsets of people with GSH depletion - something must explain the positive results from using GSH - but overall, at least based on the published results its pretty to marshall a scenario of either widespread or substantial GSH depletion in a significant number of CFS patients. I agree we do have a big problem with heterogeneity in CFS. Reeves recently came out with a study, using the CDC definition, that found no orthostatic intolerance in CFS. Thats kind of mind boggling. We've had so many false leads in CFS that are thought to be due to referral bias; people with certain kinds of CFS gathering around specific researchers. Perhaps we'll come to the conclusion that what we thought was referral bias was instead different subsets of CFS patients with different triggers. Then again you can't throw out the baby with bathwater. The definition wasnt arrived at out of the blue. While there has been a great variability in some test results there have been some fairly consistent findings; reduced NK cell cytotoxicity, problems with serotonin, increased RNase L fragmentation, increased choline levels in the basal ganglia, increased levels of TGF-beta and, of course, increased oxidative stress in the muscles and the blood. This is one thing that weakens the GSH depletion theory; given the consistently increased oxidative stress one would think that GSH might be depleted simply due to the stress that system is under. Anyway while the definition is certainly not satisfactory it has been good enough right now to give us some consistent results. But the definition is a big problem that has to be fixed. It think they'll probably wait until they have really good evidence that they have a really good definition. Its really difficult to start over; the CDC is investing millions of dollars in huge studies incorporating genomic proteomics and other data all based on that definition. I wonder what 's new definition is? I'd love to see it. He's certainly doing excellant work in that area. Spence recently talked about heterogeneity problem in his Making the Breakthrough talk. I really wanted to get that newsletter but I couldn't find it. In the face of this, I have taken the position that we need to put together some comprehensive hypotheses that can be used to guide the clinical research, as a way to ferret out the various subsets in the defined population, and that's what I've been trying to do. You may think that this is purely a " blue sky " activity, without relevance to the real world. ***Why would I do that? In order for your theory to be viable, however, it now has to involve subsets doesnt it? However, I don't see it that way. Any comprehensive hypothesis must be self-consistent, and it must also be in accordance with accepted science. Furthermore, there must be at least a subset of the CFS population whose characteristics conform to it, wherever " peg points " exist. One can't expect one hypothesis to fit all PWCs, because not all are the same. Does anyone on this list still doubt that, after so many here have shared their experiences? One size definitely does not fit all in CFS. ****Of course not. My objection has been that you've ignored the negative evidence for your theory about GSH while accentuating the positive. A reading of your theory would suggest to someone uninformed about the issue that glutathione depletion is normal in CFS - that is what I thought until I looked at the studies. There's another very good test of comprehensive CFS hypotheses. Do they lead to anyone being helped? We have heard from quite a few on this list who have been helped by raising there glutathione. I'm very optimistic that incorporating the DAN! autism treatments will help many more, and if this turns out to be true, no comprehensive hypothesis would have a better confirmation than that. ***I agree with that. That is in fact the strongest evidence that glutathione in one way or another plays a role in CFS and this is the reason I hope you proceed with this and continue educating CFS patients about it. GSH supplementation has helped some CFS patients alot; others a bit, some it has even hurt a bit and others have had no response. What a mixed bag we are! I have no problem with anyone coming up with an alternate comprehensive hypothesis for CFS, in fact I encouraged the people at the last AACFS (now IACFS) conference to do just that. Maybe they can fit another subset from the ones I've been trying to fit. ***I'm surprised your suggesting that MAYBE they can (?) come up with other subsets or hypotheses? Of course they can and have; there is RNase L, PKR, theres alot of brain stuff going on, Ablashi has suggested subsets of CFS patients have HHV-6, Chia -enterovirus, Kerr - parvovirus. The fact that longitudinal studies have revealed that several pathogens (EBV, Ross River) cause CFS in a subset of people with come down with them suggest there are different viral triggers. There is evidence of toxin induced CFS as well. Lange/Natelson have found a subset of CFS patients demonstrate encephalopathy. Pall believes CFS is due to increased NO/ONOO. There are lots of potential subsets and a good number of hypotheses. If so, more power to them. But they must satisfy the rigorous criteria that I outlined above: self-consistency, conformance to known science, and agreement with data from at least a subset of PWCs. *** My problem has been YOUR lack of rigor in addressing evidence that is contrary to your theory. If you're looking for agreement with the data emerging now you have to more and more start to cherry-pick to find GSH depleted CFS patients. This is why I think you have to find a way to make GSH work without being depleted. I just went over the recent Jammes study; GSH was found to be normal in CFS patients during exercise - in fact at the end of the paper the authors stated there was a 'tendency' for GSH to be increased in CFS patients; that was a large sample size - almost 50 CFS patients as I remember. Yet GSH works for some patients and works well. I think your theory would be more viable and valuable if you can find a way to explain this conundrum and I hope you will continue to look at ways that could explain that. Yours truly, Cort. Rich > > > > Before we can reach such a conclusion, though, > I > > think it behooves us to get more data on glutathione levels, > > selenium levels, and glutathione peroxidase activity in people > with > > positive tests for long-term Lyme disease, as well as some > > experience trying these treatments as part of the treatment of > long- > > term Lyme disease. > > ***I certainly think GSH is a valuable treatment for some CFS patients and I dont want to be represented as someone being 'anti- GSH'. My concern is theoretical and as such it is relatively minor in the scheme of things. > > I dont know why, Rich, you are interested in testing GSH in Lyme patients. The evidence of GSH depletion in CFS is meager and getting more meager all the time; the recent McGregor paper reviewed in the second issue of the Phoenix Rising newsletter found normal or increased GSH levels in the erythrocytes of CFS patients. This duplicated the findings of an earlier study. Because your theory does not seem to primarily based on evidence from studies on CFS patients I dont see why GSH studies on Lyme disease patients would hold any sway. Maybe this is a moot question anyway. The better question might be does GSH supplementation work? and if so why it does it do so in the face of apparently normal GSH levels? Basically I think you should throw out the low GSH depletion aspect and concentrate that question. > > I think a better case for GSH in CFS, given the most contrary findings thus far and the mostly positive results from its use, would involve greatly increased oxidative stress (?) that requires supplementation even if GSH levels are normal (?) or your intriguing idea that CFS patients are unable to utilize GSH efficiently. Perhaps methylation will fit in there somewhere - I havent been able to keep up the methylation ideas. > Yours truly, > Cort > > > > > --------------------------------- > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > Photos > Got holiday prints? See all the ways to get quality prints in your hands ASAP. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2006 Report Share Posted January 19, 2006 My last post seemed rather negative in total but I dont want to downplay the helpful benefits GSH can bring. When it works it appears to work very well and at least from anecdotal reports it appears to be one of the most effective treatments we've come up with. I'm sure continuing work in devising better delivery systems for it (i.e. lipoceutical GSH) will continue to further improve its efficacy. The many different types of GSH now available speak to how important a compound it is, not only for CFS but for other diseases. I havent been able to follow the methylation question but it seems like addressing that problem will further enhance GSH's effects and I'm looking forward, if you have the time, to posting an overview of that aspect on the website as well. Yours truly, Cort rvankonynen <richvank@...> wrote: Hi, Cort. Thanks for your comments. I realize that we have differing views about how the published glutathione data should be interpreted. The best response I can give is to reiterate that one of the most difficult problems in making use of nearly all the clinical data published in CFS is that the current research case definition produces a very heterogeneous population for study. As a result, it is very difficult to obtain definitive clinical results, and any interpretation of those that have been published must be done with a great deal of judgment. I might add that I have communicated in person and by email with quite a few clinical researchers, and this is a problem I hear from them quite often. One of the extreme cases is McCully. He repeated the same type of clinical study, using the same criteria for CFS patients, and got opposite results. To his credit, he had the guts to publish both, but where does that leave us in trying to reach a conclusion about his type of study in CFS? The glutathione work isn't so different from this. As you may know, one of the Australian papers reported that there was actually a bimodal distribution. One subset was higher than normal, and the other was lower than normal. Had they averaged them together, as is done in a lot of CFS work, especially since there usually aren't a very large number of subjects, they would have gotten insignificant results. As it is, they caused me to wonder how there could be these two groups. As I started to get some gene polymorphism results for the glutathione transferase enzymes in PWCs, it hit me! That's where the hypothesis came from that you find " intriguing. " My point is that it is not just an idea out of the blue. It's based on data, and it also conforms to the science of the glutathone system, as we understand it. It's what one would expect if these polymorphisms occurred. What I'm using here is a systems approach and " gedanken " or thought experiments. These are techniques that have been very commonly used in physics for many years, but haven't been so useful in the biomedical field until recent years, because there wasn't a well enough developed body of theory to enable someone to use these approaches. But now there is, and one can. I don't know if you saw the latest issue of the newletter put out by the Wisconsin CFS Support Group. They reviewed a very candid talk that was given by Lenny there, and one of the things he said was that he had tried to get the research case definition tightened up, but the objection was that if that were done, the research performed after that could not be compared with all the research that had gone before! We are stuck with a research definition that prevents definitive work from being done, in the interest of preserving the " value " of work done with a definition that prevents definitive work from being done. Does that make sense to you? I think it's tragic. In the face of this, I have taken the position that we need to put together some comprehensive hypotheses that can be used to guide the clinical research, as a way to ferret out the various subsets in the defined population, and that's what I've been trying to do. You may think that this is purely a " blue sky " activity, without relevance to the real world. However, I don't see it that way. Any comprehensive hypothesis must be self-consistent, and it must also be in accordance with accepted science. Furthermore, there must be at least a subset of the CFS population whose characteristics conform to it, wherever " peg points " exist. One can't expect one hypothesis to fit all PWCs, because not all are the same. Does anyone on this list still doubt that, after so many here have shared their experiences? One size definitely does not fit all in CFS. There's another very good test of comprehensive CFS hypotheses. Do they lead to anyone being helped? We have heard from quite a few on this list who have been helped by raising there glutathione. I'm very optimistic that incorporating the DAN! autism treatments will help many more, and if this turns out to be true, no comprehensive hypothesis would have a better confirmation than that. I have no problem with anyone coming up with an alternate comprehensive hypothesis for CFS, in fact I encouraged the people at the last AACFS (now IACFS) conference to do just that. Maybe they can fit another subset from the ones I've been trying to fit. If so, more power to them. But they must satisfy the rigorous criteria that I outlined above: self-consistency, conformance to known science, and agreement with data from at least a subset of PWCs. Rich > > > > Before we can reach such a conclusion, though, > I > > think it behooves us to get more data on glutathione levels, > > selenium levels, and glutathione peroxidase activity in people > with > > positive tests for long-term Lyme disease, as well as some > > experience trying these treatments as part of the treatment of > long- > > term Lyme disease. > > ***I certainly think GSH is a valuable treatment for some CFS patients and I dont want to be represented as someone being 'anti- GSH'. My concern is theoretical and as such it is relatively minor in the scheme of things. > > I dont know why, Rich, you are interested in testing GSH in Lyme patients. The evidence of GSH depletion in CFS is meager and getting more meager all the time; the recent McGregor paper reviewed in the second issue of the Phoenix Rising newsletter found normal or increased GSH levels in the erythrocytes of CFS patients. This duplicated the findings of an earlier study. Because your theory does not seem to primarily based on evidence from studies on CFS patients I dont see why GSH studies on Lyme disease patients would hold any sway. Maybe this is a moot question anyway. The better question might be does GSH supplementation work? and if so why it does it do so in the face of apparently normal GSH levels? Basically I think you should throw out the low GSH depletion aspect and concentrate that question. > > I think a better case for GSH in CFS, given the most contrary findings thus far and the mostly positive results from its use, would involve greatly increased oxidative stress (?) that requires supplementation even if GSH levels are normal (?) or your intriguing idea that CFS patients are unable to utilize GSH efficiently. Perhaps methylation will fit in there somewhere - I havent been able to keep up the methylation ideas. > Yours truly, > Cort > > > > > --------------------------------- > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > Photos > Got holiday prints? See all the ways to get quality prints in your hands ASAP. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2006 Report Share Posted January 19, 2006 Hi, Cort. Please don't worry about your critiques sounding negative. I really do appreciate your shooting at my hypotheses. That's a good way to test them, and they definitely need to be tested! One of the people who had a major impact on my life, starting about 43 years ago, was the late physicist Teller. He told me that one of the problems he had in doing research in the latter part of his life was that it was hard for him to find people who would give him an honest critique of his hypotheses and proposals. Because of his history and reputation, people tended to be very polite and to show deference to him, and this made it hard for him to make progress. Of course, I'm no Teller! But I do understand what he meant about that. And I did try to give him honest critiques, at least when I understood enough about what he was working on, which wasn't all that often! I can remember three times when I did that, though, and I approached those times with a great deal of fear and trepidation! But he actually did appreciate it, and I actually was right on those three occasions. So please, keep it up! I will try to write something more about the methylation cycle block, though I have posted some things about it, starting from the first part of November, after I went to the October DAN! conference. It may be a little while, though, because at present my wife is encouraging me to get out something more detailed on prevention and treatment of avian flu. She believes, and I think she's right, that this should get some priority in view of the possible consequences of a worldwide flu pandemic. Rich > > My last post seemed rather negative in total but I dont want to downplay the helpful benefits GSH can bring. When it works it appears to work very well and at least from anecdotal reports it appears to be one of the most effective treatments we've come up with. I'm sure continuing work in devising better delivery systems for it (i.e. lipoceutical GSH) will continue to further improve its efficacy. The many different types of GSH now available speak to how important a compound it is, not only for CFS but for other diseases. I havent been able to follow the methylation question but it seems like addressing that problem will further enhance GSH's effects and I'm looking forward, if you have the time, to posting an overview of that aspect on the website as well. > > > Yours truly, Cort > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2006 Report Share Posted January 20, 2006 I cant believe that a) you knew Teller and that you actually won an argument with him. What a interesting and controversial guy he was. rvankonynen <richvank@...> wrote: Hi, Cort. Please don't worry about your critiques sounding negative. I really do appreciate your shooting at my hypotheses. That's a good way to test them, and they definitely need to be tested! One of the people who had a major impact on my life, starting about 43 years ago, was the late physicist Teller. He told me that one of the problems he had in doing research in the latter part of his life was that it was hard for him to find people who would give him an honest critique of his hypotheses and proposals. Because of his history and reputation, people tended to be very polite and to show deference to him, and this made it hard for him to make progress. Of course, I'm no Teller! But I do understand what he meant about that. And I did try to give him honest critiques, at least when I understood enough about what he was working on, which wasn't all that often! I can remember three times when I did that, though, and I approached those times with a great deal of fear and trepidation! But he actually did appreciate it, and I actually was right on those three occasions. So please, keep it up! I will try to write something more about the methylation cycle block, though I have posted some things about it, starting from the first part of November, after I went to the October DAN! conference. It may be a little while, though, because at present my wife is encouraging me to get out something more detailed on prevention and treatment of avian flu. She believes, and I think she's right, that this should get some priority in view of the possible consequences of a worldwide flu pandemic. Rich > > My last post seemed rather negative in total but I dont want to downplay the helpful benefits GSH can bring. When it works it appears to work very well and at least from anecdotal reports it appears to be one of the most effective treatments we've come up with. I'm sure continuing work in devising better delivery systems for it (i.e. lipoceutical GSH) will continue to further improve its efficacy. The many different types of GSH now available speak to how important a compound it is, not only for CFS but for other diseases. I havent been able to follow the methylation question but it seems like addressing that problem will further enhance GSH's effects and I'm looking forward, if you have the time, to posting an overview of that aspect on the website as well. > > > Yours truly, Cort > This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 20, 2006 Report Share Posted January 20, 2006 By the way he owned 3 hyperbaric oxygen chambers and used them often which kept him going for his later years. > > > > My last post seemed rather negative in total but I dont want to > downplay the helpful benefits GSH can bring. When it works it > appears to work very well and at least from anecdotal reports it > appears to be one of the most effective treatments we've come up > with. I'm sure continuing work in devising better delivery systems > for it (i.e. lipoceutical GSH) will continue to further improve its > efficacy. The many different types of GSH now available speak to how > important a compound it is, not only for CFS but for other > diseases. I havent been able to follow the methylation question but > it seems like addressing that problem will further enhance GSH's > effects and I'm looking forward, if you have the time, to posting an > overview of that aspect on the website as well. > > > > > > Yours truly, Cort > > > > > > > > > This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with each other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any treatment discussed here, please consult your doctor. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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