Vagus nerve infection hypothesis: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 14:48, April 11, 2016
The vagus nerve hypothesis proposes that the symptoms of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome are caused by an infection of the vagus nerve.
In 2013, Michael Van ElZakker, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard Medical School, published the hypothesis.[1][2]
The vagus nerve is responsible for the sickness response.
Van Elzakker believes that any infectious agent with an affinity for nerve tissues can cause a vagus nerve infection, including HHV-6, Epstein-Barr virus, Varicella zoster virus, chicken pox, certain kinds of enteroviruses and even borrelia, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease. He thinks this could explain why no single infective agent has been isolated as the cause of CFS, even though all of these agents have been associated with disease.[3]
Notable studies
Learn more
See also
- Vagus nerve stimulation
- Michael Van ElZakker quotes Louis Pasteur in reference to Vagus nerve hypothesis: "The germ is nothing; the terrain is everything."
References
- ↑ Chronic fatigue syndrome from vagus nerve infection: a psychoneuroimmunological hypothesis - PubMed
- ↑ Chronic fatigue syndrome from vagus nerve infection: A psychoneuroimmunological hypothesis PDF - Elsevier - By: Michael B. VanElzakker
- ↑ The Low Histamine Chef - Harvard neuroscientist Dr. Michael VanElzakker: chronic fatigue vagus nerve link