Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Hi All, Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's watching! It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting one aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles and the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " viruses then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm people. I hope this is useful to people here. Phil ------------------------------------------------------------ The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. ABSTRACT: This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy for the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) in conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle metabolism (including the muscles of the cardiovascular system) continually compete for glutathione, inducing a state of constant stress that renders the condition chronic. The impairment of a range of functions means that subtly different suites of symptoms are apparent for different patients. Graded exercise therapy has proven useful for a minority of these, and the exacerbation of symptoms for the majority is not subjective but has a physiological basis. Blanket recommendation of graded exercise therapy is not prudent for such a heterogeneous group of patients, most of which are likely to respond negatively to physical activity. Following exercise, patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) uniquely exhibit exacerbated symptoms and a suite of measurable physiological changes indicative of stress (sub-optimal metabolic performance; e.g. reduced respiration and heart rate, increased glycolysis and lactic acid production, and concomitant limitation of activity1-5). Although these symptoms may not be universal6, a significant subgroup of ME patients are affected in this manner7. The issue of exercise is critical for the treatment of the condition as one school of thought recommends " graded exercise therapy " as a general remedy for ME whilst another recognises that exercise intolerance may have an underlying physiological cause that may actually be aggravated by physical exertion. This difference of opinion influences policy: graded exercise therapy is one of the principal recommendations of the current NICE draft guidelines for the treatment of patients " mildly to moderately affected " by ME (p. 21, lines 20 to 23) 8. Although recent general reviews of ME exist9- 11, our aim is to specifically review evidence for the mechanisms by which physical activity affects ME patients, and to investigate how graded exercise therapy may help or hinder recovery. Although no single randomised controlled study has yet attempted to investigate every aspect of ME, the combined weight of empirical evidence to date indicates that the condition is characterised by a complex series of events involving reserves of metabolic regulators such as glutathione, muscle metabolism and the cardiovascular system. A significant body of literature suggests that these imbalances are associated with a dysfunctional immune system impaired by viral infection. Indeed, a hallmark of ME is a range of symptoms, varying in extent between patients, suggesting that a range of functions are impaired to greater or lesser degrees. ME typically follows a flu-like illness, with elevated concentrations of viral particles subsequently detectable in blood and muscle tissues12. Post-viral fatigue is a well established possible consequence of infection by a range of different viruses13- 17, with enteroviruses specifically implicated in the case of ME – elevated concentrations of viral RNA sequences resembling coxsackie virus B are detectable in muscle tissue12. Furthermore, the majority of the limited number of ME patients so far treated with antiviral drugs (interferons) were able to return to work following treatment18, also suggestive of a persistent `smoldering infection'19. Crucially, post-viral fatigue is not related to the muscle disuse and deconditioning that can result from the initial period of illness12. Indeed, the mechanism underpinning post-viral fatigue is a multifaceted physiological imbalance. Nijs and co-workers20 found that, for ME patients, graded exercise resulted in faulty regulation of the immune system, specifically increased activity of the enzymes " elastase " and " RNase L " . RNase L is a key component in the cell's virus detection system and is up-regulated in response to viral infection. However, elastase degrades RNase L and is normally involved in removing it from the cell when concentrations are too high. Why should both be highly expressed in ME patients? Elastase is activated and degrades the RNase L in the absence of metabolic regulators such as glutathione. (Glutathione is an amino acid complex that modifies enzyme activity throughout the body, and ME patients exhibit either lower concentrations or an imbalance between its active and inactive forms21-23.) Thus the simultaneous over- activation and mis-regulation of this part of the immune system can be explained by glutathione depletion. A range of factors contribute to glutathione depletion in the general population, including infection, the oxidative stress induced by strenuous or sustained exercise, and the long- term elevation of the stress hormones cortisol and adrenalin24. Furthermore, glutathione is also involved in sustaining respiration (i.e. the production of chemical energy compounds such as ATP in the mitochondria) thereby providing energy for active tissues such as muscle. Thus muscle tissue effectively competes with the immune system for glutathione25 – sustained physical activity reduces the amount of glutathione available to the immune system, resulting in immune dysfunction. Conversely, an overactive immune system reduces the amount of energy available for muscle tissue, also exacerbating oxidative stress, and can account for both the chronic fatigue and pain (by inducing lactic acid production) that characterise ME. Thus, following an initial period of stress, glutathione concentrations may be too low for the optimal function of both the immune system and muscle tissues, paving the way for both persistent viral infection and fatigue, both of which feedback from each other to render the condition chronic. This situation is compounded by the fact that glutathione not only has a supporting role in the immune response but also directly inhibits the replication of enteroviruses by blocking the formation of one particular protein (glycoprotein shared by all – including coxsackie viruses. Indeed, glutathione concentration is a major factor influencing the expression of other persistent viral infections such as HIV26-29. Thus glutathione depletion not only suppresses the immune system, it leaves the body particularly defenceless against enteroviruses. Sustained exercise or stress can deplete glutathione concentrations to the point where viral RNA is no longer prevented from replicating, aiding either an initial infection or the renewed replication of previously blocked viral RNA present in muscle tissue and blood27,29. Thus glutathione depletion is a strong candidate for `the trigger for reactivation of endogenous latent viruses' in ME30. A small number of studies demonstrate that foods rich in glutathione or direct glutathione injection help to relieve fatigue in ME patients, and may clear active viral infections31,32. Although the above studies have concentrated on skeletal muscle, the heart (and the postural leg muscle involved in pumping blood back to the heart) is not exempt from glutathione depletion. Thus the above mechanism can also account for the range of cardiovascular problems associated with ME, including orthostatic (standing) intolerance (reviewed by Spence and 33). Patients with orthostatic intolerance `have continuous disability and commonly have exercise intolerance'33. Together, this evidence suggests that chronic fatigue in ME is symptomatic of the following sequence of events: a period of infection or strenuous physical or mental activity results in glutathione depletion; this renders the immune system relatively ineffective, particularly against enterovirus infection; the immune system becomes constantly activated (and inefficiently governed) because it has insufficient resources (glutathione) to completely rid the body of viral particles; the constantly elevated energy demand of the immune system detracts from other metabolic functions (particularly energy-demanding systems such as skeletal muscles and the cardiovascular system); limitation of respiratory and cardiovascular systems further locks the patient into a vicious cycle of inefficient energy production and use; increased reliance on anaerobic metabolism leads to lactic acid production and associated muscle pain. Clearly, the performance of energy-demanding activities such as exercise can only aggravate this situation. Indeed, 82 % of ME patients in a recent study stated that graded exercise therapy worsened their condition, and only 5 % found it useful (compared to 70 – 75 % of patients who found either pain management or `pacing' of daily activities useful)34. Furthermore, the Canadian Clinical Treatment Protocol warns that " externally paced `Graded Exercise Programs' or programs based on the premise that patients are misperceiving their activity limits or illness must be avoided " 35. If exercise is so detrimental, why is graded exercise therapy often recommended as a treatment for ME? Firstly, many of the studies cited here are recent, and the information and implications have perhaps not yet filtered up to policy makers. Secondly, the reclassification of ME as an ambiguous `chronic fatigue syndrome' (CFS) by members of the psychiatric profession assumes that the symptoms have no physiological basis and are best treated with the traditional psychiatric method of facing and overcoming a problem, rather than direct removal of the problem at source. However, this approach jumps from hypothesis to treatment without investigating the mechanisms involved, perhaps explaining why " no psychiatrist has ever cured an M.E. patient using psychiatric treatments " 19. Psychiatry, by definition, should not have authority over the treatment of physiological disorders, particularly those that occur chiefly in muscle tissues. Graded exercise therapy is founded on, and perpetuates, the myth that ME patients are simply malingering, while most are frustrated by their incapacity to satisfactorily conduct critical aspects of daily life34. ME is a heterogeneous disorder that affects different patients to varying degrees and with subtly different suites of symptoms. At best, graded exercise therapy has relieved symptoms for (but not cured) a tiny minority of patients, whilst the weight of empirical evidence indicates that exercise has direct and persistently negative impacts on the physiology and quality of life of a significant subgroup of ME patients. Any universally applied therapy is unlikely to address the heterogeneity of ME, and graded exercise is particularly unsuitable as it may worsen the condition, and should not be generally recommended without a high degree of confidence that it will not be applied to susceptible patients: it is difficult to conceive of a more inappropriate therapy for ME. By increasing the risk of relapse and overall health risks, rather than reducing them, graded exercise therapy also risks increasing the burden of illness on society at large. The present review suggests that an approach based on treatment of the underlying physiological dysfunction will be more fruitful. Abbreviations ATP = Adenosine triphosphate, RNase L = 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2-5A) synthetase/Ribonuclease L Literature cited 1 De Becker PJ, Roeykens J, Reynders N, McGregor N & De Meirleir K. 2000. Exercise capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome. Archives of International Medicine 160: 3270-3277. 2 Fulcher KY & White PD. 2000. Strength and physiological response to exercise in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 69: 302-307. 3 Wong R, Lopaschuk G, Zhu G, et al. 1992. Skeletal muscle metabolism in the chronic fatigue syndrome: in vivo assessment by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Chest 102: 1716-1722. 4 Nus J, De Meirleir K, Wolfs S & Duquet W. 2004. Disability evaluation in chronic fatigue syndrome: associations between exercise capacity and activity limitations/participation restrictions. Clinical Rehabilitation 18: 139-148. 5 Sorensen B. Streib JE, Strand M, et al. 2003. Complement activation in a model of chronic fatique syndrome. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 112: 397-403. 6 Sargent C, Scroop GC, Nemeth PM, Burnet RB & Buckley JD. 2002. Maximal oxygen uptake and lactate metabolism are normal in chronic fatigue syndrome. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 34: 51- 56. 7 Chia JKS. 2005. The role of enterovirus in chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Clinical Pathology 58: 1126-1132. 8 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). CFS/ME: full guideline DRAFT (September 2006). 9 Afari N & Buchwald D. 2003. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a review. American Journal of Psychiatry 160: 221-236. 10 Patarca-Montero R, Antoni M, Fletcher MA & Klimas NG. 2001. Cytokine and other immunologic markers in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and their relation to neuropsychological factors. Applied Neuropsychology 8: 51-64. 11 Hooper M. 2006. Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME): a review with emphasis on key findings in biomedical research. Journal of Clinical Pathology (in press) published online 25 Aug. 2006 doi: 10.1136/jcp.2006.042408. 12 Lane RJM, Soteriou BA, Zhang H, & Archard LC. 2003. Enterovirus related metabolic myopathy: a postviral fatigue syndrome. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 74: 1382-1386. 13 Ayres JG, Flint N, EG, et al. 1998. Post-infection fatigue syndrome following Q-fever. Q. J. Med. 91: 105-123. 14 Berelowitz JG, Burgess AP, Thanabalasingham T, et al. 1995. Post- hepatitis syndrome revisited. Journal of Viral Hepatitis 2: 133-138. 15 Kerr JR, Barah F, Matley DL. et al. 2001. Circulating tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma are detectable during acute and convalescent paravirus B19 infection and are associated with prolonged and chronic fatigue. Journal of General Virology. 82: 3011-3019. 16 Hotopf M, Noah N, Wesseley S. 1996. Chronic fatigue and psychiatric morbidity following viral meningitis: a controlled study. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 60: 495- 503. 17 White PD, JM, Amess J, et al. 1995. The existence of a fatigue syndrome after glandular fever. Psychological Medicine 25: 907-916. 18 Chia JK, Jou NS, Majera L et al. 2001. The presence of enteroviral RNA (EV RNA) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) associated with high levels of neutralizing antibodies to enteroviruses. Clinical Infectious Diseases 33: 1157. 19 Hyde B. 2006. A new and simple definition of myalgic encephalomyelitis and a new simple definition of chronic fatigue syndrome & a brief history of myalgic encephalomyelitis and an irreverent history of chronic fatigue syndrome. Invest in ME, UK. 20 Nijs J, Meeus M, McGregor NR, Meeusen R, De Schutter G, Van Hoof E & De Meirleir K. 2005. Chronic fatigue syndrome: exercise performance related to immune dysfunction. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 37(10): 1647-1654. 21 s RS, TK, RH, McGregor NR & Butt HL. 2000. Free radicals in chronic fatigue syndrome: cause or effect? Redox Report 5(2-3): 146-147. 22 y Keenoy B, Moorkens G, Vertommen J, Noe M & De Leeuw I. 2000. Magnesium status and parameters of the oxidant-antioxidant balance in patients with chronic fatigue: effects of supplementation with magnesium. Journal of the American College of Nutrition 19(3): 374-382. 23 Kurup RK & Kurup PA. 2003. Hypothalamic digoxin, cerebral chemical dominance and myalgic encephalomyelitis. International Journal of Neuroscience 113: 683-701. 24 Ji LL. 1995. Oxidative stress during exercise: implication of antioxidant nutrients. Free Radical Biology & Medicine 18(6): 1079- 1086. 25 Bounous G & Molson J. 1999. Competition for glutathione precursors between the immune system and the skeletal muscle: pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome. Medical Hypotheses 53(4): 347-349. 26 Roederer M, Raju PA, Staal FJT, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. 1991. N-acetycysteine inhibits latent HIV expression in chronically infected cells. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 7: 563-567. 27 Staal FJT, Roederer M, Israelski DM, Bubp J, Mole LA, McShane D, Deresinski SC, Ross W, Sussman H, Raju PA, MT, W, Ela SW, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. 1992. Intracellular glutathione levels in T cell subsets decrease in HIV-infected individuals. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 8: 305-311. 28 Ciriolo MR, Palamara AT, Incerpi S, Lafavia E, Bue MC, De Vito P, Garaci E & Rotilio G. 1997. Loss of GSH, oxidative stress, and decrease of intracellular pH as sequential steps in viral infection. Journal of Biological Chemistry 272(5): 2700-2708. 29 Cai J, Chen Y, Seth S, Furukawa S, Compans RW & DP. 2003. Inhibition of influenza infection by glutathione. Free Radical Biology & Medicine 34(7): 928-936. 30 Van Konynenburg RA. 2004. Is glutathione depletion an important part of the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome? Presented at the AACFS Seventh International Conference, Oct. 8-10/2004, Madison, Wisconsin. 31 Salvato P. 1998. CFIDS patients improve with glutathione injections. CFIDS Chronicle January/February 1998. 32 Cheney PR. 1999. Evidence of glutathione deficiency in chronic fatigue syndrome. American Biologics 11th International Symposium, Vienna, Austria. Tape No. 07-199: available from Professional Audio Recording, P.O. Box 7455, LaVerne, CA 91750. 33 Spence V & J. 2004. Standing up for ME. Biologist 51(2): 65-70. 34 25% ME Group. 2004. Severely affected ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) analysis report on a questionnaire issued January 2004. 25% ME Group, Troon, Ayrshire, UK. pp. 8. 35 Jain AK, Carruthers BM & Van de Sande MI. 2004. Fibromyalgia Syndrome: Canadian Clinical Working Case Definition, Diagnostic and Treatment Protocols-A Consensus Document. Journal of Musculoskeletal Pain 11(4): 3-107. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Thanks for this; is this published (or going to be), and where? And who are the authors? > > Hi All, > > Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on > this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on > the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > watching! > > It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting one > aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles and > the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up > glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes > less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " viruses > then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm people. > > I hope this is useful to people here. > > Phil > > ------------------------------------------------------------ > > The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic > encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. > > ABSTRACT... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Hi, Phil. It is very gratifying to see that somebody is taking seriously some of the things I've been writing. I would be very pleased to talk to the principal author of this piece. My email address is richvank at aol dot com. Rich > > Hi All, The > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > watching! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 Quote from article: " Many CFS patients relate the onset of their symptoms to a preceding viral infection from which they believe they failed to recover fully. Evidence supporting such attribution had been largely anecdotal until recent prospective studies found evidence of protracted fatigue states following certain laboratory confirmed infections, supporting the concept of a postviral or postinfectious fatigue syndrome.4–7,11 We reported previously that a subset of CFS patients had abnormal lactate responses to exercise at work rates below the predicted anaerobic threshold.19 Such cases proved less likely to have evidence of psychiatric disorder than cases with normal lactate responses, and the finding could not be explained satisfactorily by the effects of deconditioning or muscle disuse, either on the basis of heart rate responses to exercise19 or from a subsequent analysis of muscle fibre sizes and fibre type proportions.20 Further studies using phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy have shown that some CFS patients have defective muscle energy metabolism,21–23 notably reduced ATP resynthesis rates following exercise, suggestive of mitochondrial dysfunction.21 " Wow. No " stress or stressors " " personality types " " diet " " exercise " or " lack of exercise " involved. A virus! Doesn't much care about your individual quirks. What a concept! - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 7, 2006 Report Share Posted December 7, 2006 That fits me to a tee...but then, I can't believe that stress is still an issue and we still have to hear people psychologize this illness. Would you please, let me know, whether Mold Warriors contains the info that Desperation Medicine has, or does one have to buy both? Also, is mold avoidance the main way you deal with mycotoxins? I think that Cholestyramine would not be good for me...am thinking Chronic Bowel Obstruction. TIA, Amelia > > Quote from article: > " Many CFS patients relate the onset of their symptoms to a preceding > viral infection from which they believe they failed to recover > fully. Evidence supporting such attribution had been largely > anecdotal until recent prospective studies found evidence of > protracted fatigue states following certain laboratory confirmed > infections, supporting the concept of a postviral or postinfectious > fatigue syndrome.4–7,11 > > We reported previously that a subset of CFS patients had abnormal > lactate responses to exercise at work rates below the predicted > anaerobic threshold.19 Such cases proved less likely to have > evidence of psychiatric disorder than cases with normal lactate > responses, and the finding could not be explained satisfactorily by > the effects of deconditioning or muscle disuse, either on the basis > of heart rate responses to exercise19 or from a subsequent analysis > of muscle fibre sizes and fibre type proportions.20 Further studies > using phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy have shown that > some CFS patients have defective muscle energy metabolism,21–23 > notably reduced ATP resynthesis rates following exercise, suggestive > of mitochondrial dysfunction.21 " > > Wow. No " stress or stressors " " personality types " " diet " " exercise " > or " lack of exercise " involved. > A virus! Doesn't much care about your individual quirks. > What a concept! > - > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 8, 2006 Report Share Posted December 8, 2006 " lifelonglearner79 " wrote: > That fits me to a tee...but then, I can't believe that stress is > still an issue and we still have to hear people psychologize this > illness. > > Would you please, let me know, whether Mold Warriors contains the > info that Desperation Medicine has, or does one have to buy both? > Also, is mold avoidance the main way you deal with mycotoxins? I > think that Cholestyramine would not be good for me...am thinking > Chronic Bowel Obstruction. > Amelia I hear ya' on that! In 2001 I moved into a place that put me " below the power curve " of long term exposure - more than I could endure. Wasn't all that ferocious, not like walking into a sick building, but this adds up over time, and I could tell that I was gradually " slipping " and heading in a very bad direction. CSM only scrubs toxins after they've passed through and done their damage. It's like cleaning up after the Hurricane, doesn't really protect you in the midst of the storm. For people " on the edge " , it helps a lot by keeping the mess a bit better under control, but as long as the mess keeps piling up, eventually you're gonna get buried. I did try the CSM at that time, and it did seem to help, just a bit, but my digestive tract came to a screaming halt. I finally decided that I had " had enough of this s--t " and just concentrated on total avoidance - and that's all I do. And when I look back at all the things that people are trying, and get a sense of what their results are, it makes me feel fortunate that I chose to follow this path. Very difficult, complex, life turned totally upside down - but beats the crap out of the alternative. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2006 Report Share Posted December 9, 2006 One of the most useful papers I have read. Where was it published? Thanks Phil Phil <fi11ip@...> wrote: Hi All, Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's watching! It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting one aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles and the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " viruses then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm people. I hope this is useful to people here. Phil ---------------------------------------------------------- The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. ABSTRACT: This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy for the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) in conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle metabolism (including the muscles of the cardiovascular system) continually compete for glutathione, inducing a state of constant stress that renders the condition chronic. The impairment of a range of functions means that subtly different suites of symptoms are apparent for different patients. Graded exercise therapy has proven useful for a minority of these, and the exacerbation of symptoms for the majority is not subjective but has a physiological basis. Blanket recommendation of graded exercise therapy is not prudent for such a heterogeneous group of patients, most of which are likely to respond negatively to physical activity. Following exercise, patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) uniquely exhibit exacerbated symptoms and a suite of measurable physiological changes indicative of stress (sub-optimal metabolic performance; e.g. reduced respiration and heart rate, increased glycolysis and lactic acid production, and concomitant limitation of activity1-5). Although these symptoms may not be universal6, a significant subgroup of ME patients are affected in this manner7. The issue of exercise is critical for the treatment of the condition as one school of thought recommends " graded exercise therapy " as a general remedy for ME whilst another recognises that exercise intolerance may have an underlying physiological cause that may actually be aggravated by physical exertion. This difference of opinion influences policy: graded exercise therapy is one of the principal recommendations of the current NICE draft guidelines for the treatment of patients " mildly to moderately affected " by ME (p. 21, lines 20 to 23) 8. Although recent general reviews of ME exist9- 11, our aim is to specifically review evidence for the mechanisms by which physical activity affects ME patients, and to investigate how graded exercise therapy may help or hinder recovery. Although no single randomised controlled study has yet attempted to investigate every aspect of ME, the combined weight of empirical evidence to date indicates that the condition is characterised by a complex series of events involving reserves of metabolic regulators such as glutathione, muscle metabolism and the cardiovascular system. A significant body of literature suggests that these imbalances are associated with a dysfunctional immune system impaired by viral infection. Indeed, a hallmark of ME is a range of symptoms, varying in extent between patients, suggesting that a range of functions are impaired to greater or lesser degrees. ME typically follows a flu-like illness, with elevated concentrations of viral particles subsequently detectable in blood and muscle tissues12. Post-viral fatigue is a well established possible consequence of infection by a range of different viruses13- 17, with enteroviruses specifically implicated in the case of ME – elevated concentrations of viral RNA sequences resembling coxsackie virus B are detectable in muscle tissue12. Furthermore, the majority of the limited number of ME patients so far treated with antiviral drugs (interferons) were able to return to work following treatment18, also suggestive of a persistent `smoldering infection'19. Crucially, post-viral fatigue is not related to the muscle disuse and deconditioning that can result from the initial period of illness12. Indeed, the mechanism underpinning post-viral fatigue is a multifaceted physiological imbalance. Nijs and co-workers20 found that, for ME patients, graded exercise resulted in faulty regulation of the immune system, specifically increased activity of the enzymes " elastase " and " RNase L " . RNase L is a key component in the cell's virus detection system and is up-regulated in response to viral infection. However, elastase degrades RNase L and is normally involved in removing it from the cell when concentrations are too high. Why should both be highly expressed in ME patients? Elastase is activated and degrades the RNase L in the absence of metabolic regulators such as glutathione. (Glutathione is an amino acid complex that modifies enzyme activity throughout the body, and ME patients exhibit either lower concentrations or an imbalance between its active and inactive forms21-23.) Thus the simultaneous over- activation and mis-regulation of this part of the immune system can be explained by glutathione depletion. A range of factors contribute to glutathione depletion in the general population, including infection, the oxidative stress induced by strenuous or sustained exercise, and the long- term elevation of the stress hormones cortisol and adrenalin24. Furthermore, glutathione is also involved in sustaining respiration (i.e. the production of chemical energy compounds such as ATP in the mitochondria) thereby providing energy for active tissues such as muscle. Thus muscle tissue effectively competes with the immune system for glutathione25 – sustained physical activity reduces the amount of glutathione available to the immune system, resulting in immune dysfunction. Conversely, an overactive immune system reduces the amount of energy available for muscle tissue, also exacerbating oxidative stress, and can account for both the chronic fatigue and pain (by inducing lactic acid production) that characterise ME. Thus, following an initial period of stress, glutathione concentrations may be too low for the optimal function of both the immune system and muscle tissues, paving the way for both persistent viral infection and fatigue, both of which feedback from each other to render the condition chronic. This situation is compounded by the fact that glutathione not only has a supporting role in the immune response but also directly inhibits the replication of enteroviruses by blocking the formation of one particular protein (glycoprotein shared by all – including coxsackie viruses. Indeed, glutathione concentration is a major factor influencing the expression of other persistent viral infections such as HIV26-29. Thus glutathione depletion not only suppresses the immune system, it leaves the body particularly defenceless against enteroviruses. Sustained exercise or stress can deplete glutathione concentrations to the point where viral RNA is no longer prevented from replicating, aiding either an initial infection or the renewed replication of previously blocked viral RNA present in muscle tissue and blood27,29. Thus glutathione depletion is a strong candidate for `the trigger for reactivation of endogenous latent viruses' in ME30. A small number of studies demonstrate that foods rich in glutathione or direct glutathione injection help to relieve fatigue in ME patients, and may clear active viral infections31,32. Although the above studies have concentrated on skeletal muscle, the heart (and the postural leg muscle involved in pumping blood back to the heart) is not exempt from glutathione depletion. Thus the above mechanism can also account for the range of cardiovascular problems associated with ME, including orthostatic (standing) intolerance (reviewed by Spence and 33). Patients with orthostatic intolerance `have continuous disability and commonly have exercise intolerance'33. Together, this evidence suggests that chronic fatigue in ME is symptomatic of the following sequence of events: a period of infection or strenuous physical or mental activity results in glutathione depletion; this renders the immune system relatively ineffective, particularly against enterovirus infection; the immune system becomes constantly activated (and inefficiently governed) because it has insufficient resources (glutathione) to completely rid the body of viral particles; the constantly elevated energy demand of the immune system detracts from other metabolic functions (particularly energy-demanding systems such as skeletal muscles and the cardiovascular system); limitation of respiratory and cardiovascular systems further locks the patient into a vicious cycle of inefficient energy production and use; increased reliance on anaerobic metabolism leads to lactic acid production and associated muscle pain. Clearly, the performance of energy-demanding activities such as exercise can only aggravate this situation. Indeed, 82 % of ME patients in a recent study stated that graded exercise therapy worsened their condition, and only 5 % found it useful (compared to 70 – 75 % of patients who found either pain management or `pacing' of daily activities useful)34. Furthermore, the Canadian Clinical Treatment Protocol warns that " externally paced `Graded Exercise Programs' or programs based on the premise that patients are misperceiving their activity limits or illness must be avoided " 35. If exercise is so detrimental, why is graded exercise therapy often recommended as a treatment for ME? Firstly, many of the studies cited here are recent, and the information and implications have perhaps not yet filtered up to policy makers. Secondly, the reclassification of ME as an ambiguous `chronic fatigue syndrome' (CFS) by members of the psychiatric profession assumes that the symptoms have no physiological basis and are best treated with the traditional psychiatric method of facing and overcoming a problem, rather than direct removal of the problem at source. However, this approach jumps from hypothesis to treatment without investigating the mechanisms involved, perhaps explaining why " no psychiatrist has ever cured an M.E. patient using psychiatric treatments " 19. Psychiatry, by definition, should not have authority over the treatment of physiological disorders, particularly those that occur chiefly in muscle tissues. Graded exercise therapy is founded on, and perpetuates, the myth that ME patients are simply malingering, while most are frustrated by their incapacity to satisfactorily conduct critical aspects of daily life34. ME is a heterogeneous disorder that affects different patients to varying degrees and with subtly different suites of symptoms. At best, graded exercise therapy has relieved symptoms for (but not cured) a tiny minority of patients, whilst the weight of empirical evidence indicates that exercise has direct and persistently negative impacts on the physiology and quality of life of a significant subgroup of ME patients. Any universally applied therapy is unlikely to address the heterogeneity of ME, and graded exercise is particularly unsuitable as it may worsen the condition, and should not be generally recommended without a high degree of confidence that it will not be applied to susceptible patients: it is difficult to conceive of a more inappropriate therapy for ME. By increasing the risk of relapse and overall health risks, rather than reducing them, graded exercise therapy also risks increasing the burden of illness on society at large. The present review suggests that an approach based on treatment of the underlying physiological dysfunction will be more fruitful. Abbreviations ATP = Adenosine triphosphate, RNase L = 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2-5A) synthetase/Ribonuclease L Literature cited 1 De Becker PJ, Roeykens J, Reynders N, McGregor N & De Meirleir K. 2000. Exercise capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome. Archives of International Medicine 160: 3270-3277. 2 Fulcher KY & White PD. 2000. Strength and physiological response to exercise in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 69: 302-307. 3 Wong R, Lopaschuk G, Zhu G, et al. 1992. Skeletal muscle metabolism in the chronic fatigue syndrome: in vivo assessment by 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Chest 102: 1716-1722. 4 Nus J, De Meirleir K, Wolfs S & Duquet W. 2004. Disability evaluation in chronic fatigue syndrome: associations between exercise capacity and activity limitations/participation restrictions. Clinical Rehabilitation 18: 139-148. 5 Sorensen B. Streib JE, Strand M, et al. 2003. Complement activation in a model of chronic fatique syndrome. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 112: 397-403. 6 Sargent C, Scroop GC, Nemeth PM, Burnet RB & Buckley JD. 2002. Maximal oxygen uptake and lactate metabolism are normal in chronic fatigue syndrome. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 34: 51- 56. 7 Chia JKS. 2005. The role of enterovirus in chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Clinical Pathology 58: 1126-1132. 8 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). CFS/ME: full guideline DRAFT (September 2006). 9 Afari N & Buchwald D. 2003. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a review. American Journal of Psychiatry 160: 221-236. 10 Patarca-Montero R, Antoni M, Fletcher MA & Klimas NG. 2001. Cytokine and other immunologic markers in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and their relation to neuropsychological factors. Applied Neuropsychology 8: 51-64. 11 Hooper M. 2006. Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME): a review with emphasis on key findings in biomedical research. Journal of Clinical Pathology (in press) published online 25 Aug. 2006 doi: 10.1136/jcp.2006.042408. 12 Lane RJM, Soteriou BA, Zhang H, & Archard LC. 2003. Enterovirus related metabolic myopathy: a postviral fatigue syndrome. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 74: 1382-1386. 13 Ayres JG, Flint N, EG, et al. 1998. Post-infection fatigue syndrome following Q-fever. Q. J. Med. 91: 105-123. 14 Berelowitz JG, Burgess AP, Thanabalasingham T, et al. 1995. Post- hepatitis syndrome revisited. Journal of Viral Hepatitis 2: 133-138. 15 Kerr JR, Barah F, Matley DL. et al. 2001. Circulating tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma are detectable during acute and convalescent paravirus B19 infection and are associated with prolonged and chronic fatigue. Journal of General Virology. 82: 3011-3019. 16 Hotopf M, Noah N, Wesseley S. 1996. Chronic fatigue and psychiatric morbidity following viral meningitis: a controlled study. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 60: 495- 503. 17 White PD, JM, Amess J, et al. 1995. The existence of a fatigue syndrome after glandular fever. Psychological Medicine 25: 907-916. 18 Chia JK, Jou NS, Majera L et al. 2001. The presence of enteroviral RNA (EV RNA) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) associated with high levels of neutralizing antibodies to enteroviruses. Clinical Infectious Diseases 33: 1157. 19 Hyde B. 2006. A new and simple definition of myalgic encephalomyelitis and a new simple definition of chronic fatigue syndrome & a brief history of myalgic encephalomyelitis and an irreverent history of chronic fatigue syndrome. Invest in ME, UK. 20 Nijs J, Meeus M, McGregor NR, Meeusen R, De Schutter G, Van Hoof E & De Meirleir K. 2005. Chronic fatigue syndrome: exercise performance related to immune dysfunction. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 37(10): 1647-1654. 21 s RS, TK, RH, McGregor NR & Butt HL. 2000. Free radicals in chronic fatigue syndrome: cause or effect? Redox Report 5(2-3): 146-147. 22 y Keenoy B, Moorkens G, Vertommen J, Noe M & De Leeuw I. 2000. Magnesium status and parameters of the oxidant-antioxidant balance in patients with chronic fatigue: effects of supplementation with magnesium. Journal of the American College of Nutrition 19(3): 374-382. 23 Kurup RK & Kurup PA. 2003. Hypothalamic digoxin, cerebral chemical dominance and myalgic encephalomyelitis. International Journal of Neuroscience 113: 683-701. 24 Ji LL. 1995. Oxidative stress during exercise: implication of antioxidant nutrients. Free Radical Biology & Medicine 18(6): 1079- 1086. 25 Bounous G & Molson J. 1999. Competition for glutathione precursors between the immune system and the skeletal muscle: pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome. Medical Hypotheses 53(4): 347-349. 26 Roederer M, Raju PA, Staal FJT, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. 1991. N-acetycysteine inhibits latent HIV expression in chronically infected cells. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 7: 563-567. 27 Staal FJT, Roederer M, Israelski DM, Bubp J, Mole LA, McShane D, Deresinski SC, Ross W, Sussman H, Raju PA, MT, W, Ela SW, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. 1992. Intracellular glutathione levels in T cell subsets decrease in HIV-infected individuals. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 8: 305-311. 28 Ciriolo MR, Palamara AT, Incerpi S, Lafavia E, Bue MC, De Vito P, Garaci E & Rotilio G. 1997. Loss of GSH, oxidative stress, and decrease of intracellular pH as sequential steps in viral infection. Journal of Biological Chemistry 272(5): 2700-2708. 29 Cai J, Chen Y, Seth S, Furukawa S, Compans RW & DP. 2003. Inhibition of influenza infection by glutathione. Free Radical Biology & Medicine 34(7): 928-936. 30 Van Konynenburg RA. 2004. Is glutathione depletion an important part of the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome? Presented at the AACFS Seventh International Conference, Oct. 8-10/2004, Madison, Wisconsin. 31 Salvato P. 1998. CFIDS patients improve with glutathione injections. CFIDS Chronicle January/February 1998. 32 Cheney PR. 1999. Evidence of glutathione deficiency in chronic fatigue syndrome. American Biologics 11th International Symposium, Vienna, Austria. Tape No. 07-199: available from Professional Audio Recording, P.O. Box 7455, LaVerne, CA 91750. 33 Spence V & J. 2004. Standing up for ME. Biologist 51(2): 65-70. 34 25% ME Group. 2004. Severely affected ME (myalgic encephalomyelitis) analysis report on a questionnaire issued January 2004. 25% ME Group, Troon, Ayrshire, UK. pp. 8. 35 Jain AK, Carruthers BM & Van de Sande MI. 2004. Fibromyalgia Syndrome: Canadian Clinical Working Case Definition, Diagnostic and Treatment Protocols-A Consensus Document. Journal of Musculoskeletal Pain 11(4): 3-107. --------------------------------- Any questions? Get answers on any topic at Answers. Try it now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 9, 2006 Report Share Posted December 9, 2006 Hi, It's " in press " as they say, but we are hoping to publish it. In the meantime anyone is free to use the ideas, but until it is published, quoting it may not carry so much weight. The important thing is to get across the point that in ME/CFS, exercise = bad. Phil PS Louella, are you italian? > Hi All, > > Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on > this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on > the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > watching! > > It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting one > aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles and > the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up > glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes > less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " viruses > then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm people. > > I hope this is useful to people here. > > Phil > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic > encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. > > ABSTRACT: > This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy for > the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current > knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the > physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of > peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that > with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) in > conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the > metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of > physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle metabolism > (including the muscles of the cardiovascular system) continually > compete for glutathione, inducing a state of constant stress that > renders the condition chronic. The impairment of a range of > functions means that subtly different suites of symptoms are > apparent for different patients. Graded exercise therapy has proven > useful for a minority of these, and the exacerbation of symptoms for > the majority is not subjective but has a physiological basis. > Blanket recommendation of graded exercise therapy is not prudent for > such a heterogeneous group of patients, most of which are likely to > respond negatively to physical activity. > > Following exercise, patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) > uniquely exhibit exacerbated symptoms and a suite of measurable > physiological changes indicative of stress (sub-optimal metabolic > performance; e.g. reduced respiration and heart rate, increased > glycolysis and lactic acid production, and concomitant limitation of > activity1-5). Although these symptoms may not be universal6, a > significant subgroup of ME patients are affected in this manner7. > The issue of exercise is critical for the treatment of the condition > as one school of thought recommends " graded exercise therapy " as a > general remedy for ME whilst another recognises that exercise > intolerance may have an underlying physiological cause that may > actually be aggravated by physical exertion. This difference of > opinion influences policy: graded exercise therapy is one of the > principal recommendations of the current NICE draft guidelines for > the treatment of patients " mildly to moderately affected " by ME (p. > 21, lines 20 to 23) 8. Although recent general reviews of ME exist9- > 11, our aim is to specifically review evidence for the mechanisms by > which physical activity affects ME patients, and to investigate how > graded exercise therapy may help or hinder recovery. > Although no single randomised controlled study has yet attempted to > investigate every aspect of ME, the combined weight of empirical > evidence to date indicates that the condition is characterised by a > complex series of events involving reserves of metabolic regulators > such as glutathione, muscle metabolism and the cardiovascular > system. A significant body of literature suggests that these > imbalances are associated with a dysfunctional immune system > impaired by viral infection. Indeed, a hallmark of ME is a range of > symptoms, varying in extent between patients, suggesting that a > range of functions are impaired to greater or lesser degrees. > ME typically follows a flu-like illness, with elevated > concentrations of viral particles subsequently detectable in blood > and muscle tissues12. Post-viral fatigue is a well established > possible consequence of infection by a range of different viruses13- > 17, with enteroviruses specifically implicated in the case of ME – > elevated concentrations of viral RNA sequences resembling coxsackie > virus B are detectable in muscle tissue12. Furthermore, the majority > of the limited number of ME patients so far treated with antiviral > drugs (interferons) were able to return to work following > treatment18, also suggestive of a persistent `smoldering > infection'19. > Crucially, post-viral fatigue is not related to the muscle disuse > and deconditioning that can result from the initial period of > illness12. Indeed, the mechanism underpinning post-viral fatigue is > a multifaceted physiological imbalance. Nijs and co-workers20 found > that, for ME patients, graded exercise resulted in faulty regulation > of the immune system, specifically increased activity of the > enzymes " elastase " and " RNase L " . RNase L is a key component in the > cell's virus detection system and is up-regulated in response to > viral infection. However, elastase degrades RNase L and is normally > involved in removing it from the cell when concentrations are too > high. Why should both be highly expressed in ME patients? Elastase > is activated and degrades the RNase L in the absence of metabolic > regulators such as glutathione. (Glutathione is an amino acid > complex that modifies enzyme activity throughout the body, and ME > patients exhibit either lower concentrations or an imbalance between > its active and inactive forms21-23.) Thus the simultaneous over- > activation and mis-regulation of this part of the immune system can > be explained by glutathione depletion. A range of factors contribute > to glutathione depletion in the general population, including > infection, the oxidative stress induced by strenuous or sustained > exercise, and the long- > term elevation of the stress hormones cortisol and adrenalin24. > Furthermore, glutathione is also involved in sustaining respiration > (i.e. the production of chemical energy compounds such as ATP in the > mitochondria) thereby providing energy for active tissues such as > muscle. Thus muscle tissue effectively competes with the immune > system for glutathione25 – sustained physical activity reduces the > amount of glutathione available to the immune system, resulting in > immune dysfunction. Conversely, an overactive immune system reduces > the amount of energy available for muscle tissue, also exacerbating > oxidative stress, and can account for both the chronic fatigue and > pain (by inducing lactic acid production) that characterise ME. > Thus, following an initial period of stress, glutathione > concentrations may be too low for the optimal function of both the > immune system and muscle tissues, paving the way for both persistent > viral infection and fatigue, both of which feedback from each other > to render the condition chronic. > This situation is compounded by the fact that glutathione not only > has a supporting role in the immune response but also directly > inhibits the replication of enteroviruses by blocking the formation > of one particular protein (glycoprotein shared by all – including > coxsackie viruses. Indeed, glutathione concentration is a major > factor influencing the expression of other persistent viral > infections such as HIV26-29. Thus glutathione depletion not only > suppresses the immune system, it leaves the body particularly > defenceless against enteroviruses. Sustained exercise or stress can > deplete glutathione concentrations to the point where viral RNA is > no longer prevented from replicating, aiding either an initial > infection or the renewed replication of previously blocked viral RNA > present in muscle tissue and blood27,29. Thus glutathione depletion > is a strong candidate for `the trigger for reactivation of > endogenous latent viruses' in ME30. A small number of studies > demonstrate that foods rich in glutathione or direct glutathione > injection help to relieve fatigue in ME patients, and may clear > active viral infections31,32. > Although the above studies have concentrated on skeletal muscle, the > heart (and the postural leg muscle involved in pumping blood back to > the heart) is not exempt from glutathione depletion. Thus the above > mechanism can also account for the range of cardiovascular problems > associated with ME, including orthostatic (standing) intolerance > (reviewed by Spence and 33). Patients with orthostatic > intolerance `have continuous disability and commonly have exercise > intolerance'33. > Together, this evidence suggests that chronic fatigue in ME is > symptomatic of the following sequence of events: a period of > infection or strenuous physical or mental activity results in > glutathione depletion; this renders the immune system relatively > ineffective, particularly against enterovirus infection; the immune > system becomes constantly activated (and inefficiently governed) > because it has insufficient resources (glutathione) to completely > rid the body of viral particles; the constantly elevated energy > demand of the immune system detracts from other metabolic functions > (particularly energy-demanding systems such as skeletal muscles and > the cardiovascular system); limitation of respiratory and > cardiovascular systems further locks the patient into a vicious > cycle of inefficient energy production and use; increased reliance > on anaerobic metabolism leads to lactic acid production and > associated muscle pain. > Clearly, the performance of energy-demanding activities such as > exercise can only aggravate this situation. Indeed, 82 % of ME > patients in a recent study stated that graded exercise therapy > worsened their condition, and only 5 % found it useful (compared to > 70 – 75 % of patients who found either pain management or `pacing' > of daily activities useful)34. Furthermore, the Canadian Clinical > Treatment Protocol warns that " externally paced `Graded Exercise > Programs' or programs based on the premise that patients are > misperceiving their activity limits or illness must be avoided " 35. > If exercise is so detrimental, why is graded exercise therapy often > recommended as a treatment for ME? Firstly, many of the studies > cited here are recent, and the information and implications have > perhaps not yet filtered up to policy makers. Secondly, the > reclassification of ME as an ambiguous `chronic fatigue syndrome' > (CFS) by members of the psychiatric profession assumes that the > symptoms have no physiological basis and are best treated with the > traditional psychiatric method of facing and overcoming a problem, > rather than direct removal of the problem at source. However, this > approach jumps from hypothesis to treatment without investigating > the mechanisms involved, perhaps explaining why " no psychiatrist has > ever cured an M.E. patient using psychiatric treatments " 19. > Psychiatry, by definition, should not have authority over the > treatment of physiological disorders, particularly those that occur > chiefly in muscle tissues. Graded exercise therapy is founded on, > and perpetuates, the myth that ME patients are simply malingering, > while most are frustrated by their incapacity to satisfactorily > conduct critical aspects of daily life34. > ME is a heterogeneous disorder that affects different patients to > varying degrees and with subtly different suites of symptoms. At > best, graded exercise therapy has relieved symptoms for (but not > cured) a tiny minority of patients, whilst the weight of empirical > evidence indicates that exercise has direct and persistently > negative impacts on the physiology and quality of life of a > significant subgroup of ME patients. Any universally applied therapy > is unlikely to address the heterogeneity of ME, and graded exercise > is particularly unsuitable as it may worsen the condition, and > should not be generally recommended without a high degree of > confidence that it will not be applied to susceptible patients: it > is difficult to conceive of a more inappropriate therapy for ME. By > increasing the risk of relapse and overall health risks, rather than > reducing them, graded exercise therapy also risks increasing the > burden of illness on society at large. The present review suggests > that an approach based on treatment of the underlying physiological > dysfunction will be more fruitful. > > Abbreviations > ATP = Adenosine triphosphate, RNase L = 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2- 5A) > synthetase/Ribonuclease L > Literature cited > 1 De Becker PJ, Roeykens J, Reynders N, McGregor N & De Meirleir K. > 2000. Exercise capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome. Archives of > International Medicine 160: 3270-3277. > 2 Fulcher KY & White PD. 2000. Strength and physiological response > to exercise in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of > Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 69: 302-307. > 3 Wong R, Lopaschuk G, Zhu G, et al. 1992. Skeletal muscle > metabolism in the chronic fatigue syndrome: in vivo assessment by > 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Chest 102: 1716-1722. > 4 Nus J, De Meirleir K, Wolfs S & Duquet W. 2004. Disability > evaluation in chronic fatigue syndrome: associations between > exercise capacity and activity limitations/participation > restrictions. Clinical Rehabilitation 18: 139-148. > 5 Sorensen B. Streib JE, Strand M, et al. 2003. Complement > activation in a model of chronic fatique syndrome. Journal of > Allergy and Clinical Immunology 112: 397-403. > 6 Sargent C, Scroop GC, Nemeth PM, Burnet RB & Buckley JD. 2002. > Maximal oxygen uptake and lactate metabolism are normal in chronic > fatigue syndrome. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 34: 51- > 56. > 7 Chia JKS. 2005. The role of enterovirus in chronic fatigue > syndrome. Journal of Clinical Pathology 58: 1126-1132. > 8 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). > CFS/ME: full guideline DRAFT (September 2006). > 9 Afari N & Buchwald D. 2003. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a review. > American Journal of Psychiatry 160: 221-236. > 10 Patarca-Montero R, Antoni M, Fletcher MA & Klimas NG. 2001. > Cytokine and other immunologic markers in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome > and their relation to neuropsychological factors. Applied > Neuropsychology 8: 51-64. > 11 Hooper M. 2006. Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME): a review with > emphasis on key findings in biomedical research. Journal of Clinical > Pathology (in press) published online 25 Aug. 2006 doi: > 10.1136/jcp.2006.042408. > 12 Lane RJM, Soteriou BA, Zhang H, & Archard LC. 2003. Enterovirus > related metabolic myopathy: a postviral fatigue syndrome. Journal of > Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 74: 1382-1386. > 13 Ayres JG, Flint N, EG, et al. 1998. Post-infection fatigue > syndrome following Q-fever. Q. J. Med. 91: 105-123. > 14 Berelowitz JG, Burgess AP, Thanabalasingham T, et al. 1995. Post- > hepatitis syndrome revisited. Journal of Viral Hepatitis 2: 133- 138. > 15 Kerr JR, Barah F, Matley DL. et al. 2001. Circulating tumour > necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma are detectable during > acute and convalescent paravirus B19 infection and are associated > with prolonged and chronic fatigue. Journal of General Virology. 82: > 3011-3019. > 16 Hotopf M, Noah N, Wesseley S. 1996. Chronic fatigue and > psychiatric morbidity following viral meningitis: a controlled > study. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 60: 495- > 503. > 17 White PD, JM, Amess J, et al. 1995. The existence of a > fatigue syndrome after glandular fever. Psychological Medicine 25: > 907-916. > 18 Chia JK, Jou NS, Majera L et al. 2001. The presence of > enteroviral RNA (EV RNA) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells > (PBMC) of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) > associated with high levels of neutralizing antibodies to > enteroviruses. Clinical Infectious Diseases 33: 1157. > 19 Hyde B. 2006. A new and simple definition of myalgic > encephalomyelitis and a new simple definition of chronic fatigue > syndrome & a brief history of myalgic encephalomyelitis and an > irreverent history of chronic fatigue syndrome. Invest in ME, UK. > 20 Nijs J, Meeus M, McGregor NR, Meeusen R, De Schutter G, Van Hoof > E & De Meirleir K. 2005. Chronic fatigue syndrome: exercise > performance related to immune dysfunction. Medicine & Science in > Sports and Exercise 37(10): 1647-1654. > 21 s RS, TK, RH, McGregor NR & Butt HL. 2000. > Free radicals in chronic fatigue syndrome: cause or effect? Redox > Report 5(2-3): 146-147. > 22 y Keenoy B, Moorkens G, Vertommen J, Noe M & De Leeuw I. > 2000. Magnesium status and parameters of the oxidant-antioxidant > balance in patients with chronic fatigue: effects of supplementation > with magnesium. Journal of the American College of Nutrition 19 (3): > 374-382. > 23 Kurup RK & Kurup PA. 2003. Hypothalamic digoxin, cerebral > chemical dominance and myalgic encephalomyelitis. International > Journal of Neuroscience 113: 683-701. > 24 Ji LL. 1995. Oxidative stress during exercise: implication of > antioxidant nutrients. Free Radical Biology & Medicine 18(6): 1079- > 1086. > 25 Bounous G & Molson J. 1999. Competition for glutathione > precursors between the immune system and the skeletal muscle: > pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome. Medical Hypotheses 53 (4): > 347-349. > 26 Roederer M, Raju PA, Staal FJT, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. > 1991. N-acetycysteine inhibits latent HIV expression in chronically > infected cells. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 7: 563-567. > 27 Staal FJT, Roederer M, Israelski DM, Bubp J, Mole LA, McShane D, > Deresinski SC, Ross W, Sussman H, Raju PA, MT, W, Ela > SW, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. 1992. Intracellular glutathione > levels in T cell subsets decrease in HIV-infected individuals. AIDS > Research and Human Retroviruses 8: 305-311. > 28 Ciriolo MR, Palamara AT, Incerpi S, Lafavia E, Bue MC, De Vito P, > Garaci E & Rotilio G. 1997. Loss of GSH, oxidative stress, and > decrease of intracellular pH as sequential steps in viral infection. > Journal of Biological Chemistry 272(5): 2700-2708. > 29 Cai J, Chen Y, Seth S, Furukawa S, Compans RW & DP. 2003. > Inhibition of influenza infection by glutathione. Free Radical > Biology & Medicine 34(7): 928-936. > 30 Van Konynenburg RA. 2004. Is glutathione depletion an important > part of the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome? Presented at > the AACFS Seventh International Conference, Oct. 8-10/2004, Madison, > Wisconsin. > 31 Salvato P. 1998. CFIDS patients improve with glutathione > injections. CFIDS Chronicle January/February 1998. > 32 Cheney PR. 1999. Evidence of glutathione deficiency in chronic > fatigue syndrome. American Biologics 11th International Symposium, > Vienna, Austria. Tape No. 07-199: available from Professional Audio > Recording, P.O. Box 7455, LaVerne, CA 91750. > 33 Spence V & J. 2004. Standing up for ME. Biologist 51 (2): > 65-70. > 34 25% ME Group. 2004. Severely affected ME (myalgic > encephalomyelitis) analysis report on a questionnaire issued January > 2004. 25% ME Group, Troon, Ayrshire, UK. pp. 8. > 35 Jain AK, Carruthers BM & Van de Sande MI. 2004. Fibromyalgia > Syndrome: Canadian Clinical Working Case Definition, Diagnostic and > Treatment Protocols-A Consensus Document. Journal of Musculoskeletal > Pain 11(4): 3-107. > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > Any questions? Get answers on any topic at Answers. Try it now. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2006 Report Share Posted December 10, 2006 hi phil ok. can u say where the researchers are from? which academic institution or whatever? and nope not Italian. Irish origin actually. Louella Phil <fi11ip@...> wrote: Hi, It's " in press " as they say, but we are hoping to publish it. In the meantime anyone is free to use the ideas, but until it is published, quoting it may not carry so much weight. The important thing is to get across the point that in ME/CFS, exercise = bad. Phil PS Louella, are you italian? > Hi All, > > Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on > this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on > the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > watching! > > It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting one > aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles and > the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up > glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes > less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " viruses > then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm people. > > I hope this is useful to people here. > > Phil > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic > encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. > > ABSTRACT: > This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy for > the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current > knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the > physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of > peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that > with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) in > conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the > metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of > physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle metabolism > (including the muscles of the cardiovascular system) continually > compete for glutathione, inducing a state of constant stress that > renders the condition chronic. The impairment of a range of > functions means that subtly different suites of symptoms are > apparent for different patients. Graded exercise therapy has proven > useful for a minority of these, and the exacerbation of symptoms for > the majority is not subjective but has a physiological basis. > Blanket recommendation of graded exercise therapy is not prudent for > such a heterogeneous group of patients, most of which are likely to > respond negatively to physical activity. > > Following exercise, patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) > uniquely exhibit exacerbated symptoms and a suite of measurable > physiological changes indicative of stress (sub-optimal metabolic > performance; e.g. reduced respiration and heart rate, increased > glycolysis and lactic acid production, and concomitant limitation of > activity1-5). Although these symptoms may not be universal6, a > significant subgroup of ME patients are affected in this manner7. > The issue of exercise is critical for the treatment of the condition > as one school of thought recommends " graded exercise therapy " as a > general remedy for ME whilst another recognises that exercise > intolerance may have an underlying physiological cause that may > actually be aggravated by physical exertion. This difference of > opinion influences policy: graded exercise therapy is one of the > principal recommendations of the current NICE draft guidelines for > the treatment of patients " mildly to moderately affected " by ME (p. > 21, lines 20 to 23) 8. Although recent general reviews of ME exist9- > 11, our aim is to specifically review evidence for the mechanisms by > which physical activity affects ME patients, and to investigate how > graded exercise therapy may help or hinder recovery. > Although no single randomised controlled study has yet attempted to > investigate every aspect of ME, the combined weight of empirical > evidence to date indicates that the condition is characterised by a > complex series of events involving reserves of metabolic regulators > such as glutathione, muscle metabolism and the cardiovascular > system. A significant body of literature suggests that these > imbalances are associated with a dysfunctional immune system > impaired by viral infection. Indeed, a hallmark of ME is a range of > symptoms, varying in extent between patients, suggesting that a > range of functions are impaired to greater or lesser degrees. > ME typically follows a flu-like illness, with elevated > concentrations of viral particles subsequently detectable in blood > and muscle tissues12. Post-viral fatigue is a well established > possible consequence of infection by a range of different viruses13- > 17, with enteroviruses specifically implicated in the case of ME – > elevated concentrations of viral RNA sequences resembling coxsackie > virus B are detectable in muscle tissue12. Furthermore, the majority > of the limited number of ME patients so far treated with antiviral > drugs (interferons) were able to return to work following > treatment18, also suggestive of a persistent `smoldering > infection'19. > Crucially, post-viral fatigue is not related to the muscle disuse > and deconditioning that can result from the initial period of > illness12. Indeed, the mechanism underpinning post-viral fatigue is > a multifaceted physiological imbalance. Nijs and co-workers20 found > that, for ME patients, graded exercise resulted in faulty regulation > of the immune system, specifically increased activity of the > enzymes " elastase " and " RNase L " . RNase L is a key component in the > cell's virus detection system and is up-regulated in response to > viral infection. However, elastase degrades RNase L and is normally > involved in removing it from the cell when concentrations are too > high. Why should both be highly expressed in ME patients? Elastase > is activated and degrades the RNase L in the absence of metabolic > regulators such as glutathione. (Glutathione is an amino acid > complex that modifies enzyme activity throughout the body, and ME > patients exhibit either lower concentrations or an imbalance between > its active and inactive forms21-23.) Thus the simultaneous over- > activation and mis-regulation of this part of the immune system can > be explained by glutathione depletion. A range of factors contribute > to glutathione depletion in the general population, including > infection, the oxidative stress induced by strenuous or sustained > exercise, and the long- > term elevation of the stress hormones cortisol and adrenalin24. > Furthermore, glutathione is also involved in sustaining respiration > (i.e. the production of chemical energy compounds such as ATP in the > mitochondria) thereby providing energy for active tissues such as > muscle. Thus muscle tissue effectively competes with the immune > system for glutathione25 – sustained physical activity reduces the > amount of glutathione available to the immune system, resulting in > immune dysfunction. Conversely, an overactive immune system reduces > the amount of energy available for muscle tissue, also exacerbating > oxidative stress, and can account for both the chronic fatigue and > pain (by inducing lactic acid production) that characterise ME. > Thus, following an initial period of stress, glutathione > concentrations may be too low for the optimal function of both the > immune system and muscle tissues, paving the way for both persistent > viral infection and fatigue, both of which feedback from each other > to render the condition chronic. > This situation is compounded by the fact that glutathione not only > has a supporting role in the immune response but also directly > inhibits the replication of enteroviruses by blocking the formation > of one particular protein (glycoprotein shared by all – including > coxsackie viruses. Indeed, glutathione concentration is a major > factor influencing the expression of other persistent viral > infections such as HIV26-29. Thus glutathione depletion not only > suppresses the immune system, it leaves the body particularly > defenceless against enteroviruses. Sustained exercise or stress can > deplete glutathione concentrations to the point where viral RNA is > no longer prevented from replicating, aiding either an initial > infection or the renewed replication of previously blocked viral RNA > present in muscle tissue and blood27,29. Thus glutathione depletion > is a strong candidate for `the trigger for reactivation of > endogenous latent viruses' in ME30. A small number of studies > demonstrate that foods rich in glutathione or direct glutathione > injection help to relieve fatigue in ME patients, and may clear > active viral infections31,32. > Although the above studies have concentrated on skeletal muscle, the > heart (and the postural leg muscle involved in pumping blood back to > the heart) is not exempt from glutathione depletion. Thus the above > mechanism can also account for the range of cardiovascular problems > associated with ME, including orthostatic (standing) intolerance > (reviewed by Spence and 33). Patients with orthostatic > intolerance `have continuous disability and commonly have exercise > intolerance'33. > Together, this evidence suggests that chronic fatigue in ME is > symptomatic of the following sequence of events: a period of > infection or strenuous physical or mental activity results in > glutathione depletion; this renders the immune system relatively > ineffective, particularly against enterovirus infection; the immune > system becomes constantly activated (and inefficiently governed) > because it has insufficient resources (glutathione) to completely > rid the body of viral particles; the constantly elevated energy > demand of the immune system detracts from other metabolic functions > (particularly energy-demanding systems such as skeletal muscles and > the cardiovascular system); limitation of respiratory and > cardiovascular systems further locks the patient into a vicious > cycle of inefficient energy production and use; increased reliance > on anaerobic metabolism leads to lactic acid production and > associated muscle pain. > Clearly, the performance of energy-demanding activities such as > exercise can only aggravate this situation. Indeed, 82 % of ME > patients in a recent study stated that graded exercise therapy > worsened their condition, and only 5 % found it useful (compared to > 70 – 75 % of patients who found either pain management or `pacing' > of daily activities useful)34. Furthermore, the Canadian Clinical > Treatment Protocol warns that " externally paced `Graded Exercise > Programs' or programs based on the premise that patients are > misperceiving their activity limits or illness must be avoided " 35. > If exercise is so detrimental, why is graded exercise therapy often > recommended as a treatment for ME? Firstly, many of the studies > cited here are recent, and the information and implications have > perhaps not yet filtered up to policy makers. Secondly, the > reclassification of ME as an ambiguous `chronic fatigue syndrome' > (CFS) by members of the psychiatric profession assumes that the > symptoms have no physiological basis and are best treated with the > traditional psychiatric method of facing and overcoming a problem, > rather than direct removal of the problem at source. However, this > approach jumps from hypothesis to treatment without investigating > the mechanisms involved, perhaps explaining why " no psychiatrist has > ever cured an M.E. patient using psychiatric treatments " 19. > Psychiatry, by definition, should not have authority over the > treatment of physiological disorders, particularly those that occur > chiefly in muscle tissues. Graded exercise therapy is founded on, > and perpetuates, the myth that ME patients are simply malingering, > while most are frustrated by their incapacity to satisfactorily > conduct critical aspects of daily life34. > ME is a heterogeneous disorder that affects different patients to > varying degrees and with subtly different suites of symptoms. At > best, graded exercise therapy has relieved symptoms for (but not > cured) a tiny minority of patients, whilst the weight of empirical > evidence indicates that exercise has direct and persistently > negative impacts on the physiology and quality of life of a > significant subgroup of ME patients. Any universally applied therapy > is unlikely to address the heterogeneity of ME, and graded exercise > is particularly unsuitable as it may worsen the condition, and > should not be generally recommended without a high degree of > confidence that it will not be applied to susceptible patients: it > is difficult to conceive of a more inappropriate therapy for ME. By > increasing the risk of relapse and overall health risks, rather than > reducing them, graded exercise therapy also risks increasing the > burden of illness on society at large. The present review suggests > that an approach based on treatment of the underlying physiological > dysfunction will be more fruitful. > > Abbreviations > ATP = Adenosine triphosphate, RNase L = 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2- 5A) > synthetase/Ribonuclease L > Literature cited > 1 De Becker PJ, Roeykens J, Reynders N, McGregor N & De Meirleir K. > 2000. Exercise capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome. Archives of > International Medicine 160: 3270-3277. > 2 Fulcher KY & White PD. 2000. Strength and physiological response > to exercise in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of > Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 69: 302-307. > 3 Wong R, Lopaschuk G, Zhu G, et al. 1992. Skeletal muscle > metabolism in the chronic fatigue syndrome: in vivo assessment by > 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Chest 102: 1716-1722. > 4 Nus J, De Meirleir K, Wolfs S & Duquet W. 2004. Disability > evaluation in chronic fatigue syndrome: associations between > exercise capacity and activity limitations/participation > restrictions. Clinical Rehabilitation 18: 139-148. > 5 Sorensen B. Streib JE, Strand M, et al. 2003. Complement > activation in a model of chronic fatique syndrome. Journal of > Allergy and Clinical Immunology 112: 397-403. > 6 Sargent C, Scroop GC, Nemeth PM, Burnet RB & Buckley JD. 2002. > Maximal oxygen uptake and lactate metabolism are normal in chronic > fatigue syndrome. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 34: 51- > 56. > 7 Chia JKS. 2005. The role of enterovirus in chronic fatigue > syndrome. Journal of Clinical Pathology 58: 1126-1132. > 8 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). > CFS/ME: full guideline DRAFT (September 2006). > 9 Afari N & Buchwald D. 2003. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a review. > American Journal of Psychiatry 160: 221-236. > 10 Patarca-Montero R, Antoni M, Fletcher MA & Klimas NG. 2001. > Cytokine and other immunologic markers in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome > and their relation to neuropsychological factors. Applied > Neuropsychology 8: 51-64. > 11 Hooper M. 2006. Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME): a review with > emphasis on key findings in biomedical research. Journal of Clinical > Pathology (in press) published online 25 Aug. 2006 doi: > 10.1136/jcp.2006.042408. > 12 Lane RJM, Soteriou BA, Zhang H, & Archard LC. 2003. Enterovirus > related metabolic myopathy: a postviral fatigue syndrome. Journal of > Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 74: 1382-1386. > 13 Ayres JG, Flint N, EG, et al. 1998. Post-infection fatigue > syndrome following Q-fever. Q. J. Med. 91: 105-123. > 14 Berelowitz JG, Burgess AP, Thanabalasingham T, et al. 1995. Post- > hepatitis syndrome revisited. Journal of Viral Hepatitis 2: 133- 138. > 15 Kerr JR, Barah F, Matley DL. et al. 2001. Circulating tumour > necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma are detectable during > acute and convalescent paravirus B19 infection and are associated > with prolonged and chronic fatigue. Journal of General Virology. 82: > 3011-3019. > 16 Hotopf M, Noah N, Wesseley S. 1996. Chronic fatigue and > psychiatric morbidity following viral meningitis: a controlled > study. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 60: 495- > 503. > 17 White PD, JM, Amess J, et al. 1995. The existence of a > fatigue syndrome after glandular fever. Psychological Medicine 25: > 907-916. > 18 Chia JK, Jou NS, Majera L et al. 2001. The presence of > enteroviral RNA (EV RNA) in peripheral blood mononuclear cells > (PBMC) of patients with the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) > associated with high levels of neutralizing antibodies to > enteroviruses. Clinical Infectious Diseases 33: 1157. > 19 Hyde B. 2006. A new and simple definition of myalgic > encephalomyelitis and a new simple definition of chronic fatigue > syndrome & a brief history of myalgic encephalomyelitis and an > irreverent history of chronic fatigue syndrome. Invest in ME, UK. > 20 Nijs J, Meeus M, McGregor NR, Meeusen R, De Schutter G, Van Hoof > E & De Meirleir K. 2005. Chronic fatigue syndrome: exercise > performance related to immune dysfunction. Medicine & Science in > Sports and Exercise 37(10): 1647-1654. > 21 s RS, TK, RH, McGregor NR & Butt HL. 2000. > Free radicals in chronic fatigue syndrome: cause or effect? Redox > Report 5(2-3): 146-147. > 22 y Keenoy B, Moorkens G, Vertommen J, Noe M & De Leeuw I. > 2000. Magnesium status and parameters of the oxidant-antioxidant > balance in patients with chronic fatigue: effects of supplementation > with magnesium. Journal of the American College of Nutrition 19 (3): > 374-382. > 23 Kurup RK & Kurup PA. 2003. Hypothalamic digoxin, cerebral > chemical dominance and myalgic encephalomyelitis. International > Journal of Neuroscience 113: 683-701. > 24 Ji LL. 1995. Oxidative stress during exercise: implication of > antioxidant nutrients. Free Radical Biology & Medicine 18(6): 1079- > 1086. > 25 Bounous G & Molson J. 1999. Competition for glutathione > precursors between the immune system and the skeletal muscle: > pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome. Medical Hypotheses 53 (4): > 347-349. > 26 Roederer M, Raju PA, Staal FJT, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. > 1991. N-acetycysteine inhibits latent HIV expression in chronically > infected cells. AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses 7: 563-567. > 27 Staal FJT, Roederer M, Israelski DM, Bubp J, Mole LA, McShane D, > Deresinski SC, Ross W, Sussman H, Raju PA, MT, W, Ela > SW, Herzenberg LA & Herzenberg LA. 1992. Intracellular glutathione > levels in T cell subsets decrease in HIV-infected individuals. AIDS > Research and Human Retroviruses 8: 305-311. > 28 Ciriolo MR, Palamara AT, Incerpi S, Lafavia E, Bue MC, De Vito P, > Garaci E & Rotilio G. 1997. Loss of GSH, oxidative stress, and > decrease of intracellular pH as sequential steps in viral infection. > Journal of Biological Chemistry 272(5): 2700-2708. > 29 Cai J, Chen Y, Seth S, Furukawa S, Compans RW & DP. 2003. > Inhibition of influenza infection by glutathione. Free Radical > Biology & Medicine 34(7): 928-936. > 30 Van Konynenburg RA. 2004. Is glutathione depletion an important > part of the pathogenesis of chronic fatigue syndrome? Presented at > the AACFS Seventh International Conference, Oct. 8-10/2004, Madison, > Wisconsin. > 31 Salvato P. 1998. CFIDS patients improve with glutathione > injections. CFIDS Chronicle January/February 1998. > 32 Cheney PR. 1999. Evidence of glutathione deficiency in chronic > fatigue syndrome. American Biologics 11th International Symposium, > Vienna, Austria. Tape No. 07-199: available from Professional Audio > Recording, P.O. Box 7455, LaVerne, CA 91750. > 33 Spence V & J. 2004. Standing up for ME. Biologist 51 (2): > 65-70. > 34 25% ME Group. 2004. Severely affected ME (myalgic > encephalomyelitis) analysis report on a questionnaire issued January > 2004. 25% ME Group, Troon, Ayrshire, UK. pp. 8. > 35 Jain AK, Carruthers BM & Van de Sande MI. 2004. Fibromyalgia > Syndrome: Canadian Clinical Working Case Definition, Diagnostic and > Treatment Protocols-A Consensus Document. Journal of Musculoskeletal > Pain 11(4): 3-107. > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > Any questions? Get answers on any topic at Answers. Try it now. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 10, 2006 Report Share Posted December 10, 2006 Very interesting article, Phil. In one part of the study, it said that there were some foods that helped raise glutathione. Does anyone know what those foods might be, or are they referring to whey? Mike C > > Hi All, > > > > Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on > > this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on > > the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The > > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > > watching! > > > > It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting > one > > aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles > and > > the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up > > glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes > > less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " > viruses > > then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm > people. > > > > I hope this is useful to people here. > > > > Phil > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > > > The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic > > encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. > > > > ABSTRACT: > > This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy > for > > the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current > > knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the > > physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of > > peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that > > with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) in > > conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the > > metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of > > physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle<<snip>> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 Mike, I suspect that Rich and other regulars here may know more about this than we do. The main thing was using peer-reviewed work (where possible) to establish a bullet-proof scientific link between exercise and the harm it can do to PWME, to try and influence health policy here in the UK. Phil > > > Hi All, > > > > > > Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help > on > > > this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass > on > > > the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The > > > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > > > watching! > > > > > > It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting > > one > > > aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles > > and > > > the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up > > > glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system > becomes > > > less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " > > viruses > > > then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm > > people. > > > > > > I hope this is useful to people here. > > > > > > Phil > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic > > > encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. > > > > > > ABSTRACT: > > > This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy > > for > > > the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current > > > knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the > > > physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of > > > peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that > > > with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) > in > > > conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the > > > metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of > > > physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle<<snip>> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 11, 2006 Report Share Posted December 11, 2006 Lets just say they're new to the field! Please forgive the evasiveness for now... > > Hi All, > > > > Thanks to everyone in this thread who answered my call for help on > > this issue. I can't claim credit for the result, but I did pass on > > the references people here supplied, and below is the result. The > > principle author is interested in talking to Rich VK btw, if he's > > watching! > > > > It pretty much speaks for itself, but it is perhaps highlighting > one > > aspect from the get-go: competion for Glutatione between muscles > and > > the immune system. Over-exertion leads to muscles using up > > glutathione (depleted in those with ME); the immune system becomes > > less able to deal with infection as a result; any " dormant " > viruses > > then get let loose. So exercise can worsen symptoms and harm > people. > > > > I hope this is useful to people here. > > > > Phil > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > > > The physiology of exercise intolerance in patients with myalgic > > encephalomyelitis (ME) and the utility of graded exercise therapy. > > > > ABSTRACT: > > This review discusses the suitability of graded exercise therapy > for > > the treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), based on current > > knowledge of the underlying physiology of the condition and the > > physiological effects of exertion on ME patients. A large body of > > peer-reviewed scientific literature supports the hypothesis that > > with ME an initial over-exertion (a period of metabolic stress) in > > conjunction with viral infection depletes concentrations of the > > metabolic regulator glutathione, initiating a cascade of > > physiological dysfunction. The immune system and muscle metabolism > > (including the muscles of the cardiovascular system) continually > > compete for glutathione, inducing a state of constant stress that > > renders the condition chronic. The impairment of a range of > > functions means that subtly different suites of symptoms are > > apparent for different patients. Graded exercise therapy has > proven > > useful for a minority of these, and the exacerbation of symptoms > for > > the majority is not subjective but has a physiological basis. > > Blanket recommendation of graded exercise therapy is not prudent > for > > such a heterogeneous group of patients, most of which are likely > to > > respond negatively to physical activity. > > > > Following exercise, patients with myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) > > uniquely exhibit exacerbated symptoms and a suite of measurable > > physiological changes indicative of stress (sub-optimal metabolic > > performance; e.g. reduced respiration and heart rate, increased > > glycolysis and lactic acid production, and concomitant limitation > of > > activity1-5). Although these symptoms may not be universal6, a > > significant subgroup of ME patients are affected in this manner7. > > The issue of exercise is critical for the treatment of the > condition > > as one school of thought recommends " graded exercise therapy " as a > > general remedy for ME whilst another recognises that exercise > > intolerance may have an underlying physiological cause that may > > actually be aggravated by physical exertion. This difference of > > opinion influences policy: graded exercise therapy is one of the > > principal recommendations of the current NICE draft guidelines for > > the treatment of patients " mildly to moderately affected " by ME > (p. > > 21, lines 20 to 23) 8. Although recent general reviews of ME > exist9- > > 11, our aim is to specifically review evidence for the mechanisms > by > > which physical activity affects ME patients, and to investigate > how > > graded exercise therapy may help or hinder recovery. > > Although no single randomised controlled study has yet attempted > to > > investigate every aspect of ME, the combined weight of empirical > > evidence to date indicates that the condition is characterised by > a > > complex series of events involving reserves of metabolic > regulators > > such as glutathione, muscle metabolism and the cardiovascular > > system. A significant body of literature suggests that these > > imbalances are associated with a dysfunctional immune system > > impaired by viral infection. Indeed, a hallmark of ME is a range > of > > symptoms, varying in extent between patients, suggesting that a > > range of functions are impaired to greater or lesser degrees. > > ME typically follows a flu-like illness, with elevated > > concentrations of viral particles subsequently detectable in blood > > and muscle tissues12. Post-viral fatigue is a well established > > possible consequence of infection by a range of different > viruses13- > > 17, with enteroviruses specifically implicated in the case of ME – > > elevated concentrations of viral RNA sequences resembling > coxsackie > > virus B are detectable in muscle tissue12. Furthermore, the > majority > > of the limited number of ME patients so far treated with antiviral > > drugs (interferons) were able to return to work following > > treatment18, also suggestive of a persistent `smoldering > > infection'19. > > Crucially, post-viral fatigue is not related to the muscle disuse > > and deconditioning that can result from the initial period of > > illness12. Indeed, the mechanism underpinning post-viral fatigue > is > > a multifaceted physiological imbalance. Nijs and co-workers20 > found > > that, for ME patients, graded exercise resulted in faulty > regulation > > of the immune system, specifically increased activity of the > > enzymes " elastase " and " RNase L " . RNase L is a key component in > the > > cell's virus detection system and is up-regulated in response to > > viral infection. However, elastase degrades RNase L and is > normally > > involved in removing it from the cell when concentrations are too > > high. Why should both be highly expressed in ME patients? Elastase > > is activated and degrades the RNase L in the absence of metabolic > > regulators such as glutathione. (Glutathione is an amino acid > > complex that modifies enzyme activity throughout the body, and ME > > patients exhibit either lower concentrations or an imbalance > between > > its active and inactive forms21-23.) Thus the simultaneous over- > > activation and mis-regulation of this part of the immune system > can > > be explained by glutathione depletion. A range of factors > contribute > > to glutathione depletion in the general population, including > > infection, the oxidative stress induced by strenuous or sustained > > exercise, and the long- > > term elevation of the stress hormones cortisol and adrenalin24. > > Furthermore, glutathione is also involved in sustaining > respiration > > (i.e. the production of chemical energy compounds such as ATP in > the > > mitochondria) thereby providing energy for active tissues such as > > muscle. Thus muscle tissue effectively competes with the immune > > system for glutathione25 – sustained physical activity reduces the > > amount of glutathione available to the immune system, resulting in > > immune dysfunction. Conversely, an overactive immune system > reduces > > the amount of energy available for muscle tissue, also > exacerbating > > oxidative stress, and can account for both the chronic fatigue and > > pain (by inducing lactic acid production) that characterise ME. > > Thus, following an initial period of stress, glutathione > > concentrations may be too low for the optimal function of both the > > immune system and muscle tissues, paving the way for both > persistent > > viral infection and fatigue, both of which feedback from each > other > > to render the condition chronic. > > This situation is compounded by the fact that glutathione not only > > has a supporting role in the immune response but also directly > > inhibits the replication of enteroviruses by blocking the > formation > > of one particular protein (glycoprotein shared by all – > including > > coxsackie viruses. Indeed, glutathione concentration is a major > > factor influencing the expression of other persistent viral > > infections such as HIV26-29. Thus glutathione depletion not only > > suppresses the immune system, it leaves the body particularly > > defenceless against enteroviruses. Sustained exercise or stress > can > > deplete glutathione concentrations to the point where viral RNA is > > no longer prevented from replicating, aiding either an initial > > infection or the renewed replication of previously blocked viral > RNA > > present in muscle tissue and blood27,29. Thus glutathione > depletion > > is a strong candidate for `the trigger for reactivation of > > endogenous latent viruses' in ME30. A small number of studies > > demonstrate that foods rich in glutathione or direct glutathione > > injection help to relieve fatigue in ME patients, and may clear > > active viral infections31,32. > > Although the above studies have concentrated on skeletal muscle, > the > > heart (and the postural leg muscle involved in pumping blood back > to > > the heart) is not exempt from glutathione depletion. Thus the > above > > mechanism can also account for the range of cardiovascular > problems > > associated with ME, including orthostatic (standing) intolerance > > (reviewed by Spence and 33). Patients with orthostatic > > intolerance `have continuous disability and commonly have exercise > > intolerance'33. > > Together, this evidence suggests that chronic fatigue in ME is > > symptomatic of the following sequence of events: a period of > > infection or strenuous physical or mental activity results in > > glutathione depletion; this renders the immune system relatively > > ineffective, particularly against enterovirus infection; the > immune > > system becomes constantly activated (and inefficiently governed) > > because it has insufficient resources (glutathione) to completely > > rid the body of viral particles; the constantly elevated energy > > demand of the immune system detracts from other metabolic > functions > > (particularly energy-demanding systems such as skeletal muscles > and > > the cardiovascular system); limitation of respiratory and > > cardiovascular systems further locks the patient into a vicious > > cycle of inefficient energy production and use; increased reliance > > on anaerobic metabolism leads to lactic acid production and > > associated muscle pain. > > Clearly, the performance of energy-demanding activities such as > > exercise can only aggravate this situation. Indeed, 82 % of ME > > patients in a recent study stated that graded exercise therapy > > worsened their condition, and only 5 % found it useful (compared > to > > 70 – 75 % of patients who found either pain management or `pacing' > > of daily activities useful)34. Furthermore, the Canadian Clinical > > Treatment Protocol warns that " externally paced `Graded Exercise > > Programs' or programs based on the premise that patients are > > misperceiving their activity limits or illness must be avoided " 35. > > If exercise is so detrimental, why is graded exercise therapy > often > > recommended as a treatment for ME? Firstly, many of the studies > > cited here are recent, and the information and implications have > > perhaps not yet filtered up to policy makers. Secondly, the > > reclassification of ME as an ambiguous `chronic fatigue syndrome' > > (CFS) by members of the psychiatric profession assumes that the > > symptoms have no physiological basis and are best treated with the > > traditional psychiatric method of facing and overcoming a problem, > > rather than direct removal of the problem at source. However, this > > approach jumps from hypothesis to treatment without investigating > > the mechanisms involved, perhaps explaining why " no psychiatrist > has > > ever cured an M.E. patient using psychiatric treatments " 19. > > Psychiatry, by definition, should not have authority over the > > treatment of physiological disorders, particularly those that > occur > > chiefly in muscle tissues. Graded exercise therapy is founded on, > > and perpetuates, the myth that ME patients are simply malingering, > > while most are frustrated by their incapacity to satisfactorily > > conduct critical aspects of daily life34. > > ME is a heterogeneous disorder that affects different patients to > > varying degrees and with subtly different suites of symptoms. At > > best, graded exercise therapy has relieved symptoms for (but not > > cured) a tiny minority of patients, whilst the weight of empirical > > evidence indicates that exercise has direct and persistently > > negative impacts on the physiology and quality of life of a > > significant subgroup of ME patients. Any universally applied > therapy > > is unlikely to address the heterogeneity of ME, and graded > exercise > > is particularly unsuitable as it may worsen the condition, and > > should not be generally recommended without a high degree of > > confidence that it will not be applied to susceptible patients: it > > is difficult to conceive of a more inappropriate therapy for ME. > By > > increasing the risk of relapse and overall health risks, rather > than > > reducing them, graded exercise therapy also risks increasing the > > burden of illness on society at large. The present review suggests > > that an approach based on treatment of the underlying > physiological > > dysfunction will be more fruitful. > > > > Abbreviations > > ATP = Adenosine triphosphate, RNase L = 2',5'-oligoadenylate (2- > 5A) > > synthetase/Ribonuclease L > > Literature cited > > 1 De Becker PJ, Roeykens J, Reynders N, McGregor N & De Meirleir > K. > > 2000. Exercise capacity in chronic fatigue syndrome. Archives of > > International Medicine 160: 3270-3277. > > 2 Fulcher KY & White PD. 2000. Strength and physiological response > > to exercise in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of > > Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 69: 302-307. > > 3 Wong R, Lopaschuk G, Zhu G, et al. 1992. Skeletal muscle > > metabolism in the chronic fatigue syndrome: in vivo assessment by > > 31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Chest 102: 1716- 1722. > > 4 Nus J, De Meirleir K, Wolfs S & Duquet W. 2004. Disability > > evaluation in chronic fatigue syndrome: associations between > > exercise capacity and activity limitations/participation > > restrictions. Clinical Rehabilitation 18: 139-148. > > 5 Sorensen B. Streib JE, Strand M, et al. 2003. Complement > > activation in a model of chronic fatique syndrome. Journal of > > Allergy and Clinical Immunology 112: 397-403. > > 6 Sargent C, Scroop GC, Nemeth PM, Burnet RB & Buckley JD. 2002. > > Maximal oxygen uptake and lactate metabolism are normal in chronic > > fatigue syndrome. Medicine & Science in Sports and Exercise 34: 51- > > 56. > > 7 Chia JKS. 2005. The role of enterovirus in chronic fatigue > > syndrome. Journal of Clinical Pathology 58: 1126-1132. > > 8 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE). > > CFS/ME: full guideline DRAFT (September 2006). > > 9 Afari N & Buchwald D. 2003. Chronic fatigue syndrome: a review. > > American Journal of Psychiatry 160: 221-236. > > 10 Patarca-Montero R, Antoni M, Fletcher MA & Klimas NG. 2001. > > Cytokine and other immunologic markers in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome > > and their relation to neuropsychological factors. Applied > > Neuropsychology 8: 51-64. > > 11 Hooper M. 2006. Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME): a review with > > emphasis on key findings in biomedical research. Journal of > Clinical > > Pathology (in press) published online 25 Aug. 2006 doi: > > 10.1136/jcp.2006.042408. > > 12 Lane RJM, Soteriou BA, Zhang H, & Archard LC. 2003. Enterovirus > > related metabolic myopathy: a postviral fatigue syndrome. Journal > of > > Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 74: 1382-1386. > > 13 Ayres JG, Flint N, EG, et al. 1998. Post-infection > fatigue > > syndrome following Q-fever. Q. J. Med. 91: 105-123. > > 14 Berelowitz JG, Burgess AP, Thanabalasingham T, et al. 1995. > Post- > > hepatitis syndrome revisited. Journal of Viral Hepatitis 2: 133- > 138. > > 15 Kerr JR, Barah F, Matley DL. et al. 2001. Circulating tumour > > necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma are detectable during > > acute and convalescent paravirus B19 infection and are associated > > with prolonged and chronic fatigue. Journal of General Virology. > 82: > > 3011-3019. > > 16 Hotopf M, Noah N, Wesseley S. 1996. 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