Study casts doubt on virus-chronic fatigue syndrome link
February 26th, 2010 - 1:19 pm ICT by ANILondon, Feb 26 (ANI): A new study by researchers in Netherlands has cast doubt on recent claims that a human retrovirus known as XMRV is associated with chronic fatigue syndrome or ME (myalgic encephalitis).
The findings in the British Medical Journal were the latest to contradict a recent study from the US that detected XMRV in two thirds of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, but could not conclusively prove a direct (causal) link between the virus and the disease.
In January 2010, another research team found no evidence of XMRV in 186 patients with chronic fatigue syndrome in the United Kingdom. A third study, published earlier this month, also failed to identify XMRV in 170 patients.
So, a team from the Netherlands, led by Professors Frank van Kuppeveld and Jos van der Meer, investigated whether this link could be confirmed in an independent European group of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome.
They examined the DNA from XMRV in the blood cells of 32 Dutch patients with chronic fatigue syndrome and 43 healthy controls, matched by age, sex and geographical area. Two highly sensitive tests were performed on two different target genes.
They found no evidence of XMRV in any of the patients or the controls, adding to the negative evidence in the two previous studies.
“Although our patient group was relatively small and we cannot formally rule out a role of XMRV, our data cast doubt on the claim that this virus is associated with chronic fatigue syndrome in the majority of patients,” say the authors.
The researchers said that one reason why these results contradict the original findings might be that the US study involved patients from a specific outbreak of chronic fatigue syndrome in the mid-80s that has already been linked to several viruses.
They concluded that it is possible that XMRV is implicated in this outbreak, but does not play a substantial role in most cases of chronic fatigue syndrome elsewhere.
Chronic fatigue syndrome is a debilitating condition that affects millions of people worldwide with disabling physical and mental fatigue that does not improve with rest. Its causes remain unclear, but many people say their illness started after a viral infection. (ANI)
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