Guest guest Posted March 2, 2006 Report Share Posted March 2, 2006 Hi, mjh. I think " comprehensive " is stretching it a little, but it's nice of you to say that! Concerning EBV, though, I think it is one of several viruses that can reactivate from the latent, endogenous state when glutathione goes low enough. I wouldn't view it as the cause in most cases of CFS. However, if we're talking about a person who gets an EBV infection for their first time, such as a teenager getting mononucleosis (glandular fever) on their first exposure to EBV, and then they go into CFS from that, I think it could be viewed as a precipitating factor in that case. I would say that the cause in such a case would be a genetic predisposition, combined with whatever lowered the glutathione to the point where the vicious cycle set in, including the EBV infection, because the immune system demands more glutathione to fight it. I do think that the genetic predisposition has to be there for a person to develop CFS, though. Until the person's genetic variations are characterized, they continue to hide in the bushes, and the EBV gets the blame for causing the CFS. Rich > > > But, EBV is not on Rich's comprehensive list of CFIDS subsets... at least, > not that I could find. > > mjh > > > In a message dated 3/2/06 3:35:11 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, > runningwild@... writes: > > All I know is that whoever the researchers are they believe that CFS is > originally caused by the Ebstein Barr virus.Which seems odd to me because as > we all know > this is very old news! > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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