Posted on 10/08/2009 9:32:37 PM PDT by neverdem
Prostate cancer pathogen may be behind the disease once dubbed 'yuppie flu'.
A study on chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has linked the mysterious and controversial disease to a recently discovered retrovirus. Just last month researchers found the same virus to be associated with aggressive prostate tumours.
CFS is marked by debilitating exhaustion and often an array of other symptoms, including memory and concentration problems and painful muscles and joints. The underlying cause of the disease is unknown; it is diagnosed only when other physical and psychiatric diseases have been excluded. Though the disease's nebulous nature originally drew scepticism from both doctors and the general public, most of the medical community now perceives it as a serious if poorly defined disease.
Now Judy Mikovits of the Whittemore Peterson Institute for Neuro-Immune Disease in Reno, Nevada, and her colleagues think they have discovered a potential pathogenic link to CFS. In patients with the disease from different parts of the United States, 67% were infected with a retrovirus known as XMRV. Less than 4% of controls carried the virus.
"I can't wait to be able to tell my patients," says Mikovits, who is also the vice president of drug development for Genyous Biomed in Henderson, Nevada. "It's going to knock their socks off. They've had such a stigma. People have just assumed they were just complainers who didn't handle stress well."
CFS researchers have long had their eyes on retroviruses. A number of the symptoms, including fatigue and cognitive dysfunction, can occur when the immune system is dealing with a viral infection, and the disease is often preceded by a flu-like illness. Although a number of retroviruses have been hypothesized to play a role in CFS, none has ever been confirmed.
About three years ago Robert Silverman, a biologist at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio and a coauthor of the new study, discovered a previously unknown retrovirus, XMRV, while searching for a pathogen that might contribute to prostate cancer. The retrovirus was very similar to MLV, a group of viruses that can cause cancer and neurological and immunological diseases in mice. Silverman found XMRV in a subset of prostate tumours, and more recent research found a stronger correlation between XMRV and aggressive prostate tumours1,2.
Mikovits asked Silverman to analyze the blood samples of 101 CFS patients and 218 healthy controls. The authors detected XMRV DNA in the immune cells of 67% of the CFS patients but in only 3.7% of healthy controls. The authors also showed that the virus was able to spread from infected immune cells to cultured prostate cancer cells and that the virus's DNA sequence was more than 99% similar to the sequence of the virus associated with prostate cancer. The findings were published in Science3.
"It's scary," says Mikovits. "But it's cool. Hopefully this will finally make people change their attitudes to this disease."
Mikovits believes the association may be even stronger than the present work indicates. DNA sequencing only picks up active infections, she says, so she wants to study CFS exposure to the virus more broadly. In an unpublished investigation, she and her colleagues analyzed blood cells in about 330 CFS patients and found that more than 95% expressed antibodies to XMRV, whereas about 4% of healthy controls did.
Although Mikovits acknowledges that it's premature to suggest a causal link between XMRV and CFS, she thinks it makes sense. Chronic XMRV infection in immune cells could cause them to churn out inflammatory cytokines, which are observed in some CFS patients, she says. Mikovits also points out that the MLV coat protein can disrupt red blood cells in mice, leading to low blood oxygen levels.
William Reeves, principal investigator for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)'s CFS public health research programme, says the findings are "unexpected and surprising" and that it is "almost unheard of to find an association of this magnitude between an infectious agent and a well-defined chronic disease, much less an illness like CFS".
But Reeves is cautious. "Until the work is independently verified, the report represents a single pilot study," he says. According to Reeves, the CDC is already trying to replicate these findings. He also notes that CFS is a heterogeneous disease and likely arises from a combination of many factors.
XMRV presents its own puzzle. John Coffin, a virologist at Tufts University in Boston who has studied MLV, points out that the virus's prevalence in healthy controls "is, in some ways, an equally striking result".
"It's highly preliminary, but if it's in fact representative, then there are 10 million Americans with this infection, which is very similar to MLV and is now linked to two important diseases," says Coffin. "There's a lot we don't know, including whether XMRV causes disease, but that's always the case when the first paper, like this one, comes out."
Ribonuclease L (RNase L) is an important effector of the innate antiviral response. FReebie, links at upper right
micro ping
They talk about the prostate cancer etc yet show a picture
of a “not guilty” in bed. (I know there’s a tie in there somewhere.) (At least it wasn’t Helen!)
Yeah, I'm sure they'll love the news.
WTF?
Of interest to you?
LOL! I was thinking the same thing. WTF does this have to do with...?!? Then....Not guilty!
Innerestin’
new retrovirus ping
Is there anything one can do to get rid of a virus like this, or is a person basically stuck with it?
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome has made a comeback, eh? LAME!
CFS ping, FWIW.
Also, Keep up with other H1N1 update stories on this thread: H1N1 flu victim collapsed on way to hospital [Latest H1N1 updates downthread] thanks to DvdMom and others.
I may get roasted for the anecdotal testimony provided but here goes.
I know two people that were family relations. Both developed similar symptoms after a traumatic series of events occurred in their lives. The first one came down with a mystery ailment immediately after several family members died of unrelated causes (multiple tragic deaths in one year). This person spent a year trying to figure out why there was fatigue. After a year of intensive scrutiny the diagnosis was Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, although they were convinced it was Epstein Barr Syndrome (this self-diagnosis was during the heyday of the EBS media frenzy). The second came down with a mystery ailment about 5 years later. They had kept all the original stresses of the family deaths inside, to stay strong for the other family member going through CFS. This ailment coincided with early retirement and empty nest syndrome. After a year of testing, the second person was diagnosed with EBS, although the family was convinced it was CFS (because the other had same symptoms AND CFS was the new media craze). In the second case, no tick was found but blood work confirmed EBS. The second person went on drug therapy and recovered suddenly after about a year.
They both made a miraculous recovery after a year of drug therapy. The episodes disappeared as if nothing happened. The doctors’ diagnosis validated their assertion they were sick. Insurance paid for the bills. In both cases, they kept insisting they weren’t crazy and they weren’t trying to be sick.
A third person, wholly unrelated to the two family members, was diagnosed with EBS after a long bout with a mysterious ailment—same symptoms. Again, no tick was found. Again, blood work finally determined Epstein Barr. Again, the person was put on a drug therapy. Again, the person suddenly recovered after about a year of taking drugs. I learned after talking to this person that the family was going through a series of traumatic events at the time they came down with a mystery ailment, including a multiple death in the family.
In all three cases the recovery echoed each other—miraculous was the common word described. They tried to lead normal lives but were so tired and depressed during the years they had their diseases. All three thought they were having relapses during times of great stress, took their medication, and recovered instantly. All three cases, though anecdotal, seemed to parallel the recovery time experienced during the mourning process during stress or death.
Stress and depression act strangely upon certain people. Other people break out in hives, develop shingles, or have breakdowns of other body parts. Hives, shingles, and other illnesses are real.
All seem to recover when they run the course of stressful events’ mourning process. But some seem to recover only after they are given medication. The therapy validates their ailment and seems to vindicate that they aren’t crazy, which is a universal saying.
Just an observation and opinion. But I could be wrong. One thing is certain all recovered eventually and “miraculously.”
It seems logical that stress breaks down immunity is my conclusion. And the immunity breakdown leads to the body being hit with unusual diseases.
This is something that I want to research some more.
Thank you for the ping.
The CFIDS.org sent out an e-mail about this study, but the article posted appears to have more info.
(P.S. Happy HAPPY Happy Birthday to Piper!!!) ;)
Find out what type of drug therapy they were on because I was diagnosed in 1990 and nobody has found a miraculous cure for me!
(At about the same time as the EBV theories, there were also a lot of doctors supposedly diagnosing patients who were clinically depressed as having CFS because CFS had less stigma attached to it.)
Thanks for the ping.
I'm sure they will.
Being accused of having an imaginary disease with no know cause, cure or treatment is bad.
Identifying a cause that isn't "all in your head" or "just laziness" is at worst comforting.
At best, causes can be treated...
You’re welcome, GOPJ!
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