Guest guest Posted June 3, 2011 Report Share Posted June 3, 2011 One of the tough things about CFS is that its symptoms tend to get worse and then better all on their own. If you decide to try a new treatment because you are feeling really miserable, and then feel better a little while later, there is really no way to tell if the treatment worked, or if you were just going to get better on your own. Similarly, if you start a new treatment and suddenly feel worse, there is really no way to tell whether the treatment is causing side effects, or if your CFS just got worse on its own. It's extremely unfair that CFS patients are left to their own devices to try to find treatments, because with a disease that varies so much on its own, controlled studies are by far the best hope of finding a cure. Why do CFS symptoms fluctuate so much? Well, I think it's because CFS is caused by a herpes infection. (To be precise, I believe that herpes causes many, but not necessarily all, cases of CFS. It may be that different subtypes of CFS have different causes.) Herpes infections just naturally flare up when the immune system is weak, which could cause CFS to get better or worse for seemingly no reason. Almost everyone on earth is infected with one or more herpes viruses, and once you get infected with a herpes virus, it's with you for life, because the immune system can not completely eradicate herpes viruses. Some herpes viruses hide from the immune system by infecting nerve cells. Many components of the immune system are not active within nervous tissue, because nerve cells are so delicate that strong immune activity would kill them. Herpes Simplex 1 (the cause of cold sores), Herpes Simplex 2 (genital herpes) and Varicella-Zoster Virus (a.k.a Herpes 3, the cause of chicken pox and shingles) all hide within nerve cells. Other herpes viruses avoid the immune system by living within the immune cells themselves (although they don't destroy the immune system to the extent that HIV does.) For example, Epstein-Barr virus (a.k.a Herpes 4, which causes most cases of mononucleosis and was originally thought to be the cause of CFS) lives inside white blood cells, as does Cytomegalovirus (a.k.a Herpes 5.) A few herpes viruses, such as Herpes 6, can live within both nerve cells and white blood cells. Because the immune system can't completely get rid of herpes viruses, it has to constantly battle to keep them " latent. " That is, the immune system is in a constant war to keep the herpes viruses from replicating and making the person sick. People with severely weakened immune systems often get terrible herpes infections. A good example is Herpes 8--it often causes fatal tumors (Kaposi's Sarcoma) in people with untreated AIDS, but people with healthy immune systems almost never get Kaposi's Sarcoma. Even mild impairments to the immune system can cause a herpes flare-up (although generally much milder ones than occur with AIDS.) Whenever something reduces immunity--be it another illness, emotional stress, or long hours at work--herpes viruses can start replicating. For example, getting a cold can weaken the immune system enough that Herpes Simplex 1 activates and causes painful mouth sores. (That's why the sores are called " cold sores. " ) So, if a herpes virus is causing your CFS, the slightest weakening of your immune response (resulting from, say, successfully fighting off a cold virus that you didn't even know you were exposed to) could cause the CFS to suddenly become worse. Similarly, slight improvements to the immune system (resulting from unknowingly eating something that stimulates immunity, say) could make the CFS much better. Also, eating something with anti-herpes properties might reduce the infection, but we really don't know all the foods that have anti-herpes properties. Which herpes virus do I think causes CFS? Herpes 3, Varicella-Zoster Virus (aka VZV), a virus carried by almost all people who live in areas with cold winters (and about half of the rest of the human race.) I wrote a paper that was published in 2009 in the journal Medical Hypothesis, explaining why I think VZV causes CFS. The abstract is at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19520522 I'll be happy to send a copy of the full article to anyone here that wants one. Here are the main reasons why I think VZV causes CFS: 1) VZV is known to suddenly cause illness, often severe illness, even in seemingly healthy people. Although the initial infection with VZV just causes chicken pox, the virus often returns suddenly decades later, causing the very painful condition called shingles (shingles is like having really severe cold sores over a wide area of your skin), as well as a number of other, less common illnesses. With most herpes infections, the initial bout of illness is the worst and later bouts of the same virus are milder (unless the immune system gets seriously damaged.) VZV is the only herpes virus where the virus comes back *worse* in healthy people. VZV infection would therefore explain why CFS often seemingly appears out of nowhre. 2) Because VZV attacks the nervous system, VZV infection would explain why CFS patients sometimes have neurological symptoms. Also, the symptoms of VZV are extremely variable, depending on which parts of the nervous system are attacked. (For example, shingles patients just about always have severe pain, but if the facial nerves are attacked, they may also have temporary blindness, severe vertigo, or facial paralysis. Other herpes viruses are not as variable in their symptoms.) Therefore, VZV infection would explain why different CFS patients have such different symptoms. 3) People who get shingles are often extremely fatigued, another way in which VZV infection is known to be like CFS. The cause of " shingles fatigue " is not known, but could easily be explained if their VZV were attacking the autonomic ganglia, the nerve cells that control the internal organs. VZV is known to live in the autonomic ganglia (and other herpes viruses are not known to live there.) 4) The autonomic symptoms seen in CFS, such as orthostatic hypotension, would also be explained if VZV caused CFS, since VZV is known to live in the autonomic ganglia. 5) CFS is, in many ways, like a milder form of Multiple Sclerosis (MS), another illness often characterized by extreme fatigue, variable symptoms, and unexplained fluctuations in severity. (The reason I say that CFS is milder than MS is because MS can cause all the symptoms that CFS patients have, but MS also often causes paralysis and sometimes death.) One of the most promising theories about MS is that it is caused by VZV. This theory of MS says that active VZV replication in the spinal cord causes an immune overreaction in the spinal tissue that further damages the nerve cells there. My theory is that CFS is milder than MS either because A) in CFS, the VZV may only be in the outer nerves, not the spinal tissue, or because the immune system in CFS patients doesn't overreact the way it does in MS. 6) Because it lives in the nerves, VZV is typically undetectable in the blood (except during the initial chicken pox infection.) Even people who are dying of rare VZV brain infections typically have no detectible VZV particles in their blood. This would explain why a cause of CFS has been so hard to find. Unfortunately, VZV has received essentially ZERO attention as a possible cause of CFS. Most doctors think of VZV reactivation as causing the extremely painful sores of shingles, and CFS patients typically don't have painful sores. In fact, though, severe VZV infections (including the rare fatal VZV infections of the brain) can occur without any sores. When my article can out, I wrote to about 15 of the leading CFS researchers telling them about my theory. Almost none of them wrote back, and those that did generally didn't seem to understand my theory. I also wrote to some leading VZV researchers. They were interested in my theory, but had no way to test it because they had no access to CFS patients. I am hoping that when all the hoopla over XMRV dies down, someone might finally test the theory that VZV causes CFS. Why I am telling this to people here? Mostly to encourage people here to use anti-herpes drugs, the only treatment shown in carefully controlled studies to help CFS. (Elderberry is really promising, too--it hasn't been tested in CFS patients, but works in several other viruses.) I know that Epstein-Barr (Herpes 4) is largely discredited as the cause of CFS, and so far Herpes 6 & 7 have not been shown to be the cause, either, but no one has looked at Herpes 3 (VZV)--and it is a really, really good candidate as the cause of CFS. -- Judith Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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