Study Links Virus to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Posted: October 8, 2009

WASHINGTON—A virus recently linked to prostate cancer is a new suspect in chronic fatigue syndrome. U.S.scientists tested blood from 101 patients and found two-thirds carried it.

That does not mean the virus causes chronic fatigue, stressed the research published Thursday in the journal Science.

The team of scientists from the National Cancer Institute and Nevada's Whittemore Peterson Institute said it was possible the virus, named XMRV, was just "a passenger virus" that catches a ride in patients whose immune systems are weakened by chronic fatigue.

Moreover, the researchers found nearly 4 percent of healthy people carried the virus, too. That raises bigger questions about just what role this recently discovered virus — a relative of viruses that cause cancer in mice — may be playing in overall health.

"This suggests that several million Americans may be infected with a retrovirus of as-yet-unknown pathogenic potential," the researchers concluded.

A retrovirus is a kind of virus that permanently embeds in the body.

Various viruses have been linked to chronic fatigue over the years, only to fall by the wayside as potential culprits in the mysterious illness thought to afflict millions. It is characterized by at least six months of severe fatigue, impaired memory and other symptoms, but there's no test for it — doctors rule out other possible causes — and no specific treatment.

The XMRV virus is related to mouse leukemia viruses. No one knows how it arose or how people become infected. But another research team recently found the virus lurking in about a quarter of 200 prostate tumors — and in about 6 percent of noncancerous prostate samples they used for comparison.

"There is still much that we do not understand," including whether people with either disease just are more prone to infection, cautioned Tufts University microbiologist John Coffin in an accompanying editorial. Still, "further study may reveal XMRV as a cause of more than one well-known 'old' disease."

More proof CDC & NIH ME/CFIDS program needs total overhall

The ME/CFIDS patient funded research once again makes the breakthroughs while NIH and CDC actively block real science and waste taxpayers' millions. pathetic.

Justin Reilly of CO @ Nov 20, 2009 23:03:32 PM

Then why not..

get a colloidal silver generator, and add CO2 to the electrolysis process, (using an aquarium pump), thereby reducing the silver ions to nano size. This will work on viruses as well as mycoplasma phlei, (virus sized bacteria causing MS). I have 8 people so far of herpes in a single dose, so it should work on the virus that causes CFS, even if the virus sequencing is unknown. 3 tablespons a day for a week should safely tackle all viruses. Actually as it has no harmful side effects, (not even turning you silver, as you have filtered the processed CS liquid), you can take it daily, but there is no need for that. The evidence is anecdotal, with no largescale studies having been done. BTW nort a single study has been published on ANY tests of the swinr flu vax. It is interesting to nore here that the Hong Kong Medical Dept. had all the Hong Kong subways sprayed with nano colloidal silver during the bird flu outbreak a few years back.

ThomasT @ Oct 10, 2009 10:45:18 AM

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