PHOENIX RISING: An ME/CFS Newsletter by Cort Johnson
(July/August 2007)
The Autonomic Nervous System Edition
NEWS
Now that’s an Electronic Newsletter!
The latest CFIDS Association of America’s E-newsletter is chock full of
information and some very encouraging news. Check out
-–One could argue that
the most important thing we could do is change the conversation about ME/CFS and
that once we do that then everything we need will follow accordingly. Here
Kim McCleary
provides some evidence that suggests the conversation about ME/CFS is shifting
and in our favor.
An Expanded Research Program. The most exciting part of
the newsletter for me is the CFIDS Association’s announcement that they’re going
to dramatically
expand their
research program
They’re hiring a full-time scientific
director who will, among other things, reach out and collaborate with
researchers to create and identify opportunities. With so many aspects of CFS
research appearing to come together this appears to be an apt time to do this.
The CAA will never be able to fund research like the federal government can but
if they can work skillfully to open new doors they could make a real impact.
There’s no one in the CFS research field doing this – its something that’s
wanted and needed and kudo’s to the CAA for moving in this direction.
The latest NIH meeting on ME/CFS, personal stories and more.
Immune Support is continuing their recent focus on ME/CFS
physicians. Check out
Dr. Bateman is a member of the Name Change Campaign. Read
a
live chat
with this very active physician and researcher.
Craig Phillips, a traumatic brain injury survivor, has created an
inspiring blog on
his efforts to carve out a meaningful and satisfying life despite his
limitations. (Second Chance to Live)
Phoenix Rising Webmaster’s Blog Page – You might want to
check out the new
webmaster’s
blog page. It includes several new
blogs on the debate between ME and CFS, as well as my testimony to the CFSAC, my
thoughts on the state of ME/CFS advocacy and a recent personal blog about how an
incident revealed very clearly that I’m just ‘Not the Man I Used to Be".
TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE - Check Out the First Phoenix Rising
ME/CFS Quiz!
____________________________________________________________________________________
SPECIAL FOCUS: ME/CFS and the Autonomic Nervous System With An Emphasis on Heart Rate Variability (HRV)
CFS patients
have consistently displayed low levels of heart rate variability (HRV)
during tilt table testing (Naschitz et al. 2003, Tanaka et al. 2002,
Yamamoto et al. 2002). It was one of the few physiological abnormalities found
during the CDC’s Pharmacogenomics studies. It has, in fact, been one of the
most, if not the most consistent abnormalities seen - a notable fact in itself –
but it’s never got much respect. The studies examined in this newsletter suggest
it’s going to start getting some.
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HEART RATE VARIABILITY (HRV)
HRV measures the complex changes the heart constantly makes in
response to signals from the brain. Researchers have been able to detect
ultra-low frequency (ULF), very low frequency (VLF), low frequency (LF)
and high frequency (HF) patterns of heart activity. The low and high
frequency oscillations are believed to reflect, respectively,
sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system activity.
Although it seems kind of paradoxical ‘a healthy heartbeat is
slightly irregular and to some extent chaotic’. A healthy heart is able
to respond to the variety of signals constantly given to it by the
brain; an unhealthy heart does not. Impaired HRV does not, however,
necessarily mean a heart is unhealthy - it could also indicate the heart
is not receiving the right signals from the brain
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The Autonomic Nervous System and ME/CFS. The HRV patterns in CFS patients
suggest they have increased sympathetic nervous system (SNS) and
decreased parasympathetic nervous system activity (PNS).
The SNS plays an excitatory role - it boosts heart activity during stressful
situations to ensure adequate flows of oxygen and nutrients get to our tissues.
The CDC and others believe the stress response is impaired in CFS and we’ve
heard a lot about the HPA axis but the other branch of the HPA axis, the SNS, is
equally important. When we are cold, for instance, the SNS is partially
responsible for maintaining our core body temperatures by shunting blood flows
away from our skin. When we stand SNS activity keeps blood from pooling in our
legs.
The parasympathetic nervous system, on the other hand, plays an inhibitory
role; it regulates heart and other activity when we're at rest. One might think
of the SNS as a kind of warrior that helps the body react to stressful
situations and the PNS as a kind of caretaker that puts the body in a restful
mode so that it can heal. Could an imbalance in these systems cause many of the
symptoms in ME/CFS? Let’s find out.
PAPER OF THE MONTH
Reduced Self Regulation in ME/CFS or Why ME/CFS Are So Edgy?
Segerstrom, S. and L. Nes. 2007. Heart rate variability reflects
self-regulatory strength, effort and fatigue. Psychological Science 18: 275-281.
As a patient group we are well known for our ‘edginess’. I have long noticed
that particularly after I exercise I am prone to fly off the handle. If someone
calls to me when I’m working in the garden I just about jump out of my skin. My
mind seems to be all over the place and my body seems far from relaxed - my
muscles, particularly in my upper body, seem so tight and stiff that I tend to
breathe shallowly. I have to work to concentrate.
The ability to control oneself, for instance, to not eat too much or to not
eat the wrong things, to control one’s emotions, to make decisions and follow
through on them, is called self regulation. We take these activities for
granted but there is evidence that some people are better self-regulators than
others.
These researchers believe that HRV levels reflect one’s self regulatory
capacities; that the lower the HRV the more difficult it is to exert control
over certain aspects of one’s behavior (e.g. overeating), emotions (anger,
sadness) and to make decisions and perform cognitively. High HRV levels,
on the other hand, have been associated with better performance in cognitive
tests, less negative emotions during stress, more effective coping with stress
and better impulse control.
How is HRV connected with ‘self regulation’? It turns out that the parts of
the brain that control autonomic nervous system activity (ANS) are very similar
to those we use when we control our emotions, make decisions and engage in
cognitive activity. This part of the brain, which is called the ‘central
autonomic network’ (CAN) is connected to or located in the prefrontal cortex. If
you’ve been reading Phoenix Rising for long you may recognize these brain
structures as CFS researchers are interested in each of them; they are the
anterior cingulate, insula, amygdale and hypothalamus.
The Study. These researchers wanted to know if our autonomic nervous
system is indeed activated when we engage in these types of activities. If it is
this will suggest that problems in autonomic nervous system functioning may not
only affect physical factors such as heart rate variability but also the
emotions, cognition and ‘self regulation’. It will establish a connection
between the mind and the body – or perhaps more accurately between the body and
the mind.
They used one of the most powerfully evocative stimuli known to man to test
their theory; warm chocolate chip cookies. One group was ordered to ignore the
chocolate chip cookies placed before them and eat carrots while other got to eat
the chocolate chip cookies. Both groups rated themselves on their experiences
and then did cognitive tests to determine if engaging in self regulation
affected their cognitive abilities and endurance.
The Findings. Higher HRVs in the carrot eaters indicated that self
regulation does activate the ANS. Simply forcing people to not eat the (warm)
chocolate chip cookies caused the ANS to turn on and this showed up in higher
HRV readings.
The carrot eaters also performed more poorly than the chocolate chip eaters
at the cognitive test. This suggested that the self regulatory system is like a
muscle that one can wear out – by denying themselves the chocolate chip cookies
the study participants slightly weakened their ability to think.
The people who had higher resting HRVs to begin with showed greater
persistence or endurance in trying to solve the cognitive tests. This suggests
that low HRV is associated with reduced mental endurance, i.e. fatigue.
This, of course, could have implications for ME/CFS patients who often have
to retreat into quiet places to rejuvenate themselves – could the problems with
information overload originate in the parts of the brain that are associated
with autonomic nervous functioning? .
Relevance to CFS. This study suggested that people with lower HRVs (such
as ME/CFS patients) may have more difficulty ‘self regulating’, i.e. have more
trouble controlling their emotions, inhibiting compulsive behavior (such as
eating), and performing cognitively.
How to connect reduced cognition and impaired control with low HRV? Remember
the idea that low parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) activity may prevent the
body from relaxing properly during sleep? This authors suggest that an unrelaxed
body can affect the mind as well. We apparently don’t have enough energy for
both the body and the brain to function at optimal levels – one of them must
turned down for the other function well. In order for the brain to engage in
calm reflective thought the energy needs of the body need to be turned down.
This, of course, is the job of the PNS. If PNS activity in ME/CFS is indeed
low it’s possible it may never turn down the activity levels of the body down
enough for the brain to engage in calm, reflective thought or to easily engage
in ‘self regulatory’ behaviors.
Interestingly, a model incorporating the above scenario has
already been suggested by ME/CFS researchers. Some CDC researchers participating
in the Pharmacogenomics studies suggested that the ‘energy set point’ of the
brains of CFS patients is too low. (See
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Take Away Points
- People with low HRVs (such as ME/CFS patients) appear to have
more difficulty engaging in ‘self regulatory’ behavior such as
controlling their emotions, engaging in disciplined activity and
thinking.
- This may be due to a failure of the brain to turn down the
body’s energy needs sufficiently to supply the brain with adequate
levels of energy to easily engage in these activities.
- A recent model produced by CDC researchers posits a scenario in
which a low energy ‘set point’ in the brain results in low brain
energy levels.
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A Selfish Brain in CFS?).
Essentially they posit that the bodies of ME/CFS patients are pulling the
energy resources away from the brains of CFS patients – leaving them starved for
energy. Rather promisingly they came at this idea from an entirely different
direction - from indications of increased allostatic stress in ME/CFS.
Several central nervous studies imply that an energy starved
brain may be present in CFS. The low cerebral glucose levels, low blood flows,
low energy production, high lactate levels and grey matter atrophy are the kinds
of findings that might be expected in people with ‘energy starved’ brains.
HRV, Sleep and ME/CFS
.
The low HRV readings in ME/CFS suggest that low levels of parasympathetic
nervous system (PNS) are present. As noted earlier PNS regulates many bodily
functions when we are at rest or asleep. But what if it never really steps in?
Could an overactive sympathetic nervous system and underactive PNS also
contribute to the unrefreshing sleep ME/CFS patients report? Could the ‘wired
but tired’ feeling ME/CFS patients experience come from the excitatory side of
the autonomic nervous system (the SNS) always being turned on and the inhibitory
or ‘relaxing’ side of it (the PNS) being always turned down. Is this why many
ME/CFS patients never really rest when they sleep?
Boneva, R.S.
,
Decker M.J.,
Maloney, E.M.,
Lin J.M.,
Jones J.F.,
Helgason, H.G.,
Heim, C.M.,
Rye, D.B.,
Reeves, W.C.
2007. Auton Neurosci.
Sep 10.
There is some evidence it could be. The CDC found low HRV in one set of
ME/CFS patients during sleep in one of its Pharmacogenomics studies and a
Japanese researcher reported at the 2007 IACFS Conference that HRV tests
indicated that PNS activity was decreased during sleep in ME/CFS
patients. In just the last week the CDC published a full paper on HRV and the
sympathetic nervous system functioning during sleep.
Increased heart rates and lower HRVs were strongly associated with activity limitations.
They also found increased levels of a main SNS factor, norepinephrine
(noradrenaline) and reduced levels of aldosterone. The increased heart rate,
lower HRV and increased norepinephrine levels were all indicators of
increased sympathetic nervous system activity. Their findings also suggested
that not all these abnormalities were due simply to reduced activity levels.
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Takeaway Points
- Three studies have found that low heart rate variability is found in
ME/CFS patients during sleep as well as wakening.
- The increased heart rates, reduced (low frequency) heart rate
variability and increased norepinephrine levels all suggest increase
sympathetic nervous system activity in ME/CFS.
- Reduced activity is not solely responsible for the SNS abnormalities
in ME/CFS.
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This is the second time the CDC has found lowered levels of aldosterone, a
hormone that could contribute to the blood volume, inflammation, oxidative
stress and cardiovascular problems in ME/CFS. A year ago Pharmacogenomics study
authors zeroed in on aldosterone as a possible indicator that the energy set
point of the ME/CFS patient’s body is altered. See A Selfish Brain in CFS.
Conclusion: We can add sleep to our growing list of problems autonomic
nervous system dysfunction could contribute to in CFS.
Parasympathetic Nervous Activity and the Heart
Thus far we
have indications that high SNS/low PNS activity could be associated with some of
the emotional, cognitive, fatigue and sleep problems in CFS/ME. The SNS/PNS is,
however, involved in many other activities as well, among them heart
functioning. Could aberrant SNS/PNS activities be affecting the heart in CFS as
well? The next study suggests that it may
Wyller, V. B., Due, R., Saul, J. P., Amlie, J. P. and E. Thaulow. 2007
Usefulness of an abnormal cardiovascular response during low-grade head up
tilt-test for discriminating adolescents with chronic fatigue from healthy
controls. Am. J. Cardiol. 99: 997-1001.
This group from Norway used much the same protocol that Dr. Peckerman and Dr.
Cheney have; they put their patients on a Tilt board and measured their heart
and cardiovascular functioning. They came to similar results but their
conclusions were very different. (This study used young people who were
chronically fatigued but did not require that they met the more restrictive 1994
International criteria for ME/CFS; thus they will be referred to chronically
fatigued not ME/CFS patients)
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The Perils of Standing
Standing has little effect on blood flows to the brain in most
animals because their brains are roughly horizontal to their hearts.
Humans, however, have to deal with the gravitational inevitability of
large flows of blood rushing away from the brain every time they stand.
Every time humans stand 300-800 mls. of blood rush into their legs
causing about a 40% reduction in the output of blood pumped by the
heart. Unless something is quickly done reduced flows of oxygen rich
blood to the brain will result in dizziness, fatigue, etc.
The body counteracts this in four ways 1) the heart beat increases,
(2/3) the peripheral nervous system and local factors constrict blood
vessels in the legs in order stop blood from pooling in them (4) small
contractions in the leg muscles propel blood in the veins upwards.
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Study Findings - These researchers found that these chronically
fatigued adolescents had significantly larger increases in heart rate (HR), mean
blood pressure (BP), diastolic BP and total peripheral resistance index (TPRI)
compared to healthy controls when they were tilted up.
It appeared that their hearts were pumping faster in order to maintain a
higher blood pressure upon tilting. The researchers noted that a significantly
decreased stroke index (p<.05) indicated their hearts were pumping less blood
than their healthy counterparts. It appears that their hearts compensated for
the less blood available to them by pumping faster. The increased heart rate,
blood pressure and TPRI suggest increased sympathetic nervous system activity.
Diastolic dysfunction. The end diastolic volume index (EDVI) test
indicated these patients had reduced diastolic filling when they were lying
down. The heart first expands to fill with blood before it ejects it. The
diastolic process is the filling stage. Because more blood is available to
the heart when one is lying down, problems with filling show up more readily in
that position. A similar pattern (poorer diastolic function while supine) was
found in Dr. Peckerman’s study.
Acceleration Index. These chronically fatigued patients also had an increased ‘acceleration
index’ when standing. The acceleration index measures the rate at which the
heart ejects blood. Because the heart actually has less blood available to it
when we’re standing (some of it falls to the legs) it may need to pump faster
in order to keep blood flowing to the brain, but it doesn’t have to pump
harder. Thus the acceleration index decreases when we stand. It decreased in
the healthy controls but it actually increased in the CFS patients.
The increased acceleration index in the chronically fatigued patients indicated that their
heart muscles were contracting more forcefully at the very time they had less
blood to pump; i.e. their hearts were ‘overworking’. (Could this cause ‘heart
pounding’ sensations ME/CFS patients commonly experience?) Since the SNS controls
the force of the hearts contractions these authors suggested that this
‘overwork’ was due to an overactive sympathetic nervous system.
Cardiac Damage or Autonomic Nervous System Dysfunction? - Dr. Cheney
believes that heart muscle damage causes diastolic abnormalities he has been
observing. These researchers believe the heart muscle is not damaged but that
it’s getting bad signals. Specifically they believe that the increased heart
rates, increased total peripheral resistance index, reduced diastolic filling
and increased acceleration index were caused by increased sympathetic nervous
system activity (SNS).
They are not the first heart researchers to suspect the SNS or PNS
involvement in the cardiovascular problems in chronically fatigued or ME/CFS
patients. Dr. Peckerman posited that
underactive PNS activity may have caused the decreased stroke volume he saw.
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The US Steps Back – Norway Steps Forward.
The U.S. and the NIH once lead the way in cardiac and cardiovascular
testing in CFS. The New Jersey Cooperative Research Center (NJCRC)
produced a series of cardiac studies but since the NJCRC shut down in
2002 the NIH has not funded a single cardiac study that I’m aware of.
What happened? Given the opacity of the NIH it is hard to tell but
here’s a guess. Our ‘champion’ for many years, the National Institute of
Allergy and Infection (NIAID), funded the New Jersey and other research
centers for many years. In 2002 it got tired of funding non-immune
related research and pulled the plug on them. With the NIAID no longer
supporting CFS cardiovascular research it fell to the National Institute
of Heart, Lung and Blood (NHLBI) to do so. The NHLBI, however, has never
funded much CFS research and apparently has little desire to do so now.
Since it’s hard to believe that a vigorous cardiac program would just
disappear, the most logical explanation is the NHLBI has rejected every
cardiac grant it’s seen. With the exception of Dr. Cheney – who does not
publish - CFS cardiac research in the US seems to have vanished.
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The Cause of the Increased SNS Activity – The authors believe
that the increased SNS activity could be due either to problems in the
peripheral nerves that connect to the heart or to problems with the
cardiovascular control mechanisms in the brainstem. They note, however,
that low blood volume or deconditioning could cause many of the same
results.
The brainstem is the integration point for many signals coming from the
body. It processes them and then sends them up to the brain. An autopsy revealed
inflammation in the brainstem of a CFS/ME patient in the UK who died of
dehydration. Apparently the control mechanism involving hydration failed in her
brainstem.
The blood volume scenario is fascinating. If low blood volume is present
the hearts must pump faster to maintain blood flows to the tissues. We know that
low blood volume is present in many ME/CFS patients. Interestingly, while low blood
volume can result in increased SNS activity, increased SNS activity can also
cause low blood volume!
Provisos. This study has two provisos; the subjects were adolescents and
they had chronic fatigue not CFS; that is they had severe fatigue but not
necessarily other symptoms associated with CFS (joint, muscle pains, etc.).
Temperature Regulation and ME/CFS
That’s a lot on the
autonomic nervous system (ANS) but we’re not done yet. By controlling blood
flows the ANS also plays an important part in cooling the body down and warming
it up. When the temperature goes up blood is shunted to the skin in order to
lower our core temperature and the opposite happens when the temperature goes
down. Could ANS dysfunction contribute to these problems as well? CFS patients
often note their difficulties in adjusting to temperature changes.
Wyller, V., Godang, K., Murkrid, L., Saul, J., Thaulow, E. and L. Wallee.
2007. Abnormal thermoregulatory response in adolescents with chronic fatigue
syndrome: relation to clinical symptoms. Pediatrics 120: 129-37.
The Study. In this study several ANS factors (norepinephrine,
epinephrine, metaepinephrine) and dopamine were measured while one hand was
slowly cooled in water. They expected skin blood flows to decrease and levels of
the ANS agents to increase as the hands steadily cooled.
Findings. Even before the cooling test commenced increased norepinephrine
levels and increased heart rates suggested ME/CFS patients had (yes)
increased sympathetic nervous system activity. The ME/CFS patients did not
begin to turn off the blood flows to their skin until their hands were much
cooler than those of the controls and during cooling their skin blood flows
decreased much more slowly. According to eardrum temperature measurements the
ME/CFS patients’ core body temperatures were higher than the controls.
Explanations: Several things could explain these findings. The increased
core body temperatures could explain the slowed skin cooling response. If the
CFS patients body temperatures were increased they would be less quick to turn
off their cooling mechanism – than would people with normal body temperatures.
Alternately these abnormalities might reflect problems with constricting the
blood vessels – something that has been found before in some CFS patients.
Whatever the case this study again suggests that autonomic nervous system
abnormalities are present in ME/CFS.
Low HRV - A Key Indicator of Fatigue in Disease?
We have seen how
autonomic nervous system dysfunction may impact a number of problems in ME/CFS.
Now we take a look at HRV and fatigue – not just in CFS but in another fatiguing
disease.
Newton, J., Allen, J., Kerr, S., Jones, D. 2006. Reduced heart rate
variability and baroreflex sensitivity in primary biliary cirrhosis. Liver
International 26: 197-202.
Newton, J., Hudson, M., Tachatzis, P., Sutcliffe, K., Pairman, J., Burt, J.
and D. Jones. 2007. Population prevalence and symptom associations of autonomic
dysfunction in primary biliary cirrhosis. Hepatology 45: 1496-1505.
Background. In primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) the bile ducts of the
liver are slowly destroyed. The fatigue seen in primary biliary cirrhosis has
several intriguing qualities; it is not severe in all patients and it is not a
function of the severity of the disease; i.e. some PBC patients with low levels
of bile duct destruction have more fatigue than others with high bile duct
destruction. This pattern – which is found in multiple sclerosis as well –
indicates the fatigue is not due to the bile duct destruction per se but to some
process associated with it, a process that some people are susceptible to and
others are not.
One could argue a similar scenario occurs in CFS/ME. The Dubbo studies, for
instance, have shown that infection triggers CFS/ME in some people but not
others. It’s possible that the same process may be causing fatigue and other
problems in CFS, as well as fatigued PBC, multiple sclerosis and post-cancer
patients. This and other studies suggest that low HRV could have something to do
with it.
PBC is a nasty disease with high enough mortality rates that researchers have
begun to look specifically at what is causing these patients to die.
Surprisingly enough, they’ve found many PBC patients are not dying of
liver failure or liver cancer but of sudden cardiac failure (heart attack). This
is what directed their attention to HRV; low HRV levels have been associated
with an increased risk for sudden cardiac death in healthy people.
Study Purpose. They wanted to know if HRV was reduced in biliary
cirrhosis patients, and, if so, whether it was associated with high rates of
fatigue. One interesting note - in their broad outlines these patients look very
much like CFS patients; all were female and most had a high waist:hip ratio.
Study Findings: PBC patients had significantly lower HRV levels than did
the healthy controls but more importantly for our purposes, the patients with
with very high fatigue had lower HRV than did those with lower fatigue.
Just as in CFS patients most of the HRV abnormalities occurred in the lower
frequency domains – those involved in sympathetic/parasympathetic nervous
system activity. The authors suggested this reflected abnormal neuro-hormonal or
neuro-endocrine activity– two subjects the CDC and others are currently
interested in in CFS. Intriguingly the authors zeroed in on serotonin
neurotransmission in particular – another subject of high interest in CFS.
Serotonin and CFS. At the 2007 IACFS conference, Dr. Lange stated that
CFS patients appear to have problems with serotonin activity in two areas of the
brain, the hippocampus and the anterior cingulate. At the same conference the
leader of the Japanese effort on CFS, Dr. Kuratsune, singled out serotonin in
his theory of CFS pathophysiology as well
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Takeaway
Points
Low HRV is associated with fatigue in biliary cirrhosis and
has been found in CFS and FM. In all three diseases it appears to
reflect increased sympathetic/decreased parasympathetic nervous
system activity.
Some evidence suggests that low HRV and fatigue may be
associated with abnormal serotonin neurotransmission in biliary
cirrhosis and CFS.
CFS and PBC patients also appear to have other cardiovascular
abnormalities such as a high waist : hip ratio
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The second study found that fatigued PBC patients tended to have both low HRV
and orthostatic intolerance – another common finding in ME/CFS (!). This
study concluded that autonomic nervous system dysfunction probably played a
significant role in producing the fatigue found in many PBC patients.
Furthermore they suggested a similar process occurs in CFS/ME (yes they called
it CFS/ME), multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease.
How encouraging this is. Even when they are studying similar
processes researchers of other diseases rarely refer to ME/CFS
Possible Causes of Autonomic Nervous System
Dysfunction in PBC, CFS and Others
They proposed it could be due to deconditioning or basal ganglia
dysfunction
Basal Ganglia Dysfunction
Studies indicate that impaired detoxification (a natural consequence of
bile duct destruction) in PBC patients has lead to manganese deposition in
the basal ganglia - a part of the brain involved in autonomic nervous system
regulation. This is an exciting finding given
evidence of basal ganglia abnormalities in ME/CFS. Recent reports suggest
that the CDC, in its first foray into brain imaging in ME/CFS, has also found
basal ganglia dysfunction in their ME/CFS patients.
Some Remarkable Similarities: These research efforts establish more
commonalities between CFS and fatigued PBC patients. Beside low HRV, female
predominance, and increased waist:hip ratios, fatigued PBC patients also display
increased rates of orthostatic intolerance, basal ganglia abnormalities and
heavy metal loading – all of which may occur in CFS.
The Newton research group is now examining the role that impaired blood flows
to the muscles may play in producing the fatigue found in many PBC patients and
they have broadened their scope to assess cognitive dysfunction – two areas of
great interest in CFS. Its almost uncanny how similar the paths several research
groups are taking to determine the cause of fatigue and other problems in PBC,
CFS and other diseases. This suggests they are all on the right track and
presents hope for ME/CFS patients.
SUMMING UP
This is an exciting area of
research not only in ME/CFS but in other fatiguing and cognitively challenging
diseases. Increased sympathetic/decreased parasympathetic nervous system
activity could contribute to the fatigue, problems with standing, exercise,
sleep, cognition, the emotions and mental endurance experienced in CFS and
elsewhere. (Although it was not covered here, a recent paper also associated the
fatigue in MS with sympathetic nervous system dysfunction).
Not all ANS studies have found abnormalities in ME/CFS. While
one CDC study did find low HRV in one set of ME/CFS patients during sleep
another found no differences in the levels of ANS agents called catecholamines
(epinephrine, norepinephrine, etc.) in ME/CFS. Still, the interest in the ANS in
ME/CFS and other fatiguing diseases is increasing and the future should tell us
much more about how much of a role this part of our nervous system plays in
producing fatigue and other problems.
Ongoing
Studies
A fantastic study from the Neuroimmune RFA Grants will explore the
intersection between low blood volume, reduced blood flows to the tissues,
oxidative stress and SNS activity. Dr. Biaggioni will examine if
microcirculatory problems involving the SNS, nitric oxide and other factors shut
down the blood vessels and thus impede blood flows to the tissues. This could
explain a lot in ME/CFS.
Another study from the Neuroimmune RFA by Dr. Fletcher will examine
the SNS-immune connection – a connection that has been well established in the
literature but has yet to receive any interest in ME/CFS. Both branches of the
stress response, the HPA axis and the SNS, regulate immune system. There is some
evidence that the HPA axis does a poor job in doing so. If Dr. Fletcher finds
abnormalities as well, this could mean that the immune system is getting it from
both sides in ME/ CFS.