INTRAVENOUS
FLUID AS A TREATMENT
FOR ME/CFS
Upcoming
Conference: The International Association for Chronic Fatigue
Syndrome (IACFS) will be having its bi-annual conference in Ft
Lauderdale, FL co-hosted by the Patient Alliance for Neuroendocrineimmune
Disorders Organization for Research and Advocacy (PANDORA). This conference
will be held at the ocean-front Bahia Mar Resort. The patient conference
will be January 10th and 11th, and the research conference will be
the 12th, 13th, and 14th. The patient conference will be an overview
and review of the science and geared for patients and family of patients;
the research conference will be technical and fast paced.
I
think this is an excellent conference for patients and their families
to attend. They should come a day or two early and stay a day or two
to relax and talk with new friends afterwards. It is nearly impossible
for patients with ME/CFS to have a vacation, but give it a try. It
is even possible that you could learn something. If you are a patient,
plan the trip carefully, and PANDORA may be able to give you some
help and tips.
More information at www.aacfs.org
or www.pandoranet.info.
Introduction
The
newsletter today is my first discussion of intravenous saline as a
treatment agent for ME/CFS. I have now been using this treatment for
nearly six years and wish to share my thoughts. While I plan to be
open, honest and even blunt about this treatment, I will not compromise
the confidentiality of the patients treated. I have nothing to sell,
and I am not encouraging this treatment as it has not been rigorously
tested. However, I do not think I am witnessing a placebo response,
and all things considered, it is the most effective treatment for
severe ME/CFS that I have found in my 21 years of looking. But it
has serious drawbacks and risks.
——————————
Background
My first exposure to this treatment was nearly twenty years
ago when a patient I knew was seeing a nutritional MD and
receiving vitamins in intravenous fluids. This patient reported
that she would get a “lift” for a day or so
after the treatment. But taking huge doses of vitamins orally
did not give her the same response.
A few years later came the intravenous gamma globulin trials,
and some people had a temporary response after the IVIG.
But at a thousand dollars a treatment this could not be
continued. I wondered why the IVIG worked better than intramuscular
injections.
Infection with an antibiotic-sensitive bacteria was always
a hot topic and I undertook a trial with three weeks of
high dose intravenous antibiotics. Patients had an improvement
during the treatment which was assumed to be due to the
antibiotic. Some people had a reaction called a “Herxheimer”
reaction consisting of chills, fever and shaking that was
assumed to be an allergic reaction to killed microorganisms
in the blood stream. More on that later.
First
Trials
The first patient to use this treatment had a very severe
case of ME/CFS; she had been disabled for years and bed-ridden
for nearly two years. She had been having nearly constant
syncope and pre-syncope and had been admitted to a first
rate hospital for nearly six weeks. They then concluded
that these were “pseudo-seizures” and that she
was a fruitcake and sent her home without a follow-up appointment.
I knew her and her family well and we had lengthy discussions
about a trial of intravenous saline to increase her circulating
blood volume which we had measured to be low. She agreed
and with the first bag of saline the “pseudo-seizures”
stopped and did not return. At three months of daily infusions
of 1 liter of normal saline, she was able to be up and around
the house for several hours a day. At six months of treatment
she was able to volunteer at her church for three hours
a day. At one year of infusions she returned to full time
work and has remained working for nearly five years.
She has had the severe complications of this treatment.
On four occasions she has had an infection of the indwelling
catheter (PICC line or Mediport), and on each occasion the
line was surgically removed and treatment was started with
antibiotics. She remained without the IV fluids for several
weeks and on each occasion she would slide down toward her
previously disabled state. She has elected to continue the
IV saline despite the serious infection risks as she can
lead a nearly normal life with the indwelling catheter.
There are several important things to consider: 1) the IV saline has
not cured anything, it has merely improved the orthostatic intolerance
and fatigue, pain, and other symptoms; 2) with the saline infusions
she can work full time and lead a nearly normal life; 3) with the
saline infusions she has severe blood stream infections that require
urgent removal of the intravenous line and high dose antibiotics;
4) she feels that the risks and drawbacks of the treatment are justified
by the improved
activity
and decreased symptom intensity.
Results
to Date
Over the past six years approximately twenty five other
patients have had placement of PICC line or Mediport and
daily normal saline infusions. Three patients could not
tolerate the IV fluids because it made them feel more ill,
and the fluids were stopped after several days. Three other
patients used the IV saline for three months and then discontinued
it because there was no benefit. It caused no harm, but
it was just not doing any good. So overall, six of twenty-five
(24%) did not respond, and 19 of twenty five (76%) have
felt better with this treatment.
Two patients have had a line infection and have elected
not to resume the fluids because of the risks. Both have
said that the IV saline made them feel significantly better.
Five or six other patients have had line infections but
have resumed the saline treatment because they feel better
and are willing to assume the infection risk. Some patients
have returned to work, most have not, but all patients continuing
the treatment have an improved quality of life.
It can be assumed that everyone with an indwelling IV line
(PICC line) will have an infection sooner or later. A rough
estimate is an infection rate of 20% per line per year.
Usually a PICC line is placed for short term administration
of antibiotics or chemotherapy for cancer. The line is changed
every six weeks, but there is no data available for normal
saline infusions. Because the blood vessels are not injured
by the saline, the six week rule does not make sense and
some patients have done well long term (over a year) without
an infection. The key is to pull the line at the first sign
of an infection and not wait, in hopes of saving the line.
It does not seem to matter how fast or slow the fluids are run in,
everyone seems to develop their own preferences. A physician once
called me and said the results were even better when albumin was added
to the saline, but I have not tried that. I tried once weekly saline
by a peripheral line but the results were one half a good day and
six and a half bad days per week. No one has elected to stay with
this approach. No one will believe that this treatment works until
several double blind studies are run. But it is not possible to do
a double blind study because you cannot have fake (placebo) intravenous
line and saline. What an irony—after all these years the results
are better with the usual placebo, normal saline!
I have no idea of why this treatment works. At first I thought
it was because of correcting the low circulating blood volume,
but we have been able to correct that with other measures
(dDAVP) without the same results. Whatever the saline is
doing, it should be possible to reproduce the effects without
intravenous fluids if we only knew the mechanism.
As for the “Herxheimer” reaction, the last patient started
on the saline had these reactions without the antibiotics. Therefore
it could not be that the body was reacting to dead microorganisms
unless the saline somehow drown them. She is continuing the fluids
because she is improving and described the reactions this way:
“As
a CFS patient, I recently received a PICC line and administered
my first IV infusion. Initially, I infused 1,000 cc's of
normal saline from 12:00 until 4:00 p.m. My day was uneventful
until 10:00 p.m. when for 15 minutes I was overcome with
intense nausea and hot flashes. An overall feeling of sickness
swept over me. The nausea and hot flashes subsided over
a period of two hours. I then experienced a general feeling
of sickness and mild nausea that continued throughout the
night. I slept fitfully. Determined not to be discouraged
and to try my utmost to make this treatment work, I resumed
my infusion the next day.”
In
conclusion, I feel that this treatment approach is a valid area of
research, and urge researchers to attempt to understand the mechanism
that appears to underlie this approach. I would be interested to hear
from any clinicians/researchers concerning their experience with IV
saline.
——————————
Question
and Answer
Question....on
people who develop CFIDS as a result of inoculation. I had one flu
shot in my life, became terribly ill within 48 hours with what felt
like flu. And it was the flu that never went away, eventually dx'd
as CFIDS. From my years on online support groups, I know there are
many more people who have reported the same occurrence.
Answer:
There is no doubt that inoculations can set off
the process. These shots are designed to stimulate the immune
system in a way that can prevent a future infection with
something like a strain of the flu virus. Therefore it is
just like getting that particular flu virus strain and thus
can set off the process. The vaccine that I have seen causing
the greatest problem is the Hepatitis B. Maybe that is a
coincidence, but…..
Question:
Neither genetic susceptibility nor increased psychological stress
answer this question (about increased incidence) to my satisfaction.
That leads me to believe either there's a new pathogen about—or
an old one acting in atypical fashion, or that the toxic overload
in the environment has reached a critical mass, damaging either the
brain, the immune system or both. I can't think of any other explanations.
I'd love to be corrected if I'm wrong.
Answer:
Because it has been ignored for so long, we really do not
know if there is an increased incidence of this illness.
If there is, I like the idea of a two hit process. It would
go like this. Hit #1 would be silent, either with an infectious
agent, a new agent, or a toxin. By itself it does not do
anything but sets the stage for hit #2 which would be the
standard infection. Because of the silent first hit, the
second hit causes ME/CFS. It would make a good science fiction/horror
movie.
——————————
To
Subscribe: If you wish to either subscribe or
unsubscribe to the Lyndonville News, go
to www.DavidSBell.com/DSBJoin.htm and
follow the instructions. The e-mail subscription is free, while the
hard copy sent by mail costs $25 per year. For those wishing the
hard copy, please send a check made out to David S. Bell MD, to 1276
Waterport Road, Waterport, NY 14571.