-
Latest News
- Dysregulated provision of oxidisable substrates to the mitochondria in ME/CFS lymphoblasts
- Sex-based differences in plasma autoantibodies to CNS proteins in Gulf War veterans versus healthy & symptomatic controls
- Sick of the sick role: narratives of what ‘recovery’ means to people with CFS/ME
- Plasma proteomics publication shows disrupted cell-to-cell signaling in ME/CFS
- Open‐label study with the monoamine stabilizer (‐)‐OSU6162 [drug] in ME/CFS
Archives
Tag Archives: Dr Cristina Tato
Researchers identify biomarkers associated with CFS severity
Stanford Medicine News Center press release, by Bruce Goldman, 31 July 2017: Researchers identify biomarkers associated with chronic fatigue syndrome severity Stanford investigators used high-throughput analysis to link inflammation to chronic fatigue syndrome, a difficult-to-diagnose disease with no known cure. … Continue reading
Posted in News
Tagged Dr Cristina Tato, Dr Jarred Younger, Dr Jose Montoya, Dr Lily Chu, Dr Tyson Holmes, Dr Yael Rosenberg-Hasson, Ian Valencia, inflammatory cytokines, Jill Anderson, Mark Davis, Stanford ME/CFS Initiative
Comments Off on Researchers identify biomarkers associated with CFS severity
Cytokine signature associated with disease severity in CFS patients
Cytokine signature associated with disease severity in chronic fatigue syndrome patients, by Jose G. Montoyaa, Tyson H. Holmes, Jill N. Anderson, Holden T. Maecker, Yael Rosenberg-Hasson, Ian J. Valencia, Lily Chu, Jarred W. Younger, Cristina M. Tato, and Mark M. … Continue reading
Posted in News
Tagged Dr Cristina Tato, Dr Jarred Younger, Dr Jose Montoya, Dr Lily Chu, Dr Mark M Davis, Dr Tyson Holmes, Dr Yael Rosenberg-Hasson, Ian Valencia, inflammatory biomarkers, inflammatory cytokines, Jill Anderson, Stanford ME/CFS Initiative
Comments Off on Cytokine signature associated with disease severity in CFS patients