Post by Ms B. on Jun 14, 2008 16:37:08 GMT 10
Original article from 26th April 2008
ME/CFS is a disorder involving the cells’ energy-producing mitochondria – but it’s a mitochondrial disease like no other, Dr. Bell believes. He explains why it hasn’t been diagnosed, classified, and studied like other kinds of mitochondrial diseases - and why a change may be “just around the corner.”
________________
In the past week I have seen two patients who had an exercise lactate test which showed an elevation of blood lactate after mild exercise [considered a sign of mitochondrial damage]. They were told by their physician that they had “mitochondrial disease.” They were advised to take some vitamins, maybe some CoQ-10, and have a nice day. Like nearly everything else, the term mitochondrial disease left these patients feeling bewildered and somewhat lost.
While I agree that ME/CFS is a mitochondrial disease, this term needs clarification because ME/CFS is a mitochondrial disease like no other.
Until recently, when a child was diagnosed as having a mitochondrial disease, it was a disaster, even a death sentence, for it meant that there were major abnormalities in the mitochondrial or nuclear DNA that regulated energy production. Without energy (ATP) it is impossible to survive. These diseases are called MELAS, Kearns-Sayre, Leber hereditary optic neuropathy, and so on. Nearly three hundred mitochondrial illnesses have been identified from genetic mutations. It is a specialized area of pediatrics, where it is possible to measure severe abnormalities in the mitochondria on muscle biopsy testing.
This is what most clinicians think of when the words "mitochondrial disease" are mentioned, but these illnesses do not, in general, apply to ME/CFS. Many patients with ME/CFS have had muscle biopsies, and most of the mitochondrial tests on these biopsies are relatively normal. We will return to why this is in a bit.
What are Mitochondria?
Think of mitochondria as the power factories of the cell.
There are two hundred different steps in this process, and we will quiz you after this article. Actually, all you need to know is that:
Because the mechanism of energy production is essential to nearly every cell, a defect will have symptoms in every organ system. Sound familiar? Oxidative metabolism, the ability to utilize oxygen to produce energy, is quite efficient, and it is fascinating to look at the theories of how it came to be part of our cells.
However, when the energy demand is excessive, the cells revert to a more primitive, and less efficient, form of energy production - anaerobic metabolism (metabolism without oxygen). For an interesting study on the anaerobic threshold [point of reversion] in ME/CFS, see the literature review that follows.
When to Suspect Mitochondrial Disease
In a recent review article (Haas et al., 2007) there is a list of symptoms that suggest looking for mitochondrial disease. Among these symptoms are neurologic symptoms such as ataxia (coordination problems), myoclonus (twitching), and encephalopathy (brain injury), exercise intolerance, sensitivity to general anesthesia, and constipation.
A score sheet has been developed to help in when to suspect mitochondrial disease - and most ME/CFS patients would fall into the positive range. For lots of information on mitochondria please go to www.mitosoc.org. But remember that they are talking about “conventional” mitochondrial disorders, not ME/CFS.
A Mitochondrial Problem Can Be
Secondary to Some Other Problem
There is another form of mitochondrial disease, or “secondary mitochondrial disease.” In secondary mitochondrial disease the primary problem is not with the mitochondria, but some other problem that messes up mitochondrial function. There are many illnesses where the primary defect ends up causing problems with the generation of energy in mitochondria.
For example, thyroid hormone is needed for successful oxidative phosphorylation. With hypothyroidism (low thyroid) energy production is impaired, and fatigue, weakness, temperature regulatory problems, and difficulty concentrating result. This is one of the reasons that when you start to describe fatigue to your primary care physician, he or she begins to write out a script to test for thyroid hormone.
So What Is the Problem?
Why has ME/CFS not been diagnosed, studied and classified like other mitochondrial diseases? There are several reasons:
a. Mitochondrial disease is thought of by clinicians as a fatal disease of infancy, not one that occurs later in life.
b. Mitochondrial disease is usually thought of as a fixed, structural disease, and ME/CFS is a relapsing, remitting illness with some persons even becoming entirely well.
c. Mitochondrial diseases are hard to diagnose, requiring muscle biopsies and detailed ox-phos testing.
d. Ox-phos testing is often normal in ME/CFS, and this has been the critical piece that has diverted attention from mitochondria.
e. Physicians are used to thinking of organ-specific diseases (liver, kidney, etc), and mitochondria are in all cells.
f. Few physicians have taken ME/CFS seriously until recently, and research in this area has been scant.
Of the above reasons, only reason “d” is important to us here (ox-phos testing is often normal in ME/CFS). In 1990 I did a muscle biopsy study on 10 ME/CFS patients with Dr. June Aprille, PhD, an expert in cellular metabolism. All ten persons had relatively normal ox-phos studies. Although we did not publish this finding, it is consistent with the few published studies that have been done.
How can you have mitochondrial disease when the mechanism tests normal? I think that the answer to this paradox is just around the corner.
Hypothesis
If you have a patient with emphysema who is sitting in an armchair, he or she is not out of breath. You can measure the damage in tests, but to make symptoms, you have to “stress” the system – make the patient run up and down stairs. If a person with G-6-PD deficiency [linked to fava bean allergy] is sitting quietly, the blood looks normal. But feed this person fava beans and abnormalities quickly become obvious.
Persons with ME/CFS keep themselves at a balance point. They rest for two hours, then do a half hour of activity, then rest, then do more and so on. The worse the illness, the less overall activity is possible. If a ME/CFS patient does absolutely nothing for a few days, they usually feel pretty good. But go to the shopping mall for eight hours and the crash occurs.
Here is the problem: In the patients studied for mitochondrial disease, they have been resting up (staying above the balance point), and a muscle biopsy done at that moment will probably not show much. But have a ME/CFS patient exercise, and then study mitochondrial function. My hunch is that the ox-phos reactions will be seriously impaired, but this has not been systematically and methodically done. For me, this hypothesis is generated by the VanNess, Snell, and Stevens “Two-day Exercise Test” study described in the next section.
There are lots of studies that implicate mitochondrial problems; Dr. Hirohiko Kuratsune and carnitine; Dr. Suzanne Vernon and genomics; Dr. Kenny DeMeirleir, Dr. Martin Pall, Dr. Paul Cheney, and many others. But this problem cannot be studied in tiny fragments. It is time for a good study to look at the different steps of the body’s ability to generate energy. Let’s hope we get to see it within our lifetimes.
Literature Review - the “Two-day Exercise Test”
In the most recent Journal of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Vol 14, Number 2, 2007) there are two articles which may be the first to offer an objective proof of disability in ME/CFS. More importantly, if shown to be correct, they may give us an avenue to test and measure the biochemical abnormality which causes the symptom pattern. I would like to briefly review these two papers and present a case of pediatric ME/CFS which demonstrates the same abnormalities.
In the first of these papers, Margaret Ciccolella, a lawyer, teams up with Staci Stevens, Chris Snell, and Mark Van Ness of the University of the Pacific to review the legal issues surrounding exercise testing and disability(1). As everyone familiar with ME/CFS well knows, insurance companies require proof of disability, which a standard exercise test may or may not demonstrate. However, even if disability is present, insurance companies have been quick to say that the patient was not trying hard enough, or that the patient is de-conditioned.
The second paper of this series by VanNess, Snell and Stevens explains the two-day exercise test and presents results for six patients with ME/CFS(2).
As clinicians have observed, the symptom of “post-exertional malaise” is one of the most distinguishing features of CFS. This symptom is listed as one of the eight in the criteria of the Centers for Disease Control(3), and is central to the diagnosis in the recent Canadian Case Definition(4) and the proposed pediatric case definition(5). It is beginning to look like the symptom of post-exertional malaise is at the root of disability, and may be central to the pathophysiology of this complex illness spectrum.
A person with ME/CFS may be at home for several days doing little except basic activities of daily living. When this patient decides to go shopping, he or she will drive to the mall and shop for one or two hours. During this time, observers would say that the person looks entirely well, not appearing disabled. However, following this activity the patient will experience an exacerbation of pain and other symptoms of ME/CFS. This exacerbation may last one, two or three days, and, in my opinion, the more severe the illness, the longer and more severe the exacerbation.
This phenomenon is known as post-exertional malaise. The symptoms of the illness (malaise) are exacerbated by mental, physical or emotional activities (post-exertional). In an employment environment, the patient may be able to do a job well for one or even several days. However, disability lies in the inability to sustain this normal level of activity. The two-day exercise test is the first to begin to explain this phenomenon.
The exercise test is no different from what has been used for years. The patient exercises on a stationary bicycle (bicycle ergometry) and breathes through plastic tubing to measure the concentration of oxygen and carbon dioxide as well as the total amount of air. The six female patients and six sedentary matched control subjects of the study were all able to achieve maximal exertion. The ME/CFS patients had a slightly lower V02max (maximal oxygen utilization) than controls (28.4 ml/kg/min vs. 26.2 ml/kg/min) and lower VO2 at anaerobic threshold (15.01 ml/kg/min vs. 17.55 mg/kg/min) on the first day of exercise testing.
These values are not dramatic, nor are they statistically significant.
It is on the second day that interesting results are seen. The same test was repeated the following day for all 12 subjects. As is often the case, sedentary controls improved slightly in their ability to utilize oxygen, going from 28.4 to 28.9 ml/kg/min for VO2max and from 17.55 to 18.00 ml/kg/min for oxygen utilization at anaerobic threshold. The CFS patients however worsened in both categories: VO2max fell 22% from 26.23 to 20.47 ml/kg/min, and oxygen utilization at anaerobic threshold fell 27%, from 15.01 to 11.01 ml/kg/min.
To put this into perspective, these values are in the “severe disability” range on the AMA guidelines, and the decline in function from day one to day two cannot be explained by inactivity.
Sedentary or de-conditioned persons do not change their oxygen utilization because of an exercise test. Even patients with heart disease, cystic fibrosis or other diseases do not vary more than 7% from one day to the next. However, the patients with ME/CFS in this study had a significant drop; something occurred because of the test on the first day that interfered with their ability to utilize oxygen on the next day. And this is exactly what patients with ME/CFS have been describing with the symptom of post-exertional malaise.
As the authors state, “The fall in oxygen consumption among the CFS patients on the second test appears to suggest metabolic dysfunction rather than a sedentary lifestyle as the cause of diminished exercise capacity in CFS.”
Conclusions
The results of the two-day exercise testing are objective and not dependent upon subjective symptoms. Moreover, hypochondriasis, intentional falsification, and/or poor effort can be detected by the physiologic parameters. Therefore:
The two-day exercise test, if confirmed in a larger trial, could become a clinical trial end point.
More importantly, evaluations could be designed which would demonstrate the specific metabolic abnormality generated by the exercise of day one and demonstrated on the second day exercise test.
It would be my hope that these findings be explored without delay.
ME/CFS is a disorder involving the cells’ energy-producing mitochondria – but it’s a mitochondrial disease like no other, Dr. Bell believes. He explains why it hasn’t been diagnosed, classified, and studied like other kinds of mitochondrial diseases - and why a change may be “just around the corner.”
________________
In the past week I have seen two patients who had an exercise lactate test which showed an elevation of blood lactate after mild exercise [considered a sign of mitochondrial damage]. They were told by their physician that they had “mitochondrial disease.” They were advised to take some vitamins, maybe some CoQ-10, and have a nice day. Like nearly everything else, the term mitochondrial disease left these patients feeling bewildered and somewhat lost.
While I agree that ME/CFS is a mitochondrial disease, this term needs clarification because ME/CFS is a mitochondrial disease like no other.
Until recently, when a child was diagnosed as having a mitochondrial disease, it was a disaster, even a death sentence, for it meant that there were major abnormalities in the mitochondrial or nuclear DNA that regulated energy production. Without energy (ATP) it is impossible to survive. These diseases are called MELAS, Kearns-Sayre, Leber hereditary optic neuropathy, and so on. Nearly three hundred mitochondrial illnesses have been identified from genetic mutations. It is a specialized area of pediatrics, where it is possible to measure severe abnormalities in the mitochondria on muscle biopsy testing.
This is what most clinicians think of when the words "mitochondrial disease" are mentioned, but these illnesses do not, in general, apply to ME/CFS. Many patients with ME/CFS have had muscle biopsies, and most of the mitochondrial tests on these biopsies are relatively normal. We will return to why this is in a bit.
What are Mitochondria?
Think of mitochondria as the power factories of the cell.
- Nearly every cell in the body has them, usually around 500 or so in every cell.
- They take in oxygen and glucose (blood sugar) and put out carbon dioxide and energy (ATP).
There are two hundred different steps in this process, and we will quiz you after this article. Actually, all you need to know is that:
- ATP is the prime energy storage chemical (battery) of the body, and
- Oxidative phosphorylation (ox-phos) is the complex of electron transport chains that do the major work of conversion.
Because the mechanism of energy production is essential to nearly every cell, a defect will have symptoms in every organ system. Sound familiar? Oxidative metabolism, the ability to utilize oxygen to produce energy, is quite efficient, and it is fascinating to look at the theories of how it came to be part of our cells.
However, when the energy demand is excessive, the cells revert to a more primitive, and less efficient, form of energy production - anaerobic metabolism (metabolism without oxygen). For an interesting study on the anaerobic threshold [point of reversion] in ME/CFS, see the literature review that follows.
When to Suspect Mitochondrial Disease
In a recent review article (Haas et al., 2007) there is a list of symptoms that suggest looking for mitochondrial disease. Among these symptoms are neurologic symptoms such as ataxia (coordination problems), myoclonus (twitching), and encephalopathy (brain injury), exercise intolerance, sensitivity to general anesthesia, and constipation.
A score sheet has been developed to help in when to suspect mitochondrial disease - and most ME/CFS patients would fall into the positive range. For lots of information on mitochondria please go to www.mitosoc.org. But remember that they are talking about “conventional” mitochondrial disorders, not ME/CFS.
A Mitochondrial Problem Can Be
Secondary to Some Other Problem
There is another form of mitochondrial disease, or “secondary mitochondrial disease.” In secondary mitochondrial disease the primary problem is not with the mitochondria, but some other problem that messes up mitochondrial function. There are many illnesses where the primary defect ends up causing problems with the generation of energy in mitochondria.
For example, thyroid hormone is needed for successful oxidative phosphorylation. With hypothyroidism (low thyroid) energy production is impaired, and fatigue, weakness, temperature regulatory problems, and difficulty concentrating result. This is one of the reasons that when you start to describe fatigue to your primary care physician, he or she begins to write out a script to test for thyroid hormone.
So What Is the Problem?
Why has ME/CFS not been diagnosed, studied and classified like other mitochondrial diseases? There are several reasons:
a. Mitochondrial disease is thought of by clinicians as a fatal disease of infancy, not one that occurs later in life.
b. Mitochondrial disease is usually thought of as a fixed, structural disease, and ME/CFS is a relapsing, remitting illness with some persons even becoming entirely well.
c. Mitochondrial diseases are hard to diagnose, requiring muscle biopsies and detailed ox-phos testing.
d. Ox-phos testing is often normal in ME/CFS, and this has been the critical piece that has diverted attention from mitochondria.
e. Physicians are used to thinking of organ-specific diseases (liver, kidney, etc), and mitochondria are in all cells.
f. Few physicians have taken ME/CFS seriously until recently, and research in this area has been scant.
Of the above reasons, only reason “d” is important to us here (ox-phos testing is often normal in ME/CFS). In 1990 I did a muscle biopsy study on 10 ME/CFS patients with Dr. June Aprille, PhD, an expert in cellular metabolism. All ten persons had relatively normal ox-phos studies. Although we did not publish this finding, it is consistent with the few published studies that have been done.
How can you have mitochondrial disease when the mechanism tests normal? I think that the answer to this paradox is just around the corner.
Hypothesis
If you have a patient with emphysema who is sitting in an armchair, he or she is not out of breath. You can measure the damage in tests, but to make symptoms, you have to “stress” the system – make the patient run up and down stairs. If a person with G-6-PD deficiency [linked to fava bean allergy] is sitting quietly, the blood looks normal. But feed this person fava beans and abnormalities quickly become obvious.
Persons with ME/CFS keep themselves at a balance point. They rest for two hours, then do a half hour of activity, then rest, then do more and so on. The worse the illness, the less overall activity is possible. If a ME/CFS patient does absolutely nothing for a few days, they usually feel pretty good. But go to the shopping mall for eight hours and the crash occurs.
Here is the problem: In the patients studied for mitochondrial disease, they have been resting up (staying above the balance point), and a muscle biopsy done at that moment will probably not show much. But have a ME/CFS patient exercise, and then study mitochondrial function. My hunch is that the ox-phos reactions will be seriously impaired, but this has not been systematically and methodically done. For me, this hypothesis is generated by the VanNess, Snell, and Stevens “Two-day Exercise Test” study described in the next section.
There are lots of studies that implicate mitochondrial problems; Dr. Hirohiko Kuratsune and carnitine; Dr. Suzanne Vernon and genomics; Dr. Kenny DeMeirleir, Dr. Martin Pall, Dr. Paul Cheney, and many others. But this problem cannot be studied in tiny fragments. It is time for a good study to look at the different steps of the body’s ability to generate energy. Let’s hope we get to see it within our lifetimes.
Literature Review - the “Two-day Exercise Test”
In the most recent Journal of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (Vol 14, Number 2, 2007) there are two articles which may be the first to offer an objective proof of disability in ME/CFS. More importantly, if shown to be correct, they may give us an avenue to test and measure the biochemical abnormality which causes the symptom pattern. I would like to briefly review these two papers and present a case of pediatric ME/CFS which demonstrates the same abnormalities.
In the first of these papers, Margaret Ciccolella, a lawyer, teams up with Staci Stevens, Chris Snell, and Mark Van Ness of the University of the Pacific to review the legal issues surrounding exercise testing and disability(1). As everyone familiar with ME/CFS well knows, insurance companies require proof of disability, which a standard exercise test may or may not demonstrate. However, even if disability is present, insurance companies have been quick to say that the patient was not trying hard enough, or that the patient is de-conditioned.
The second paper of this series by VanNess, Snell and Stevens explains the two-day exercise test and presents results for six patients with ME/CFS(2).
As clinicians have observed, the symptom of “post-exertional malaise” is one of the most distinguishing features of CFS. This symptom is listed as one of the eight in the criteria of the Centers for Disease Control(3), and is central to the diagnosis in the recent Canadian Case Definition(4) and the proposed pediatric case definition(5). It is beginning to look like the symptom of post-exertional malaise is at the root of disability, and may be central to the pathophysiology of this complex illness spectrum.
A person with ME/CFS may be at home for several days doing little except basic activities of daily living. When this patient decides to go shopping, he or she will drive to the mall and shop for one or two hours. During this time, observers would say that the person looks entirely well, not appearing disabled. However, following this activity the patient will experience an exacerbation of pain and other symptoms of ME/CFS. This exacerbation may last one, two or three days, and, in my opinion, the more severe the illness, the longer and more severe the exacerbation.
This phenomenon is known as post-exertional malaise. The symptoms of the illness (malaise) are exacerbated by mental, physical or emotional activities (post-exertional). In an employment environment, the patient may be able to do a job well for one or even several days. However, disability lies in the inability to sustain this normal level of activity. The two-day exercise test is the first to begin to explain this phenomenon.
The exercise test is no different from what has been used for years. The patient exercises on a stationary bicycle (bicycle ergometry) and breathes through plastic tubing to measure the concentration of oxygen and carbon dioxide as well as the total amount of air. The six female patients and six sedentary matched control subjects of the study were all able to achieve maximal exertion. The ME/CFS patients had a slightly lower V02max (maximal oxygen utilization) than controls (28.4 ml/kg/min vs. 26.2 ml/kg/min) and lower VO2 at anaerobic threshold (15.01 ml/kg/min vs. 17.55 mg/kg/min) on the first day of exercise testing.
These values are not dramatic, nor are they statistically significant.
It is on the second day that interesting results are seen. The same test was repeated the following day for all 12 subjects. As is often the case, sedentary controls improved slightly in their ability to utilize oxygen, going from 28.4 to 28.9 ml/kg/min for VO2max and from 17.55 to 18.00 ml/kg/min for oxygen utilization at anaerobic threshold. The CFS patients however worsened in both categories: VO2max fell 22% from 26.23 to 20.47 ml/kg/min, and oxygen utilization at anaerobic threshold fell 27%, from 15.01 to 11.01 ml/kg/min.
To put this into perspective, these values are in the “severe disability” range on the AMA guidelines, and the decline in function from day one to day two cannot be explained by inactivity.
Sedentary or de-conditioned persons do not change their oxygen utilization because of an exercise test. Even patients with heart disease, cystic fibrosis or other diseases do not vary more than 7% from one day to the next. However, the patients with ME/CFS in this study had a significant drop; something occurred because of the test on the first day that interfered with their ability to utilize oxygen on the next day. And this is exactly what patients with ME/CFS have been describing with the symptom of post-exertional malaise.
As the authors state, “The fall in oxygen consumption among the CFS patients on the second test appears to suggest metabolic dysfunction rather than a sedentary lifestyle as the cause of diminished exercise capacity in CFS.”
Conclusions
The results of the two-day exercise testing are objective and not dependent upon subjective symptoms. Moreover, hypochondriasis, intentional falsification, and/or poor effort can be detected by the physiologic parameters. Therefore:
The two-day exercise test, if confirmed in a larger trial, could become a clinical trial end point.
More importantly, evaluations could be designed which would demonstrate the specific metabolic abnormality generated by the exercise of day one and demonstrated on the second day exercise test.
It would be my hope that these findings be explored without delay.