Guest guest Posted November 8, 2009 Report Share Posted November 8, 2009 Hi Mark, I think we are missing the point that the cortisol levels fluctuate from the beginning of the illness through the duration. I think that it would be safe to say that for a majority of the population - high cortisol levels are common at the beginning of the illness as the body fights the trigger, whatever that may be. As the adrenals wear out trying to continue to produce these high levels for an extended period of time, then a time of low cortisol has begun and most of us remain there - some form of adrenal fatigue. In later stages of illness, the adrenals mount one last effort and produce high levels of cortisol until they finally wear out permanently, no longer adrenal fatigue but adrenal insufficiency or perhaps even s. Anyway, those are my thoughts and understanding of the adrenal cycle in ME/CFIDS. I certainly could be wrong. In addition, I think that study was flawed in using CBT as a defining factor as it seems too subjective. Also, were all study participants in the same phase of illness and in the same stage of adrenal fatigue. What was the genetic makeup? A lot of factors playing a part. This is what Dr. M. stated in Reno Interview. Have there been other interviews or statements to expound on this? " discovered in prostrate cancer in men in 2006 by Silverman. Simple retrovirus, on or off. Three things control in unpublished data response to hormones response to inflammatory cytokines NF b element (?) Cortisol, the stress hormone, turns on virus very rapidly and continues to keep it expressed so inflammatory events as caused by other pathogens. and so do androgens and progesterones which makes sense in prostate cancer and in the disease in women. " Marti > > Hi - Thanks for the info, but according to that same article, it's the presence of that receptor which is believed to be the reason that lab studies show that male mice are significantly more susceptible to retrovirus infection than female mice. They attribute this due to the presence of testosterone. However, according to CFS studies, significantly more women get CFS than men. > > Additionally, see the following study: > > http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19607750 > > " CONCLUSIONS: Low cortisol is of clinical relevance in CFS, as it is associated with a poorer response to CBT. Hypocortisolism could be one of several maintaining factors that interact in the persistence of CFS. " > > If the interaction between cortisol and XMRV was significant in CFS, then the above study conflicts with that. Higher cortisol levels should have been associated with poorer treatment response, if that interaction was significant. - Mark Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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