According to molecular biologist Donald Scott, CFS as a disease was invented
to cover up the effects of the weaponized blend of the Visna virus with
Brucellosis mycoplasmas; Mycoplasmas Fermentans Incognitus

James-Osbourne: Holmes

-----Original Message-----
From: larry tankersley [mailto:la...@webtv.net]
Sent: Wednesday, January 09, 2002 7:50 AM
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: CS> CFS

 Dear list.. I found the following about CFS. Sounds like CS would be
well worth a try. If anyone has suggestions on how much , how often ,
and for how long,I'd appreciate hearing,as the lady I know who has been
diagnosed with CFS is going down the tube and the family is falling
apart.  Thanks
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<
 10/28/98
NEW HYPOTHESIS PROPOSED FOR CAUSE OF CHRONIC FATIGUE SYNDROME
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Researchers here have proposed a new theory for the
cause of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) -- one that blames the illness
both on a low-level viral infection and on the body's own immune
response to that virus.
If true, it would offer an explanation for why virologists so far
haven't found evidence of a common virus when looking at a population of
CFS patients. The hypothesis was included in a paper published in the
current issue of the American Journal of Medicine.
The new theory, proposed by Ronald Glaser, professor of medical
microbiology and immunology, and Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, professor of
psychology and psychiatry at Ohio State University, is the latest work
in more than two decades of their research on the effects of stress on
the human immune system.
"Our data suggests that stress may be causing the expression of certain
viral proteins and that these proteins may be modulating the body's
immune response, turning it on or off,"
Glaser said.
CFS was first characterized by researchers in the mid-1980s who
described it as a combination of symptoms including low-grade fevers,
body aches, malaise, and depression among other signs. The condition
seems more prevalent among young adult women. Those diagnosed with CFS
often experience stress and depression.
Symptoms routinely linger for six months or more and may continue for
years. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate
that CFS may affect anywhere from four to 10 of every 100,000 people in
the United States.
Other researchers have reported higher-than-normal titers of antibodies
to various latent viruses -- Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus, human
herpes virus 6, for example -- in the blood of patients diagnosed as
having CFS. But no one viral infection was present in all patients --
evidence that would be needed to prove a viral cause of the illness.
The Ohio State researchers' new theory poses several mechanisms that
might be linked to CFS.
Once a person is infected, these viruses can remain latent in the body
for long periods of time. Glaser proposes that the viruses could be
partially reactivated, that is, viral proteins could be produced at
levels high enough to cause a low-grade infection but too low to be seen
using current laboratory assays.
Glaser and Kiecolt-Glaser suggest that CFS patients may experience an
ongoing, low-grade viral infection -- more like a smoldering fire rather
than a three-alarm blaze -- which could stimulate parts of the immune
response without raising antibody titers to typically high levels.
That low-grade infection would be enough to increase production of
various cytokines -- chemical mediators for the immune system -- and
begin the immune response.
"A lot of the symptoms that you find in chronic fatigue syndrome are the
same ones induced by cytokines during our normal immune response,"
Glaser said.
He admits that studies of patients have yet to show a pattern of
abnormal cytokine behavior that would substantiate their theory but he
has an explanation for that.
"We haven't discovered all the cytokines involved in immunity. We may
not have found the right one, yet," he said, adding that new cytokines
are steadily being identified.
Stress and depression may be playing a related role as well,
Kiecolt-Glaser said. Earlier research has repeatedly shown that
increased stress and depression can reactivate latent viruses, decrease
the body's immune response, and stimulate the production of certain
cytokines linked to some CFS-like symptoms.
"Part of this is a chicken-and-egg problem," Kiecolt-Glaser said.
"People diagnosed with CFS often are depressed since they're unable to
carry out normal, daily activities. What we don't know is whether the
depression followed the diagnosis of CFS or if CFS contributed to it.
"We do know, however, that this kind of depression can weaken our immune
response."
Glaser said researchers need to reconsider past work on CFS.
"We need to look for immune system changes that are much more subtle and
specific than those we've been using as benchmarks," he said.
#
Contact: Ronald Glaser, (614) 292-5526; glase...@osu.edu; Janice
Kiecolt-Glaser, (614) 293-5120, kiecolt-glase...@osu.edu
Written by Earle Holland, (614) 292-8384; hollan...@osu.edu



larry tankersley; Gainesville,Florida USA


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