Assessment of energy metabolism by Serum Fluorescence Emission

Researchers from Witchita Kansas examined the metabolic component  of CFS, by determined serum NAD(P)H levels in 44 CFS patients and 30 healthy control  subjects by measuring serum fluorescence emission at 450 nm. It was directly correlated with serum coenzyme Q10 levels  and inversely correlated with urine hydroxyhemopyrrolin-2-one (HPL) levels.

Based on these findings, they propose the use of serum NAD(P)H, measured as an intrinsic serum  fluorescence emission, to monitor metabolism and fatigue status in people with CFS.

Following patient NAD(P)H levels over time may aid in selecting therapeutic strategies and monitoring treatment outcome.

Assessment of the Energy Metabolism in Patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome by Serum Fluorescence Emission

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Lynn’s London Marathon fundraising effort

Message from Rob & Menna Messenger:

Our son Cerith and daughter Eleri have been severely ill with ME for 8 and 6 Years respectively. Eleri (now 21) has been unable to stand / walk since the age of 15, and disabling pain And cognitive / sensory difficulties are her daily companions. Cerith suffered a severe relapse 18 months ago from which he is yet to emerge. He was admitted twice to palliative care in 2011, and is now at home in a hospital bed. He is tube fed and dependent on us for all his personal care.

We’d like to alert you to the challenge being undertaken by Cerith’s and Eleri’s Aunty Lynn, who is running the London Marathon (next Sunday) and two half-marathons in aid of ME Research UK. You can find out about it at her Just Giving page.

If you are able to, please support her effort, and pass this info on to anyone else you think may be interested.

Thank you so much.

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MRC funded research projects

Summaries of the current research projects funded by the MRC aimed at ‘Understanding the Mechanisms of CFS/ME’ have been added to the the section ‘MRC-funded research projects’ of the Medical Research Council’s CFS/ME page.

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Presentation about life with ME

A presentation about life with ME which draws on the personal experience of Richmond and Kingston ME Group member Heather is now available for other people to use.

Heather is happy for it to be downloaded as an electronic-presentation or printed out as a hard-copy hand-out and used by other groups, individuals, teachers, or healthcare professionals to raise awareness of the reality of life with M.E.

 

 

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Benefits medical assessors have to sign Official Secrets Act

The Guardian reports that Atos Healthcare, the private healthcare company that performs controversial sickness benefit assessments has confirmed that it makes all its medical staff sign the Official Secrets Act.

Two doctors who work for Atos raised their concerns with the Guardian and online political blog Liberal Conspiracy after the company asked them to sign a document pointing out their obligations under the OSA.

Both doctors believed that signing the document would make staff more reluctant to blow the whistle on patient safety and issues around whether medical assessments were being carried out appropriately.

In February in a parliamentary answer, the UK employment minister Chris Grayling said that his department did not require Atos employees to be bound by the terms of the OSA or extra provisions which bring further penalties for disclosing government information protected under the Act.

In a further parliamentary answer Grayling added: “No Atos Healthcare employees have been prosecuted for breach of confidentiality rules … from 2008 to date.”

Private sector medical staff assessing benefit claimants told to sign Official Secrets Act

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Cognition & CFS Webinar 11/4/12

Impaired cognition in CFS is one of the most disabling and frustrating symptoms patients experience. Deficits in short-term memory, information processing and processing speed have been documented by several groups. How closely does the medical literature reflect patients’ experiences and how can cognitive testing help support self-reported measures?

Dr. Gudrun Lange, professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the New Jersey Medical School and research scientist at the VA War Related Illness & Injury Study Center, joins Dr. Suzanne Vernon, scientific director of the CFIDS Association of America, to explore these topics in an online presentation which is happening live between 7 and 8.30 pm UK time.

Register free in advance online

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Medical students influenced by name of condition

Researchers in Australia and Belgium surveyed medical students to discover how medical students classify a range of conditions they might encounter in their professional lives and whether a different name for a condition would influence their decision in the categorisation of the condition as a ‘disease’ or ‘not a disease’.

36 conditions were included in the survey. 96% thought Myalgic Encephalomyelitis was a disease while 75% thought Chronic Fatigue Syndrome was.

The data overall seems to suggest that the labelling of a condition may influence behaviour and how future doctors’ might manage them.

Do you think it’s a disease? A survey of medical students

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Functional consequences of repeated OP exposure

The class of chemicals known as the “organophosphates” (OPs) comprises many of the most common agricultural and commercial pesticides that are used worldwide as well as the highly toxic chemical warfare agents.

The mechanism of the acute toxicity of OPs in both target and non-target organisms is primarily attributed to inhibitory actions on various forms of cholinesterase leading to excessive peripheral and central cholinergic activity. However, there is now substantial evidence that this canonical (cholinesterase-based) mechanism cannot alone account for the wide-variety of adverse consequences of OP exposure that have been described, especially those associated with repeated exposures to levels that produce no overt signs of acute toxicity.

This type of exposure has been associated with prolonged impairments in attention, memory, and other domains of cognition, as well as chronic illnesses where these symptoms are manifested (e.g., Gulf War Illness, Alzheimer’s disease). Due to their highly reactive nature, it is not surprising that OPs might alter the function of a number of enzymes and proteins (in addition to cholinesterase). However, the wide variety of long-term neuropsychiatric symptoms that have been associated with OPs suggests that some basic or fundamental neuronal process was adversely affected during the exposure period.

The purpose of this review is to discuss several non-cholinesterase targets of OPs that might affect such fundamental processes and includes cytoskeletal and motor proteins involved in axonal transport, neurotrophins and their receptors, and mitochondria (especially their morphology and movement in axons). Potential therapeutic implications of these OP interactions are also discussed.

Functional consequences of repeated organophosphate exposure: Potential non-cholinergic mechanisms  AV Terry

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Is overall genome instability cause of ME/CFS?

Henry Heng, an American researcher has been funded by the National CFIDS Foundation and Nancy Taylor Foundation for Chronic Diseases to discover whether overall genome instability rather than a specific molecular mechanism may cause chronic fatigue and immune dysfunction syndrome or CFIDS (an American term for ME/CFS).

Dr Heng will use  spectral karyotyping or SKY analysis, an advanced type of genomic testing to look for chromosomal aberrations or genomic instability in CFS/ ME patients.  Dr Heng believes scientists who have looked to single genes / mutations as the cause of diseases with complex sets of symptoms need to broaden their search to genomes.

Is overall genome instability cause of ME/CFS? 

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Are you losing ESA and live in Merthyr Tydfil?

  • Would you be willing to do an interview for Channel 4?
  • Do you live in Merthyr Tydfil?
  • Have you been told that you are losing your Employment and Support Allowance due to the government changes coming in on 30th April 2012?
  • Does your partner earn more than £15,000? Or are you someone who previously claimed under the youth rules?
  • Were you told that your ESA will only last for one year?
  • OR have you been placed in the Work Related Activity Group (WRAG) and cannot find work?

Please contact Sylvia for more information if you can help, by Wednesday 4th April 2012.

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