Guest guest Posted December 29, 2006 Report Share Posted December 29, 2006 Hi all. I want to mention some more evidence that suggests that this hypothesis is relevant to CFS. Carnitine--There are a number of studies showing that this is low in CFS, and that supplementing it helps some. Carnitine requires methylation for its synthesis, so a deficit in methylation capacity would explain the low carnitine in CFS. Coenzyme Q10--Two studies have found that supplementing this is also helpful in CFS. Co Q10 also requires methylation for its synthesis. Again, a methylation deficit would explain low Co Q10. Vitamin B12--Regland et al. gave hydroxocobalamin shots (1000 micrograms) weekly to 10 female PWCs who had low B12 and high homocysteine in their spinal fluid. They found that the ones who did not have an MTHFR polymorphism were helped more by the B12, presumably because their methionine synthase operation was not hindered by a shortage of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate in addition to a shortage of B12. All of this implicates the methylation cycle in the pathogenesis of CFS. Folinic acid--There's a new study (Lundell et al., 2006) showing that 81% of 58 CFS patients experienced subjective improvement of symptoms after taking folinic acid. This again implicates the methylation cycle, which is intimately linked to the folate cycle at methionine synthase. The evidence seems to keep piling up. Rich Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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