一位普通医务工作者呼吁国家重视“中国阴性感染者”问题
文章来源:http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_64b6b1750100m3os.html
一位普通医务工作者就“中国阴性感染者”问题向医疗卫生界的呼吁
各位医疗卫生领域专家,各位医务工作者:
我是一名长期关注“中国阴性感染者”的普通医务工作者。通过我对这个群体的观察和网上检索的医学相关文献,结合我的工作实践,我认为“中国阴性感染者”不仅仅是单纯的心理问题,这是一种严重危害公众健康的传染性慢性疾病。现将两篇相关文献(附件1、2)发至互联网,希望能够引起医疗卫生界对该类疾病的关注。
“中国阴性感染者”的症状与慢性疲劳综合征(ME/CFS)、神经肌痛性脑脊髓炎(Myalgic Encephalomyelitis)、纤维肌痛(Fibromyalgia)、海湾战争综合征(Gulf War SyndromeGWS)、不典型多发性硬化(Atypical MS)等疾病有着很多相似症候群(相似的症状见附件1,标注彩色下划线部分)。根据我检索到的国外有关资料和患者自述,该病应该是具有传染性的,并且有影响子代健康的风险。附件1标题为 New Treatments for Chronic Infections Found in Fibromyalgia Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Rheumatoid Arthritis and Gulf War Illnesses。其中的症候群,以及发病的家庭集聚性能为“中国阴性感染者”的研究提供类比的参考和线索。
我认为这是一类人类尚未完全认知的,严重损害公众身体健康的传染性疾病。该类疾病影响人体中枢神经系统、免疫系统,累及人体骨骼、肌肉,以及内脏等多种组织器官。患者症状分散复杂,常年得不到缓解,反复发作,严重影响工作和生活。这不是一种急性致死性疾病,而是一种严重的慢性失能性疾病。对人体健康危害极大,并会造成严重的家庭社会经济负担。我这里使用了军事医学“失能性”的用语,因为这个病不会kill people,而是disable people。从心理上和体能上disable一个人。
这类疾病在西方发达国家已经存在多年,发病各年龄段都有,具有明显的区域聚集性和家庭集聚性,并且多年来没有得到国外官方的重视。美国CDC将这类疾病的名称从刚开始发现时的“EBV综合征”改名为“慢性疲劳综合征”,一个听起来很gentlemen的名字。我认为美国CDC对这类疾病的命名是极不严谨科学的,是在弱化疾病,混淆概念。“慢性疲劳综合征”这一命名是对这类严重疾病危害程度的弱化,同时对疾病状态和亚健康状态的概念进行了混淆。导致西方该领域研究多年来得不到国会的拨款,大量病人仅仅当作心理疾病给予对症治疗。前不久英国《卫报》报道了一则一位母亲协助17岁开始发病,常年罹患CFS疾病的31岁的女儿自杀的新闻消息,引起了国外医疗和法律伦理界的广泛关注。(来源:http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2010/may/13/me-chronic-fatigue-syndrome)。试想想,一个从17岁就罹患CFS的女孩,她的人生会是怎样?没有学校生活,没有爱情、没有家庭,不幸她31岁去世了,但是也可以说是一种解脱。这难道还不是严重的疾病吗?这会是心理问题吗?
附件2是美国公众对白宫政府长期漠视CFS发出的呼吁信件,标题赫然为:The Awful Disease Washington Forgot!(来源:http://whchronicle.com/2010/09/the-awful-disease-washington-forgot/)。文章对美国政府(主要是针对美国CDC)20多年来对该类疾病的漠视、隐瞒做了揭露与谴责。只要有心浏览一下国外有关CFS,GWS的网站,无论是美国的还是英国的网站,就会发现各国公众以及有良知的医务工作者无不是对政府卫生部门,特别是对美国CDC的众口一词的声讨和揭露。在商业利益的驱动下,在生物战争的阴云下,这是一个20多年来被美国、英国等西方国家CDC系统(美国CDC系统工作人员是公务员,一部分还是军队编制)有意无意弱化、漠视、混淆的一类严重传染性慢性疾病。“他们(CDC)只是开展流行病调查,多年来只是对症治疗,心理问题给予抗抑郁药,疼痛给予止痛药,疲劳让我们服用B族维生素,20多年来就是这样,我们就像是CDC用来观察疾病进展的实验动物。没有人真正关注我们,CDC工作全是虚的”很多国外患者都在网站上这样抱怨。
面对这类严重疾病,我国医疗卫生界再也不要跟着美国和西方国家政府屁股后面走了,再也不要人云亦云了。中华民族是优秀的民族,我们自古以来就不缺乏优秀的医务工作者,这需要责任,需要担当。那是对人类尊严的一种关怀,也是我们民族知识分子的脊梁和传统美德。
我国是一个人口大国,我国的国民健康说到底要靠我国政府的保护,需要国内所有医务工作者的共同努力。希望这封邮件在互联网上能够引起我国医务工作者的关注,关注“中国阴性感染者”以及CFS、GWS这类严重影响人类健康的传染性疾病。共同努力,共同探索,对我们国家人民的健康负责,对我们子孙后代在这片土地上的生生不息负责!
附件:
1. New Treatments for Chronic Infections Found in Fibromyalgia Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Rheumatoid Arthritis and Gulf War Illnesses
2. September 21, 2010: "The Awful Disease Washington Forgot" by Llewellyn King
附件1
New Treatments for Chronic Infections Found in Fibromyalgia Syndrome, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Rheumatoid Arthritis and Gulf War Illnesses
Prof. Garth L. Nicolson
Chief Scientific Officer
(Professor of Internal Medicine)
The Institute for Molecular Medicine
15162 Triton Lane, Huntington Beach, CA 92649-1401 U.S.A.
Fibromyalgia Syndrome (FMS), Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) and Gulf War Syndrome, or as we prefer to call it Gulf War Illnesses (GWI), are characterized by their complex, multi-organ chronic signs and symptoms, including muscle pain, chronic fatigue, headaches, memory loss, nausea, gastrointestinal problems, joint pain, lymph node pain, among others. A particular problem in these patients is the appearance of the clinical problems (rheumatoid signs and symptoms) seen in Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) patients. The signs and symptoms of FMS overlap with CFS, and often they can be diagnosed as CFS, but the distinguishing feature of FMS is the presence of chronic widespread pain and tenderness. Often included in this complex clinical picture are increased sensitivities to various environmental agents and enhanced allergic responses. There are other troubling problems in these patients, such increased problems with heart function, increases in spontaneous abortions and other chronic signs and symptoms.
The signs and symptoms of FMS and CFS are similar to those found in GWI, and this suggests that GWI is not a separate syndrome, it is a FMS/CFS-like disorder [1]. Over 100,000 veterans of the Persian Gulf War in 1991 now have GWI, and according to one government study, it has spread to immediate family members [2]. Although incomplete, this report was undertaken in 1994 by investigators of a U.S. Senate committee, and they found after contacting approximately 1,200 GWI families that 77% of spouses and a majority of children born after the war had the signs and symptoms of GWI [2]. Notwithstanding official U. S. Department of Defense and British Ministry of Defence denials, this indicates that at least a subset of GWI patients have a transmittable illness that is being passed to spouses and children [3]. We have been particularly interested in the illness passing to children, and when children present, the most significant problem is "failure to thrive," a pediatric condition marked by failure to gain weight and develop properly.It is also accompanied by chronic fatigue, skin rashes, hair loss, diarrhea and gastrointestinal problems in these children.
The Issue of Stress and Cognitive Problems
FMS, CFS and GWI patients usually have cognitive problems, such as short term memory loss, as well as problems concentrating, depression and irritability. Psychologists or psychiatrists who examine FMS, GWI and CFS patients often find psychological or psychiatric problems in these patients and decide in the absence of contrary laboratory findings that these conditions are somatoform disorders. That is, these illnesses are caused by psychological or psychiatric problems, not medical problems. Important among the potential origins of psychological or psychiatric problems is stress, and stress is often mentioned as an important factor or the important factor in these disorders. For example, in GWI patients Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a common diagnosis given to GWI patients in veterans and military hospitals in the U. S. and Great Britain [4].
The sole evidence that physicians have offered as proof that stress or PTSD is the source of most GWI sickness is the assumption that most veterans must have suffered from stress by virtue of the stressful environment in which they found themselves during the war [4]. Most testimony to the U. S. House of Representatives committee studying the origins of GWI refutes the notion that stress is the major cause of GWI [4], and the General Accounting Office (GAO), the investigational arm of the U. S. Congress, after studying government and civilian data on the subject concluded that while stress can induce some physical illness, the link between stress and GWI has not been established [5]. Of course, stress can exacerbate chronic illness but most military personnel that we interviewed indicated to us that the Gulf War was not a particularly stressful war, and they strongly doubted that stress was the origin of their illnesses [6]. Again, in the absence of physical or laboratory tests that can identify possible origins of FMS, CFS or GWI, many physicians accept that stress is the cause of these illnesses.
Chronic Infections as a Problem in Chronic Illnesses
There is another, quite different possibility that can explane the complex signs and symptoms found in FMS, CFS, RA and GWI. At least some of these patients may suffer from system-wide or systemic chronic infections that can penetrate various tissues and organs, including the central and peripheral nervous systems [7]. Such infections can cause the complex signs and symptoms seen in CSF, FMS, GWI and in some RA patients, including immune dysfunction that may underlie some of the environmental responses as well as increased titers to various endogenous viruses that are commonly found to be expressed in these patients.
Few infectious agents can produce the complex chronic signs and symptoms found in CFS, FMS and GWI patients (and some RA patients), but one type of airborne infection that has received renewed interest of late as an important element in these disorders is represented by the class Mollicutes[7]. These microorganisms, principally mycoplasmas and other rather primitive bacteria, although not well known agents, are now considered important emerging pathogens in causing chronic diseases and may be important cofactors in some illnesses, including AIDS and other immunosuppressive diseases [7].
Interestingly, as GWI progresses, there are a number of accompanying problems, including in some patients MS-like (Multiple Sclerosis), ALS-like (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis), Lupus-like and RA-like signs and symptoms, and the presence of usually rare autoimmune responses is consistent with mycoplasmal infections that penetrate into nerve cells, synovial cells and other cell types.Some of these signs and symptoms have also been seen in a subset of FMS, RA and CFS patients. As intracellular mycoplasmas escape from cellular compartments, they incorporate into their own structures pieces of host cell membranes containing important antigens that can trigger autoimmune responses. Thus patients with such infections may be responding to mycoplasma antigens as well as their own antigens, producing unusual autoimmune signs and symptoms.
Mycoplasmas as Important Infections in Chronic Illnesses
Although most mycoplasmas are not considered important human pathogens, some species, such as M. fermentans, M. penetrans, M. pneumoniae, M. genitalium, M. pirum and M. hominis, among others, have been closely associated with various human diseases [7]. This does not necessarily mean that these diseases are entirely caused by mycoplasmal infections but this type of infection is important in causing much of the morbidity or illness seen in patients with chronic illnesses.
Do FMS, CFS, RA or GWI patients show evidence of mycoplasmal infections? In a majority of FMS, CFS, RA and GWI patients examined we and others, principally Dr. Daryl See of the University of California College of Medicine, Irvine, CA, are finding strong evidence for mycoplasmal blood infections that can explain much if not most of their chronic signs and symptoms. In our studies on GWI, a CFS/FMS-like condition [1], we have found mycoplasmal infections in about one-half of approximately 400 patients, and these patients were found to have principally one infectious species, M. fermentans [8, 9]. Moreover, in over one-half of the 500 civilians with CFS, FMS or RA that we have examined we are finding a variety of pathogenic mycoplasma species, such as those listed above, in the leukocyte fractions of blood samples. The tests that we use to identify mycoplasmal infections, polymerase chain reaction and nucleoprotein gene tracking [10], are very sensitive and highly specific. These tests are a dramatic improvement over the relatively insensitive serum antibody tests that are routinely used to assay for systemic mycoplasmal infections. In fact, we have received a Department of Defense contract to train scientists and physicians to conduct these tests, and in the second week of January 1988 a group, including staff from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology and Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the University of Texas Medical School at San Antonio and the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine, will be arriving at the Institute for Molecular Medicine for advanced training in mycoplasma detection in blood and other body fluids.
New Treatments for Chronic Infections Found in FMS, CFS, RA and GWI
The identification of mycoplasmal infections in the leukocyte blood fractions of a rather large subset of CFS, FMS and RA patients suggests that mycoplasmas, and probably other chronic infections as well, may be an important source of morbidity in these patients. If such infections are important in these disorders, then appropriate treatment with antibiotics should result in improvement and even recovery. This is exactly what has been found [11]. The recommended treatments for mycoplasmal blood infections require long-term antibiotic therapy, usually multiple 6-week cycles of doxycycline (200-300 mg/d), ciprofloxacin or Cipro (1,500 mg/d), azithromycin or Zithromax (500 mg/d) and clarithromycin or Biaxin (750-1,000 mg/d). Multiple cycles are required, because few patients recover after only a few cycles [9], possibly because of the intracellular locations of mycoplasmas like M. fermentans and M. penetrans, and the slow-growing nature of these microorganisms. These responses are not due to placebo effects, because administration of some antibiotics, such as penicillins, resulted in patients becoming more not less symptomatic.
Treatment recommendations for mycoplasmal infections are similar to those used to treat Lyme Disease, caused by other slow-growing intracellular bacteria that are difficult to identify and treat. Interestingly, FMS, CFS, RA and GWI patients that recover after several cycles of antibiotics are generally less environmentally sensitive, suggesting that their immune systems may be returning to pre-illness states. If such patients had illnesses that were caused by psychological or psychiatric problems or by environmental or chemical exposures, they should not respond to the recommended antibiotics and recover their health.
Criteria for Determining that Mycoplasmas Cause Chronic Diseases
Before systemic mycoplasmal infections can be considered important in causing disease, certain criteria must be fulfilled [12]:
(1) The incidence rate among diseased patients must be higher than in those without disease. This has been found for M. fermentans. Although this mycoplasma has been found in asymptomatic adults, the incidence is low, usually a few percent compared to almost one-half of Gulf War Illness patients [8, 9].
(2) More of the mycoplasma must be recoverable from diseased patients than from those without disease. This has been found [8, 9].
(3) An antibody response should be found at higher frequency in diseased patients than in those without disease. This has been found but usually not until the disease has progressed. According to Lo et al. [13-15] M. fermentans hides inside cells and does not elicit a strong immune response until near death.
(4) A clinical response should be accompanied by elimination of the mycoplasma. This is exactly what has been seen [8, 9].
(5) Clinical responses should be differential depending on the type of antibiotic. This is what has been found. Only antibiotics that are effective against the pathogenic mycoplasmas result in recovery, and some antibiotics, such as penicillins, can worsen the condition [8, 9].
(6) The mycoplasma must cause a similar disease in susceptible animals. The best description comes from Lo et al. [13], where injection of M. fermentans into monkeys resulted in development of a fulminant disease that leads to death. These animals display many chronic signs and symptoms [13].
(7) The mycoplasma must cause a similar disease when administered to volunteers. This has not been done, because of ethical considerations.
(8) A specific anti-mycoplasma antibody reagent or immunization protects against disease. This has not yet been done to my knowledge. Therefore, six out of eight of the above criteria have been fulfilled, at least for M. fermentans, strongly suggesting that certain mycoplasmas can cause human disease.
Mycoplasmal Infections: Only Part of the Problem in Chronic Illnesses
Are chronic, systemic mycoplasmal infections the answer to FMS, CFS, RA, GWI and other disorders? Of course not! This is likely to be an appropriate explanation for a rather large subset of FMS, CFS, RA, GWI and many RA patients, but certainly not every patient will have the same types of chronic infections. Some patients may have chemical exposures or other environmental problems as the underlying reason for their chronic signs and symptoms. In others somatoform disorders or illnesses caused by psychological or psychiatric problems may indeed be important. However, in these patients antibiotics should have no effect whatsoever, and they should not recover on antibiotic therapies.
The identification of specific infectious agents in the blood of chronically ill patients may allow many patients with FMS, CFS, RA, or GWI to obtain more specific diagnoses and effective treatments for their illnesses. The Institute for Molecular Medicine can test patients for evidence of mycoplasmal infections of the types that cause human disease. Blood samples can be sent to the Institute for Molecular Medicine for mycoplasma and other testing. (Website for further information: www.immed.org).
Contact:
Prof. Garth L. Nicolson
The Institute for Molecular Medicine
15162 Triton Lane
Huntington Beach, CA 92649-1401
Tel: 714-903-2900
Fax: 714-379-2082
References
1. Nicolson, G.L. and Nicolson, N.L. Chronic fatigue illness and Operation Desert Storm. J. Occup. Environ. Med. 1996; 38: 14-16.
2. U. S. Congress, Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, U. S. chemical and biological warfare-related dual use exports to Iraq and their possible impact on the health consequences of the Persian Gulf War , 103rd Congress, 2nd Session, Report May 25, 1994.
3. Nicolson, G.L. and Nicolson, N.L. The eight myths of Operation Desert Storm and Gulf War Syndrome. Medicine Conflict & Survival 1997; 13: 140-146.
4. U. S. Congress, House Committee on Government Reform and Oversight, Gulf War veterans : DOD continue to resist strong evidence linking toxic causes to chronic health effects, 105th Congress, 1st Session, Report 105-388, 1997.
5. U. S. General Accounting Office, Gulf War Illnesses: improved monitoring of clinical progress and reexamination of research emphasis are needed. Report GAO/SNIAD-97-163, 1997.
6. Nicolson, G.L. and Nicolson, N.L. Chronic Fatigue Illnesses Associated with Service in Operation Desert Storm. Were Biological Weapons Used Against our Forces in the Gulf War? Townsend Lett. Doctors 1996; 156: 42-48.
7. Baseman, J.B. and Tully, J.G. Mycoplasmas: Sophisticated, reemerging, and burdened by their notoriety. Emerg. Infect. Diseases 1997; 3: 21-32.
8. Nicolson, G.L. and Nicolson, N.L. Diagnosis and treatment of mycoplasmal infections in Persian Gulf War Illness-CFIDS patients. Intern. J. Occup. Med. Immunol. Tox. 1996; 5: 69-78.
9. Nicolson, G.L., Nicolson, N.L. and Nasralla, M. Mycoplasmal infections and Chronic Fatigue Illness (Gulf War Illness) associated with deployment to Operation Desert Storm. Intern. J. Med.1998; 1: 80-92.
10. Nicolson, N.L. and Nicolson, G.L. The isolation, purification and analysis of specific gene-containing nucleoproteins and nucleoprotein complexes. Methods Molecular Genet. 1994; 5: 281-298.
11. Nicolson, G.L. and Nicolson, N.L. Doxycycline treatment and Desert Storm. JAMA 1995; 273: 618-619.
12. Taylor-Robinson, D. Infections due to species of mycoplasma and ureplasma: an update. Clin. Infect. Diseases 1996; 23: 671-682.
13. Lo, S.-C., Wear, D.J., Shih, W.-K., Wang, R.Y.-H., Newton, P.B., Rodriguez, J.F. Fatal systemic infections of nonhuman primates by Mycoplasma fermentans (incognitus strain). Clin. Infect. Diseases 1993; 17(Suppl 1): S283-288.
14. Lo, S.-C., Buchholz, C.L., Wear, D.J., Hohm, R.C., Marty, A.M. Histopathology and doxycycline treatment in a previously healthy non-AIDS patient systemically infected by Mycoplasma fermentans (incognitus strain). Modern Pathol. 1991; 6: 750-754 .
15. Lo, S.-C., Dawson, M.S., Newton, P.B., Sonoda, A.A., Shih, W.-K., Engler, W.F., Wang, R.Y.-H., Wear, D.J. Association of the virus-like infectious agent originally reported in patients with AIDS with acute fatal disease in previously healthy non-AIDS patients. Amer. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 1989; 41: 364-376
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(来源:互联网http://whchronicle.com/2010/09/the-awful-disease-washington-forgot/)
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Big lobbies mean big federal dollars, the attention of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., and the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. If the disease is the kind for which a single or series of silver bullets can produce a cure, Big Pharma comes in with big funding, in the hope that it can develop a lucrative line of medicines, patentable for long-term profits.
Yet there is a vast archipelago of diseases as cruel in their impact, horrible to bear and crying out for research that is not sporadic, underfunded or, through ignorance, misdirected.
One such is Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS), a name so gentle that it belies the ghastliness of this affliction. Sufferers accuse the U.S. government, abetted by other governments, of choosing this name over the older and more commanding name, myalgic encephalomyelitis.
CFS is not about a name game. It is about debilitation lasting decades, essentially from inception to death. It is about years of lost living, terrible joint pain and total collapse, as the immune system more or less shuts down. It is like some great constricting snake that denies its victims the final convulsion.
Enter Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.). While he is not generally regarded as a man on a horse these days, to CFS sufferers he is a figure of hope. He has stood up for CFS research.
This is not because the Senate majority leader sought to know a lot about a hard-to-understand and terrible affliction, but because CFS was found in two clusters in his home state. The largest outbreak was at Incline Village, Nev. In New York state, there is a cluster too.
In the 1980s government scientists looked at these clusters, but refused to accord them the respect the suffering deserves. It was then that the name was changed; “fatigue” was less politically incendiary than myalgic encephalomyelitis.
Incline Village is significant because it shows that CFS is infectious, or that it has environmental causes. The thinking is that while clearly not having a strong transmission path, it does happen.
Recently a sufferer in England wrote to The Daily Mail, saying that her husband, who had cared for her for nearly 20 years, had become infected. This is particularly serious in England, where the medical establishment has insisted on treating the disease as a psychological disorder, despite recent research suggesting strongly that it is retrovirus XMRV.
Now, at last, two world-famous pathogen hunters, Anthony Fauci of NIH, previously seen as a debunker of CFS science, and Ian Lipkin, a celebrity pathogen hunter, are heading a major safari into the dark world of retroviruses.
For the first time, the loose global network of sufferers–nobody knows how many there are in the world, but in the United States there could be as many as 800,000—are beginning to apply political pressure.
Their plight is pitiable. The full horror of the disease is described in a paper by Deborah Waroff, a gifted New York writer who was stricken in July 1989. An energetic cyclist, skier, squash and tennis player, Waroff wrote in a paper for a Washington conference:
“My sickness began with a flu-like illness. After a week, thinking I was pretty much well, I went back to my ordinary activities, like tennis and my biking. A week later, I was sick again. This repeated several times that summer until I soon got to a point where I was never well again. I had classic symptoms. After a little activity I would just collapse, totally fold up. I also had symptoms like fevers, dizziness, upset tummy, swollen lymph glands and a new type of frequent headache. I had cognitive problems embarrassingly often, including dysphasia—putting the wrong words in sentences. I was often too weak to talk on the phone, or after five minutes of talking I would fold.”
In 2003, things got worse. But two years later, Waroff regained some of her life through the controversial treatment of ozone therapy. This treatment cannot be prescribed in most states. Allowed in New York, it is hard to come by and expensive. Some other countries, particularly Canada, have been more committed to fighting CFS and the use of ozone therapy.
Harry Reid, and others, there is more work to be done.
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