Guest guest Posted July 21, 2006 Report Share Posted July 21, 2006 Phil & all, Dr. Hyde's book is pretty solid throughout, and the first few pages are a real eye-opener in regard to clear pictures of the abnormal brain neuro SPECT & PET scans as well as QEEG scans (these abnormal scans are also on the first page of the Canadian Consensus Criteria Overview--http://www.mefmaction.net/documents/me_overview.pdf ) Also, the Neurology section of the Research portion on this new web site as well as the section entitled ME/CFS Explained show a lot of Dr. Hyde's work here: www.name-us.org Finally, Rich did a very nice summary of Dr. Hyde's presentation at a recent AACFS Conference in Wisconsin (now called IACFS). Maybe Rich could supply a link for his excellent summary of Dr. Hyde's presentation. Du Pre Website: http://www.angelfire.com/poetry/soareagle/index.html " By words the mind is winged. " Aristophanes Phil wrote: I am thinking about buying a copy of Dr Byron Hyde's text book on ME. However, owing to the cost, I thought I'd try and get a few opinions on what its like first. I am looking for material that I can show my GP first and fore-most, but also for my own use, and perhaps to lend to other ME sufferers local to me. Therefore I have the following questions: 1) Does anyone know if there is an online summary / review that they think is useful / accurate? 2) Has anyone else used it to " talk round " their GP? 3) Is there anything in it that may cause problems - ie controversial discussion that may wind up your average GP, or indeed anything that you out-right disagree with? I'd appreciate any comments or information, Phil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 21, 2006 Report Share Posted July 21, 2006 , Phil, and the group, Here's the url of Cort's site for the review of Byron Hyde's talk in Oct. of 2004: http://www.phoenix-cfs.org/The%20SITE/AACFS04Hyde.htm Rich > > I am thinking about buying a copy of Dr Byron Hyde's text book on > ME. However, owing to the cost, I thought I'd try and get a few > opinions on what its like first. I am looking for material that I > can show my GP first and fore-most, but also for my own use, and > perhaps to lend to other ME sufferers local to me. Therefore I have > the following questions: > > 1) Does anyone know if there is an online summary / review that they > think is useful / accurate? > > 2) Has anyone else used it to " talk round " their GP? > > 3) Is there anything in it that may cause problems - ie > controversial discussion that may wind up your average GP, or indeed > anything that you out-right disagree with? > > I'd appreciate any comments or information, > > Phil > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 22, 2006 Report Share Posted July 22, 2006 Thanks guys. I'll follow these links up. Phil > > > > I am thinking about buying a copy of Dr Byron Hyde's text book on > > ME. However, owing to the cost, I thought I'd try and get a few > > opinions on what its like first. I am looking for material that I > > can show my GP first and fore-most, but also for my own use, and > > perhaps to lend to other ME sufferers local to me. Therefore I have > > the following questions: > > > > 1) Does anyone know if there is an online summary / review that > they > > think is useful / accurate? > > > > 2) Has anyone else used it to " talk round " their GP? > > > > 3) Is there anything in it that may cause problems - ie > > controversial discussion that may wind up your average GP, or > indeed > > anything that you out-right disagree with? > > > > I'd appreciate any comments or information, > > > > Phil > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 23, 2006 Report Share Posted July 23, 2006 Oops. This is the wrong message to thank you Blake, but I deleted mine too quickly. Edy Blake Graham <blanket@...> wrote: Dr. Byron Hyde's book is great. It gives an excellent overview of the history of CFS and the pathophysiology, although I wouldn't look to as a source of the latest information on treatment. Blake Re: Seeking information on Dr Byron Hydes text book Thanks guys. I'll follow these links up. Phil > > > > I am thinking about buying a copy of Dr Byron Hyde's text book on > > ME. However, owing to the cost, I thought I'd try and get a few > > opinions on what its like first. I am looking for material that I > > can show my GP first and fore-most, but also for my own use, and > > perhaps to lend to other ME sufferers local to me. Therefore I have > > the following questions: > > > > 1) Does anyone know if there is an online summary / review that > they > > think is useful / accurate? > > > > 2) Has anyone else used it to " talk round " their GP? > > > > 3) Is there anything in it that may cause problems - ie > > controversial discussion that may wind up your average GP, or > indeed > > anything that you out-right disagree with? > > > > I'd appreciate any comments or information, > > > > Phil > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 23, 2006 Report Share Posted July 23, 2006 Dr. Byron Hyde's book is great. It gives an excellent overview of the history of CFS and the pathophysiology, although I wouldn't look to as a source of the latest information on treatment. Blake Re: Seeking information on Dr Byron Hydes text book Thanks guys. I'll follow these links up. Phil > > > > I am thinking about buying a copy of Dr Byron Hyde's text book on > > ME. However, owing to the cost, I thought I'd try and get a few > > opinions on what its like first. I am looking for material that I > > can show my GP first and fore-most, but also for my own use, and > > perhaps to lend to other ME sufferers local to me. Therefore I have > > the following questions: > > > > 1) Does anyone know if there is an online summary / review that > they > > think is useful / accurate? > > > > 2) Has anyone else used it to " talk round " their GP? > > > > 3) Is there anything in it that may cause problems - ie > > controversial discussion that may wind up your average GP, or > indeed > > anything that you out-right disagree with? > > > > I'd appreciate any comments or information, > > > > Phil > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2006 Report Share Posted July 30, 2006 Phil, I purchased two copies of said book by the Nightengale foundation back when they offered a buy one get the other for half price deal. or something of that sort. I think it is an excellent textbook for use in tactical deployments contra M.D. typical value system. in the clinical and scientific basis... we have an entry by virtually EVERY player in the field (up till then): Cheney, Goldstein, Les Simpson, ummm- an excellent section on the perspective from France, where they have used the term Spasmophilie instead of cfs; the doctor whose name I forget speaks of the condition more in terms of electrolyte distrubances and the role of nutrient supplementation. Sorry, but my memory lapses when it comes to being capable of rattling off 3 dozen more players from that time due to acquired brain injury and resulting amnesia. I gave my second copy to the central library in my city and it was graciously accepted. In sum, the book is a large hardcover textbook that although dated, would appear to have the requisite formal qualities needed to potentially recruit the attention of an average MD. AFter all, it ISN'T taken from the internet and besides they have never seen that text! How could this be?! [alas, I am disingenuous: MDs in my experience q) never read anything voluntarily unless they are academic types, they stopped learning about medicine when they graduated from med school 35 years ago, c) have no time to read what they might considerately accept from you in order to get to their next patient. This book is as good a candidate as any but the question is; does your doc have an open minded interest in medicine still or are they dogmatic and closed? if the latter, then strategize well before tactical deployments... H Seeking information on Dr Byron Hydes text book Hi All, I am thinking about buying a copy of Dr Byron Hyde's text book on ME. However, owing to the cost, I thought I'd try and get a few opinions on what its like first. I am looking for material that I can show my GP first and fore-most, but also for my own use, and perhaps to lend to other ME sufferers local to me. Therefore I have the following questions: 1) Does anyone know if there is an online summary / review that they think is useful / accurate? 2) Has anyone else used it to " talk round " their GP? 3) Is there anything in it that may cause problems - ie controversial discussion that may wind up your average GP, or indeed anything that you out-right disagree with? I'd appreciate any comments or information, Phil Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2006 Report Share Posted July 31, 2006 Hi H About considering CFS as spasmophilie in France,what you read in the book is completely inaccurate. My sister is spasmophile without CFS, I have CFS and I am not spasmophile. Spasmophilie is a chronic lack of magnesium which makes muscles spasm. I am sorry to disappoint you, but in France the doctors as far as I could notice have merely no perspective about CFS. BTW, I would be curious to know the name of the one mentioned in the book, I'm going to pay him a courtesy visit Can you tell me his name, please? Thanks! Will let you know! Sylvie, in France > Re: Seeking information on Dr Byron Hydes text book > Posted by: " HJR " hudr@... hudjr > Date: Sun Jul 30, 2006 10:53 am (PDT) > > Phil, > > I purchased two copies of said book by the Nightengale foundation back when > they offered a buy one get the other for half price deal. or something of > that sort. > > I think it is an excellent textbook for use in tactical deployments contra > M.D. typical value system. in the clinical and scientific basis... we have an > entry by virtually EVERY player in the field (up till then): Cheney, > Goldstein, Les Simpson, ummm- an excellent section on the perspective from > France, where they have used the term Spasmophilie instead of cfs; the doctor > whose name I forget speaks of the condition more in terms of electrolyte > distrubances and the role of nutrient supplementation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 3, 2006 Report Share Posted August 3, 2006 Don't worry about disappointing me! I don't have time to give major argument but let me say this: it is my contention that CFS may be heterogeneous disorder with the various subpopuulations...one of which I want to suggest is a population of sufferers from Gittelman's Syndrome which is a rare[?] mostly genetic disease of the kidneys, considered relatively benign or even asymptomatic at times. To be short GS is this: a condition which is characterized by a mutation of the sodium-chloride transporter. Until recently, it was thought to be just one type of mutation there. but now it is considered to be any number of related syndromes all of which share a mutation of some kind in the genes which encode for the sodium chloride transporter. There can be many (codon substitutions or deletions...). This does indeed tend to lead to muscle spasm via inadequate sodium and chloride retention/kinetics... which leads to inadquate water retention, ...not enough chloride would lead to alkalosis or alkalemia... without the sodium transporter working properly we cannot retain other electrolytes namely potassium and magnesium. without magnesium, the parathyroids do not do their job of turning storage form calcium (in bone usully) into the ionized and active form. This lack of ionized calcium leads to 'tetany' or muscle spasm/neuromuscular hyperexcitability which can be very serious I'd imagine (imagine all your muscles in spasm) or it can be asymptomatic. Or it could resemble say, Myofascial Pain Syndrome, which is a common component of cfs...sort of a twin sister to fibromyalgia syndrome. And since MPS and FMS are arguably actually CFS (whose diagnostic criteria from ages ago...CDC?) always involved pain as a necessary criterion for a positive dx or cfs. In FMS it takes the form of tenderness muscle pain. In MPS it has the quality of trigger points / localized knots and spasms which refer pain elsewhere besides the actual trigger point. So, unwiling to get any furthe into my hypothesis right now, let me just say that it is best to keep an open mind. I try to use the phenomenological technique which involves taking your beliefs about something and bracketing them (holding them aside for a sec) and consulting your experience directly. This method has led me to Gittelman's = Spasmophilie both of which are probably poorly understood and defined and whose treatments overlap considerably with those for CFS. that's all I can muster for now. sorry for the incompleteness. Always, -- Hud J Oetoyo Re: Re: Seeking information on Dr Byron Hydes text book Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 4, 2006 Report Share Posted August 4, 2006 --- So if its a problem with the sodium chloride transporter treatment implications are what exactly?- Salt/C protocol, saltpipe or abx??? Wallace In , " HJR " <hudr@...> wrote: > > Don't worry about disappointing me! I don't have time to give major argument but let me say this: it is my contention that CFS may be heterogeneous disorder with the various subpopuulations...one of which I want to suggest is a population of sufferers from Gittelman's Syndrome which is a rare[?] mostly genetic disease of the kidneys, considered relatively benign or even asymptomatic at times. To be short GS is this: a condition which is characterized by a mutation of the sodium-chloride transporter. Until recently, it was thought to be just one type of mutation there. but now it is considered to be any number of related syndromes all of which share a mutation of some kind in the genes which encode for the sodium chloride transporter. There can be many (codon substitutions or deletions...). This does indeed tend to lead to muscle spasm via inadequate sodium and chloride retention/kinetics... which leads to inadquate water retention, ...not enough chloride would lead to alkalosis or alkalemia... without the sodium transporter working properly we cannot retain other electrolytes namely potassium and magnesium. without magnesium, the parathyroids do not do their job of turning storage form calcium (in bone usully) into the ionized and active form. This lack of ionized calcium leads to 'tetany' or muscle spasm/neuromuscular hyperexcitability which can be very serious I'd imagine (imagine all your muscles in spasm) or it can be asymptomatic. Or it could resemble say, Myofascial Pain Syndrome, which is a common component of cfs...sort of a twin sister to fibromyalgia syndrome. > > And since MPS and FMS are arguably actually CFS (whose diagnostic criteria from ages ago...CDC?) always involved pain as a necessary criterion for a positive dx or cfs. In FMS it takes the form of tenderness muscle pain. In MPS it has the quality of trigger points / localized knots and spasms which refer pain elsewhere besides the actual trigger point. > > So, unwiling to get any furthe into my hypothesis right now, let me just say that it is best to keep an open mind. I try to use the phenomenological technique which involves taking your beliefs about something and bracketing them (holding them aside for a sec) and consulting your experience directly. This method has led me to Gittelman's = Spasmophilie both of which are probably poorly understood and defined and whose treatments overlap considerably with those for CFS. > > that's all I can muster for now. sorry for the incompleteness. > > > Always, > > -- > Hud J Oetoyo > Re: Re: Seeking information on Dr Byron Hydes text book > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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