Introduction
Welcome
to the Lyndonville News. In the issue today
I would like to present a chapter in a new book about cellular hypoxia
in ME/CFS about the immune cascade. I have been hoping to finish
this book about these mechanisms and perhaps soon it will be ready.
I do not know what to call it. Cellular hypoxia in ME/CFS? A
little awkward. Neuro-Immune Fatigue? What about “The mechanisms
of mitochondrial encephalopathy and cellular hypoxia in neuro-immune
fatigue.” A little wordy and no one will know what the hell
the book is about. Feel free to let me have your opinion at lynnews@davidsbell.com.
At any rate, I am working toward retirement and plan to cut down soon.
I would like to write like mad and get all this out of my system. And
spend more time with my feet up on the back porch of the farm. I would
like to do more newsletters. I would like to give more talks about
the mechanisms of the illness. Hopes and dreams. I do hope the chapter
makes some sense.
New Book
ME
/ CFS,
Neuro-immune Fatigue
And
Cellular Hypoxia
Chapter
6: The Immune Cytokine Cascade in ME/CFS
Many,
many years ago I was in medical school and one of the hardest pieces
to study was the blood clotting cascade in hematology.

The cascade
looked like a series of water fountains. The one at the very top
(Chemical A becomes A’) causes a change in chemical B to make
it B’; that causes chemical C to become C’, and so on
for twenty-five or thirty steps. Each step had its own rules and
enzymes and was influenced by different factors. It was impossible
to memorize, particularly so because not all the steps were known
at that time.
Unfortunately for me, the body seems to love cascades. Moreover, we
do not understand the specific waterfall steps of the immune system
cascade perfectly. Add to that, each step can go in different directions – the
immune system talks to the nervous system, and the nervous system regulates
the endocrine system, and so on. But the cascade creates a redundancy
or safety net which makes it less disasterous if something goes wrong.
And of course, with every step something can go wrong. In the blood
clotting cascade, if one enzyme or protein is missing the result is
hemophilia A. With another error it is delta granule storage disease;
another is Von Willebrand’s disease. They may look similar from
the symptoms – a cut does not stop bleeding – but the
mechanism that has gone wrong in the cascade is different in each illness.
In ME/CFS there is a problem, or there are problems, with the immune
activation cascade. The end result of this problem or these problems
is the symptom complex of ME/CFS.

In the first chapter of this section we discussed the evidence pointing
to certain infections causing ME/CFS. The next question is how
do these infections cause the prolonged symptoms, and for some,
the flu that never ends. The answer to this question involves the
immune mechanism set off by the infection, and specifically the
abnormal immune mechanism that allows for persistence of symptoms
even after the obvious infection has gone away.

In the second chapter we discussed the non-infectious causes of ME/CFS,
and that there is a variation in these pathways from the cascade
initiated by a standard infection. Yet many of the same cytokines
are involved, and ultimately that all these cascades (which result
in ME/CFS) come to a common point.
The confusion regarding ME/CFS and the one thousand or so other illnesses
loosely contained under this umbrella term is that both sides are correct.
ME/CFS is caused by an infection, and is caused by neurological insults
other than direct or obvious infection. Perhaps in the future we will
be able to classify all one thousand subtypes more accurately, but
for now ME/CFS will have to do. It appears that this common point where
the cascades merge is in the area of cellular metabolism, more specifically
the inability of converting oxygen into energy, or cellular hypoxia.
In this chapter we will be looking primarily at the immune mechanism
(or abnormal immune mechanism) following an infectious insult; we will
be ignoring the ME/CFS caused by toxic exposure, brain injury, heavy
metal poisoning, cigatura poisoning, and the like as it is likely that
the cascade will be different.
In the early days of ME/CFS research in the US, emphasis rested upon
looking at the Epstein-Barr virus as the cause to the immune activation
that seemed to be the hallmark of the illness. The name Chronic Fatigue
Immune Dysfunction Syndrome (CFIDS) dates from this time and remains
accurate as a name for some types of this illness. However, most patients
assumed that this meant that patients with ME/CFS had an “under-active” immune
illness response, an immune deficiency. The dominant aspect is just
the opposite, an over-active immune state. ME/CFS is a condition where
the immune system is spinning its tires in the sand, getting really
tired and going nowhere.
There are some immune deficiencies in ME/CFS, which some scientist/clinicians
like Dr. Nancy Klimas and Dr. Roberto Petarca have been studying for
years. The natural killer cells are off both in number and function,
and some cellular immune responses are delayed. The arguments raging
in the literature about the usefulness of these studies relate to which
particular subgroups are being studied. The immune deficiencies may
be the critical issue if they turn out to cause persistent infection
and the resulting immune over-reaction. For now, let us turn our attention
to the cytokine cascade activated by the initiating infection.
Definitions
For the
rookies among the readers, there are a few basic definitions that
must be mastered before proceeding. Cytokines are chemicals made
by the cell which act to carry out essential functions. While there
are many subgroups (perhaps thousands) of these messaging chemicals,
I will oversimplify by referring to them collectively as cytokines.
The ones I will be discussing are related primarily to immune function
and communication between the brain and the immune systems. The group
of cytokines that seems to play the biggest role are the “pro-inflammatory” cytokines.
One cytokine that we will be referring to extensively in the next chapters
is interferon, and there are three major types established so far: α, β,
and γ (alpha, beta, and gamma). This is one of the first cytokines
discovered, and as I recall from the history, it was named because
when someone had a viral infection, a chemical was produced by the
immune system that “interfered” and prevented another virus
from causing an infection at the same time. The good news is that you
only get one virus at a time; the bad news is that interferon makes
you feel really sick. It has been studied extensively and has been
used to treat illnesses such as cancer, hepatitis and multiple sclerosis.
Another cytokine is TNF (tumor necrosis factor), and it also comes
in various Greek subgroups. It is used to treat rheumatoid arthritis,
psoriasis, and other illnesses. The interleukins are cytokines that
act as communicators in an unbelievably complex cellular system. There
are thousands of tasks to do within the cell and every task requires
a specific mechanism to carry it out.
Getting
the Flu
With an
infection, the body jumps into action to defend itself, but usually
not for several days. For example, if you are in the checkout lane
at the grocery store and the person next to you coughs on you, you
breathe in the flu virus. The virus particle lodges in your airway
and begins to multiply; yet you feel just fine. In fact you feel
fine for three days or so (the incubation period) even though the
virus is growing like mad. Then, Saturday afternoon, at exactly three
PM, you come down with the flu: fever, headache, aches and pains,
exhaustion, sore throat, nausea... What actually happened on Saturday
was that your body recognized the attack by the flu virus and began
making cytokines to begin the counter-attack. And the cytokines make
you feel sick.
You stay in bed for a few days while the battle rages. The battle is
carried out on several fronts and after the immune system makes antibodies
the infection is brought under control. When that happens the production
of cytokines slows down, stops, and you feel better. A few more days
and you are back to normal, if everything goes right.
The production of these cytokines, (specifically interferon, IL-1,
IL-6, and TNF) is known to cause the symptoms of illness, often called “acute
sickness behavior.” This term does not imply that there is anything
artificial or psychological about the behavior, it is as real as limping
behavior in a person with a broken leg. These effects of cytokines
were discovered during trials where the cytokines were given to healthy
volunteers who then developed fever and other symptoms.
In ME/CFS something goes wrong. The infection may be an ordinary “garden
variety” virus, an enterovirus, or the Epstein-Barr virus of
mononucleosis. But in a person with the genetic vulnerability the process
does not shut down and the flu-like sensation persists for months,
years, sometimes for the rest of his or her life. It is this abnormal
mechanism that is the center of attention in ME/CFS.
The symptoms caused by cytokines differ from “end organ” symptoms.
For example, weakness is a common symptom in ME/CFS, but muscle testing
with electrodes does not indicate muscle fiber disease. Characteristically,
the sensation of profound weakness is experienced by those persons
given cytokine injections despite normal muscles. Confusion and problems
with memory and attention are symptoms caused by cytokines and in experimental
subjects, when the cytokine wears off these cognitive symptoms resolve
without damage to brain cells (presumably). It is precisely because
these symptoms are not caused by diseases of muscle or joint that medical
providers have ignored them. If you go to the doctor with a cough caused
by the flu you are patted on the head and ignored, unless you cough
up gobs of lung tissue. Then it is taken a little more seriously.
Examples
of the Cytokine Cascade or Cytokine Storm
Among
the many frustrations of seeing the reality and the importance of
ME/CFS questioned over the past twenty years is that there are well
known examples of cytokines causing serious illness.
One interesting study looked at the relationship between pro-inflammatory
cytokines and the degree of fatigue in patients with multiple sclerosis
(MS). Those MS patients without significant fatigue had much lower
levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines. This study is of value as there
is known to be a substantial variation in the degree in fatigue in
patients with MS (Heesen 2006)
A published example of a cytokine storm occurred in healthy volunteers
given an experimental drug (Sunthralingam, 2006). The drug was an antibody
whose function was to stimulate T cells, which, it turns out, it did
too well. The subjects were healthy volunteers and the drug caused
a cytokine cascade involving many different cytokines, including tumor
necrosis factor alpha, gamma interferon and several interleukins. The
healthy volunteers all became very ill and had to be admitted to an
intensive care unit. The importance of this disastrous trial was to
show the progression of a cytokine storm precipitated by a specific
monoclonal antibody in previously healthy persons. In medical school
I used to volunteer for these kinds of trials because I was broke.
There are many different cytokine cascades. Variations in ME/CFS may
relate to variations in individual cascades, which are just now beginning
to be studied. But the essential point has been established. Cytokine
cascades cause symptoms and illness. Sometimes the illnesses caused
are very severe, even fatal. It remains to be seen what will be the
exact profile or profiles that comprise what we have been up to now
calling ME/CFS.
Cytokine
Production in ME/CFS
Over the
past ten years there has been a concerted attempt to measure the
cytokine response in ME/CFS. Unfortunately it is not a simple process.
The blood stream, where the medical tests get done, is far away from
the cellular mechanisms. It is generally agreed that an abnormal
response exists, with the normal balance between pro-inflammatory
cytokines and the cellular responses being disrupted. In the studies
mentioned earlier by Dr. Kerr and associates, TNF-α and IFN-γ are
present for long periods of time when parvovirus initiates ME/CFS.
They were even able to demonstrate an abnormal TNF-α gene which
could affect the development of persistent fatigue.
In one interesting study, the cytokine IL-6 was injected into patients
and healthy controls as it is known to cause a pattern of symptoms
very similar to ME/CFS. As expected the cytokine caused an increase
in fatigue, headache, muscle and joint pain. Other studies have looked
at cytokines in the spinal fluid and during stress responses.
One question that has not been resolved is whether the cytokine cascade
of ME/CFS is due to ongoing infection, or if it is abnormal and there
is no measurable infection present. It is a chicken and the egg question,
and at present, there is no clear answer. It is likely that when the
research answers are in, it will be both. There will be an element
of ongoing infection due to an abnormal cytokine cascade.
2’-5’ A
Synthetase and Rnase L
This is
the next step in the process that was started by Suhadolnik and his
group around 1995 and continues actively at the present time. An
enzyme called 2’-5’A Synthetase is normally stimulated
by the cytokine interferon to make Rnase L, an enzyme that can “chew
up” viral RNA. Therefore it is part of the normal anti-viral
defense system. In ME/CFS there is a glitch present with an abnormal
protein present (the 37kDa fragment) in those most severely affected
by the illness.
There are three ways that an abnormality in this system may cause problems
in ME/CFS. First it allows for the continuous stimulation and production
of interferon which, as we will see, could be a major player in the
symptoms of the illness. Secondly, it may permit the persistence of
the initiating infection. And thirdly, an excess of Rnase L can cause
other difficulties down the road, because its actions are not limited
to viral RNA. It may be chewing up good RNA as well. In a follow-up
study it was noted that 72% of patients had an excess of the abnormal
protein in ME/CFS while only 1% of the normal population had it.
Hepatitis
C Study
In 2004
a remarkable study was presented at the AACFS scientific meetings
that began to draw together this information. So far we have seen
that the immune system is overactive or “upregulated” in
ME/CFS, and we know that people feel lousy, but are the two facts
connected? Does the presence of these cytokines actually cause the
persistence of symptoms?
Interferon is a cytokine used as an anti-viral treatment in certain
illnesses such as Hepatitis C. In a study conducted by Dr. Charles
Raison, patients with known Hepatitis C were given interferon. Prior
to treatment 22% of the patients had significant chronic fatigue and
3% would fit criteria for ME/CFS. After treatment with interferon 70%
of the subjects had chronic fatigue and 30% met criteria. What this
means is that administration of the cytokine interferon transformed
some persons with a known persistent virus (Hepatitis C) but without
chronic fatigue into having ME/CFS along with their hepatitis C. The
importance of this study should not be overlooked. We finally have
a model for the progression of the illness that can be studied, and,
with any good luck, treatment interventions can be tested.
Autoimmunity
Many
persons with ME/CFS have some autoimmunity. It has never been clear
whether this autiommunity is another spin off (or epiphenomenon)
of the abnormal over-active immune response, or whether it is important
to the generation of symptoms. Up to 25% of ME/CFS patients have
an abnormal ANA, a test that can suggest the disease lupus erythematosis.
The more you look for autoantibodies, the more of them can be found,
but it is unlikely that these autoantibodies are doing much harm.
Because the immune system is “revved-up”, it is looking
for something to attack. When this happens it can sometimes attack
normal tissue, autoimmunity. This is similar to allergies where the
immune response is directed toward otherwise harmless pollen or cat
dander.
In true
autoimmune disease demonstrable tissue damage can be found, as in
rheumatoid arthritis. An interesting concept is the possibility that
multiple sclerosis is ME/CFS with overlying brain tissue autoimmunity
due to an injury of the blood-brain barrier. To a carpenter everything
looks like a nail.
Finally, a word about medications that increase serotonin, commonly
known as “antidepressants.” It is known that blockade of
at least one serotonin receptor will reduce several cytokines including
tumor necrosis factor, and some of the interleukins. Reduction in pain
for some persons with ME/CFS may be a side effect of these medications,
and not due to the “antidepressant” effects.
In a standard
infection like the flu, we can see that the viral infection and the
stimulated cytokines cause symptoms, but we never paid any attention
because in a few days the cytokine cascade shuts down and the symptoms
go away. Who cares why the cytokines cause exhaustion, headache,
muscle and joint pain? But with ME/CFS the process does not stop,
so the next step becomes critical: how does this cytokine cascade
cause symptoms? If we can understand the answer to this question
we will be able to understand how to intervene and stop the symptoms.
Conclusions
There
are several conclusions from the studies concerning the immune response
in ME/CFS.
1) Persons
with ME/CFS have persistent immune activation as if there were a
persistent infection going on. More technically, there is an abnormal
shift of the immune response to Th2 instead of the normal balance
between Th1 and Th2.
2) There
is a persistence of cytokine secretion that is likely responsible
for the persistence of ME/CFS symptoms.
3) The
symptoms of ME/CFS can be temporarily reproduced by injections of
cytokines such as interferon and interleukins.
4) ME/CFS
can be caused by treating a patient with Hepatitis C with interferon.
References
Arnold
M, Papanicolaou D, O'Grady J, Lotsikas A, Dale J, Straus S, et al.
Using an interleukin-6 challenge to evaluate neuropsychological performance
in chronic fatigue syndrome. Psychol Med 2002;32:1075-1089.
Dantzer R. Cytokine-induced sickness behavior: Where do we stand? Brain,
Behavior, and Immunity 2001;15:7-24
De Meirleir K, Bisbal C, Campine I, De Becker P, Salezada T, Demettre
E, LeBleu B. A 37kDa 2-5A binding protein as a potential biochemical
marker for chronic fatigue syndrome. Am J Med. 2000; 108:99-105.
Gaab J, Rohleder N, Heitz V, Engert V, Schad T, Schurmeyer T, et al.
Stress-induced changes in LPS-induced pro-inflammatory cytokine production
in chronic fatigue syndrome. Psychoneuroendocrinology 2005;30:188-198.
Sharara AI, Perkins DJ, Misukonis MA, Chan SU, Dominitz JA Weinberg
JB 1997 Interferon (IFN)-alpha activation of human blood mononuclear
cells in vitro and in vivo for nitric oxide synthetase (NOS) type 2
mRNA and protein expression: possible relationship of induced NOS2
to the anti-hepatitis C effects of IFN-alpha in vivo. 1997. J Exp Med.
186:1495-1502.
Gerrity T, Papanicolaou D, Amsterdam J, Bingham S, Grossman A, Hedrick
T, et al. Immunologic Aspects of chronic fatigue syndrome. Neuroimmunomodulation
2004;11:351-357.
Heesen C, Nawrath L, Reich C, Bauer N, Schulz K, Gold S. Fatigue in
multiple sclerosis: an example of cytokine mediated sickness behaviour?
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2006;77:34-39
Kaushik N, Fear D, Richards S, McDermott C, Nuwaysir E, Kellam P, et
al. Gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients
with chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of Clinical Pathology (8)
Kerr J, McCoy M, Burke B, Matteyt D, Pravica V, Hutchinson I. Cytokine
gene polymorphisms associated with symptomatic parvovirus B19 infection.
J Clin Path 2003;56:725-727.
Raison C, Borisov A, Broadwell SD, Capuron L, Woolwine B, Nemeroff
C, et al. Syndrome of chronic fatigue in patients receiving interferon-alpha
for chronic hepatitis C virus infection. Presented at the 2004 AACFS
Meetings, Madison, Wisc 10/9/04 2004.
Suhadolnik RJ, Peterson DL, O’Brien K, Cheney PR, Herst CV, Reichenbach
NL, Kron N, Horvath SE, Iacono, KT, Adelson ME, DeMeirleir K, DeBecker
P, Charubala R, Wolfgang P. Biochemical evidence for a novel low molecular
weight 2-5Adependent Rnase L in chronic fatigue syndrome. Journal of
Interferon and Cytokine Research. 1997; 7:377-385.
Sunthralingam G, Perry M, Ward S, SJ B, Castello-Cortes A, MD B, et
al. Cytokine storm in a phase 1 trial of the anti-CD28 Monoclonal antibody
TGN1412. NEJM 2006;355(10):1018-1028
Tomoda A, Joudoi T, Rabab E, Matsumoto T, Park T, Miike T. Cytokine
production and modulation: comparison of patients with chronic fatigue
syndrome and normal controls. Psychiatry Research. 2005;134:101-104
Vollmer-Conna U. Acute sickness behavior: an immune system-to-brain
communication? Psychol Med 2001;31:761-767
Warren G, McKendrick M, Peet M. The role of essential fatty acids in
chronic fatigue syndrome.
Question
and Answer
Question: It
was Volume 2, Number 3: July 2005, The Presence of Cerebral
Atrophy in CFS, Cognitive Symptoms of CFS, Abnormal Cerebral
Perfusion in CFS.
I have CFS/FMS/MPS. I am very sick, with no good medical
care… But what is really hurting tonight is that
article. My tests are showing diffuse brain shrinkage
and I have gotten sicker and sicker the past 3 years. I
first got FMS in 1994. Anyway that article has me feeling
hopeless, because my brain isn't working anymore and I'm
getting worse and worse and have no $ to get good help. I
feel really hopeless after reading that article. I am
alone, family not close - alone and scared. Is there any
hope?
Attempted
Answer: The periods of despair that persons with
this illness experience are beyond description. I apologize for
the article of cerebral atrophy and progressive cognitive difficulties,
but unfortunately they are true findings for some with the illness.
I apologize for rubbing salt into the wounds. When will the medical
providers begin to approach this illness with compassion? I don’t
know. Is there any hope? Absolutely yes. And it is not a false
hope. I remain convinced that the problems with this illness
are reversible, and someday we will find them.
Question: Dear Dr. Bell, This is the
first time I've ever heard about the origins of CFIDS. My
question, to me, is simple. How does a debilitating medical
condition appear from nowhere? I consider myself a reasonable person. I
am 59 years young and have been suffering from Fibromyalgia for
the last 10 years…diagnosed in the last year. If something
is that time specific and geographic specific then logically it
must be causal.
Answer: Good question and I have
no idea of the answer. It seems to strike out of nowhere.
I have a number of professional athletes as patients and
they were in the peak of health when they got sick. But where
does a strep throat come from? Before we understood about
germs we considered “evil humors” as the cause.
Someday we will understand exactly the genetic predispositions,
the triggering factors and the reasons the illness is sustained.
Now we are stuck with the “evil humors” equivalent.
Question: Hi Dr.Bell, If the new study
at Stanford confirms the first one, will you be ready to prescribe
it? This seems to be the best news on ME/CFS I've ever heard.
Do you agree?
Answer: A
very exciting development, and the group at Stanford is working as
hard and as fast as they can. Until we get some answers from their
next round of studies we have to sit and wait. But I agree it is
the best news I have heard in many years.
Thanks
for the questions.
Clinical
Notes – Frustration
The other
day I saw a patient in the office who was in desperate circumstances
because of ME/CFS. She was alone as her husband decided there was
more fun elsewhere. The social security appeal has been pending for
a couple of years after the initial denial. A neighbor will buy a
few groceries every once in a while. The simple activities of daily
living are not simple at all: a shower is a difficult task, requiring
a chair. She has no primary care.
Meanwhile in the office I get notes from specialists saying that some
counseling might be of value, and that she should start an exercise
program with daily walking. A consultant recently said to me, “After
all, exercise is the only known cure for chronic fatigue syndrome.” Persons
with ME/CFS are known to have abnormal MRI scans of the brain, and
because of the sometimes severe cognitive symptoms an MRI is an important
test. But to get an MRI, the medical provider must go through the pre-authorization
process: discussion with a low level employee to justify the test.
The employee probably gets an incentive to deny the tests. We live
in an era of health care rationing by nuisance. Because the hurdles
are such a nuisance for the provider they say “to hell with it.” As
for the patient with ME/CFS, the insurance companies say, “To
hell with them.” If they only knew…
But before we get so depressed we all go and jump off a bridge, there
is a bright side. Sometimes the fight against all odds makes a person
stronger. It can do something to the soul, whatever that is.
Fifteen years ago I had a patient just like the one mentioned above.
She was sick and scared, and alone, and depressed. But over ten years
she became a different person. She decided that life was better without
her worthless husband. She lived on peanut butter for a couple of years
but eventually got social security so that her most basic needs were
met – she had a roof over her head and food on the table. She
learned to accept the limitations of her illness, and, most importantly,
that the illness was not her fault. She learned to manage her time
so that within each day she had one to two hours of activity where
she could get something done. And she became grateful for those two
hours. She lived patience for the remainder of the day. She even learned
meditation and yoga to clear her cluttered mind. Anger and resentment
melted away. She recently said to me the only people who understand
the story of Job in the Bible are those persons who have lived it.
It has been fifteen years and I would not wish her illness on anyone,
not even the medical skeptics who ridicule persons with this illness.
But, despite the odds, this person has become happy in a way that I
have not seen happen to my able bodied patients. There are truths hidden
in the religious teachings of the world, but she is one of the few
who has come to learn them.
Lyndonville
Research Group Report
Recently
we had the good fortune to send out samples to researchers for some
different studies. One group of samples went to study genomics in
the lab of Dr. Jonathon Kerr in London. I am very excited that his
work, and that of Drs. Gow, Vernon, and others will eventually uncover
the genes that predispose to the illness, become turned on or turned
off because of the illness, and help unravel the mechanisms. Brave
new world.
............................................................
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