This Disease Turned 5 Million People Into Statues, And Then Vanished

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  • Опубліковано 7 тра 2024
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    A mysterious disease swept the world in the early 1920s that put people into catatonic states; stiff and immovable like human statues. It was called encephalitis lethargica and it affected over 5 million people worldwide, and then was almost forgotten.
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    LINKS LINKS LINKS
    abcnews.go.com/Health/percent....
    wfneurology.org/activities/ne...
    academic.oup.com/jnen/article...
    achh.army.mil/history/book-ww...
    academic.oup.com/jnen/article...
    www.ninds.nih.gov/health-info...
    www.neurologylive.com/view/en...
    www.encephalitis.info/types-o...
    academic.oup.com/jnen/article...
    academic.oup.com/jnen/article...
    www.npr.org/transcripts/43628...
    protomag.com/medical-history/...
    achh.army.mil/history/book-ww...
    academic.oup.com/brain/articl...
    protomag.com/medical-history/...
    bmcinfectdis.biomedcentral.co...
    academic.oup.com/brain/articl...
    www.thelancet.com/journals/ec...
    www.psychologytoday.com/us/bl...
    wfneurology.org/activities/ne...
    TIMESTAMPS
    0:00 - Intro
    2:40 - What Is Encephalitis Lethargica?
    6:36 - Parkinsonism
    8:07 - Dr. Oliver Sacks
    11:59: What Causes E.L?
    18:07 - Sponsor - Factor
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 4,2 тис.

  • @arbuz_kawon
    @arbuz_kawon Місяць тому +4655

    > turns 5 million people into statues
    > refuses to elaborate
    > leaves

    • @DaleDix
      @DaleDix Місяць тому +254

      The CIA never explains itself.

    • @juliao1255
      @juliao1255 Місяць тому +109

      He elaborated. Did you miss that part?

    • @aidenrogers1468
      @aidenrogers1468 Місяць тому

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encephalitis_lethargica#:~:text=The%20disease%20attacks%20the%20brain,lethargica%20spread%20around%20the%20world.

    • @hollister2320
      @hollister2320 Місяць тому +218

      ⁠@@DaleDix i hate to b that guy, because I’ll always enjoy a good CIA dig, but they wete formed in 1947:/long after this first appeared

    • @micwclar
      @micwclar Місяць тому +219

      ​@@hollister2320that's exactly what they WANT you to believe.

  • @hootinouts
    @hootinouts Місяць тому +1838

    It is always disturbing when science cannot establish any answers to a disease that is still around.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Місяць тому

      That is probably the only bright spot in the Long Covid problem today: *lots* of interest in finding out exactly what is happening and what to do about it. The condition is increasingly known as Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS). It has appeared as chronic Lyme disease, as chronic Epstein-Barr, fibromyalgia, and now as Long Covid. CDC notes, "An estimated 836,000 to 2.5 million Americans suffer from ME/CFS. About 90 percent of people with ME/CFS have not been diagnosed." AFAIK there is no effective treatment yet, only techniques to keep it as low key as possible. An interesting anomaly among Long Covid sufferers: serious athletes (particularly half marathoners and marathoners) seem over-represented.
      Don't give up; the National Institutes of Health is sponsoring a lot of ongoing research in major medical centers and universities. It can't stay a mystery forever.

    • @yoeyyoey8937
      @yoeyyoey8937 Місяць тому +47

      Makes you question disease pathways

    • @Kitties-of-Doom
      @Kitties-of-Doom Місяць тому

      like 100s of diseases and conditions from the vax lol

    • @experimentalcyborg
      @experimentalcyborg Місяць тому +100

      Science is a methodology, and it has very limited options when there isn't enough data. The only way to gather more data is with lots of funding, and to really get to the bottom of things, ethics would need to be violated (dissections and high risk interventions on people who aren't dead). So unfortunately it's not a mystery that there are still medical mysteries and for the most part, that's for the best.

    • @Kitties-of-Doom
      @Kitties-of-Doom Місяць тому

      like everything that came from the vax! what a mystery!

  • @thecrookedtrail679
    @thecrookedtrail679 Місяць тому +621

    I developed Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in the early 90s after a significant illness. The doctors told me that was what I had was called but also told 'no one really thinks that's real illness' and I would just have to 'take it easy and see what happened'. I have experienced many bouts of Catatonia since I was 14. Took me a few decades of worsening health and being near to death to better understand the underlying causes for my ongoing illness. It is so strange to hear of so many experiencing something similar after covid. It is very hard to see that the medical system still struggling to help people.

    • @erikkollar66
      @erikkollar66 25 днів тому +22

      So what were the causes of your illness? I also have chronic fatigue syndrome and doctors in my country weren't able to help me. I gave up and I'm just trying to live with it but it's very difficult.

    • @clarioncall8449
      @clarioncall8449 25 днів тому

      I hear you. I’m 24 years and counting in chronic fatigue and got hit with Covid in 21 which nearly killed me. Long Covid is still hanging on. And the medical doesn’t believe in it or doesn’t know anything about it. The only treatment offered was antidepressants. And it is diagnosed with a blood test:Epstein-Barr virus. Strange to say the least that no other treatment is known.

    • @clarioncall8449
      @clarioncall8449 25 днів тому

      @@erikkollar66 Mine was from Epstein-Barr virus following a bad case of mono. Blood tests from Mayo confirmed this.

    • @cocohodge2962
      @cocohodge2962 24 дні тому +44

      Fibromyalgia with or with CFS is recognised by the American Arthritis Association. I had been dismissed by so many drs in the 1990s. One told me he had sick patients to attend and that I should be ashamed of myself.

    • @jmar8507
      @jmar8507 24 дні тому +19

      @@cocohodge2962 I'm sorry you were treated that way. He had no right to make those assumptions but they do unfortunately. I understand. I've had ME for over 40 years. :(

  • @Basiliakis117
    @Basiliakis117 Місяць тому +659

    I am 29, just diagnosed with Parkinson’s*. I started carbidopa-levodopa in December. I am so thankful for the neurologists that have helped me, I was in a wheelchair for 3y and have just started walking with crutches again. I was bed bound and now I’m back to playing music and “being a person”. There’s no words for how absolutely life changing the right medication has been.
    While my symptoms are permanent they’re at least not progressing as severely and I am so so thankful.
    *datScan may distinguish EOPD vs. PS vs. VE(L) just in case, I do it next week.
    Humourously my neuro told me to watch Awakenings because the case was so similar. Everything Sacks said was true of me… and now I’m doing everything I did in high school it’s wild.

    • @user-jd1ly8hz7f
      @user-jd1ly8hz7f Місяць тому +23

      I hope it’s not insensitive to talk or comment about but I got real shakey hands (26) my uncle and aunt both died with it, my dads getting older and he shakes non stop at times and has seemed to mentally degrade more so than with what his age should allot for. He hasn’t been diagnosed but it’s just kind of assumed within the family it’s the same as his siblings. I had no idea that it could set in so early? If you don’t mind my asking what symptoms did you experience at the start that eventually convinced you to go get it diagnosed. Sorry it’s out of self interest but genuine curiosity with a hint of low key panic. Best wishes to you on the journey!❤ - to preface I’m writing this during the intro playing so maybe that gets answered in the vid lol

    • @SnapBoi1
      @SnapBoi1 Місяць тому +11

      My grandmother has Parkinson’s, and my mother is an activist for all sorts of medical stuff and she is currently trying to help researchers find a cure and/or to treat it better.
      AND I have ONE question.
      Did any of you work or be near harmful chemicals? or did you be near pesticides?
      As my mother has a lead that could lead to a cure quite quickly if it is chemicals.

    • @fightingtosurvive6527
      @fightingtosurvive6527 Місяць тому +6

      May God Bless all of you and bring you comfort. ✨🌷

    • @bklyn_line
      @bklyn_line Місяць тому +2

      Wishing you well mate.

    • @DeadGirl-oz3vl
      @DeadGirl-oz3vl 29 днів тому +3

      When he said Lenard I immediately thought of that movie. It's my favorite Robin Williams movie😊

  • @bazoo513
    @bazoo513 Місяць тому +3011

    Speaking ot long covid and CFS, a wave to Physics Girl: get well soon, Dianna!

    • @OdariArt
      @OdariArt Місяць тому +310

      I miss Dianna. She was the first person I thought about. I miss her energy. Get well soon, Physics Girl.

    • @CybershamanX
      @CybershamanX Місяць тому +108

      She and Long COVID popped into my mind, as well. 😞

    • @DenkyManner
      @DenkyManner Місяць тому

      @jesusisunstoppable4438 ​Reality disagrees. The fart cloud in your skull isn't up to the task of distinguishing between fact and conspiracy theories, please take a seat and stay there.​

    • @ricos1497
      @ricos1497 Місяць тому +573

      @@jesusisunstoppable4438awesome, I'll let my father in law know that he can stop pretending to have lost his sense of smell.

    • @vcuheel1464
      @vcuheel1464 Місяць тому +543

      @@jesusisunstoppable4438Actually, there’s no such thing as Jesus.

  • @DangerAmbrose
    @DangerAmbrose Місяць тому +1154

    My great great grandfather died of this in 1921. It was thought that he contracted a virus from mosquitos that caused sleeping sickness.

    • @gunslinger9171
      @gunslinger9171 Місяць тому +13

      My great grandfather too, but I think he got it from a STD 😉

    • @tatata1543
      @tatata1543 Місяць тому +54

      @@janick01ifyIt’s Lyme and you don’t get that from mosquitoes.

    • @tatata1543
      @tatata1543 Місяць тому +64

      Mosquitoes don’t transmit sleeping sickness , that’s tsetse flies and unless he had been to Africa it’s unlikely he had that. The fact is no one really knows what caused Encephalitis lethargica.

    • @Alfred-Neuman
      @Alfred-Neuman Місяць тому

      I don't like mosquitos, they are satanic.

    • @Nilboggen
      @Nilboggen Місяць тому +51

      @@tatata1543 probably something to do with the influenza pandemic due to the timing of both epidemics. Either having influenza first made people more susceptible to encephalitis lethargica or is a rare symptom of influenza. But as you said no one really knows.

  • @pennythpmas5787
    @pennythpmas5787 Місяць тому +242

    AWAKENINGS is one of my favorite books ever.
    Tons of footnotes, which explain alot!
    Some pages are 1/2 footnotes.
    Dr. Sacks' compassion and care for his patients pours through every page.
    Book is 1000% better than movie which was sweet and cute.
    But encephalitis lethargica is utterly fascinating, including precognition of death in a couple of patients!
    Fascinating.❤

    • @robst247
      @robst247 Місяць тому +16

      I agree - indeed, ALL of Dr Sack's books are fascinating. He was a highly intelligent, erudite, well-read and compassionate man with an insatiable thirst for knowledge and experience. He was a genuine polymath, with extensive in-depth knowledge in many different scientific fields, as well in science history, psychology and philosophy, art and music. He was one of the most inspiring people I never had the pleasure to meet. Once it was certain that he would not survive his cancer, he faced his impending death courageously and wrote about it candidly. I was deeply saddened when I learnt of his death.

    • @MJFish
      @MJFish 29 днів тому +5

      Yes, the movie is great! The book is fantastic.

    • @BrianFedirko
      @BrianFedirko 25 днів тому +9

      Yep, I thought of Robin Williams and DeNiro as he first started describing the situation Gr8 Movie/story. Love❤

    • @Carolyn-qd8mj
      @Carolyn-qd8mj 24 дні тому +4

      I love all his books too. Awakenings is a wonderful movie. Both book and movie heartbreaking.

    • @robst247
      @robst247 24 дні тому +1

      @@Carolyn-qd8mj Yes - heartbreaking.

  • @dilsiam
    @dilsiam 28 днів тому +259

    My Mom got her nursing degree in 1963, she did her medicine and psychiatry practice with a catatonic patient.
    She took him put of this catatonic state I don't know how she did it.
    Mom you're special for me forever and I love you
    Rest in Power ❤❤❤

    • @sittingonariver
      @sittingonariver 24 дні тому +12

      Your rest in power message for your Mom truly touched my heart. It is exemplary for describing my Mom as well. Thank you! ❤

    • @peacekeeper479
      @peacekeeper479 23 дні тому +8

      Much respect for your mom

    • @sweettaterpie7009
      @sweettaterpie7009 23 дні тому +12

      She probably touched him with her loving light filled hands.
      I was a nurse. Patients asked me to touch them. Healing hands can do wonders.
      Light to your mother and her loving.

    • @mrstiffanyalexandrashain4489
      @mrstiffanyalexandrashain4489 2 дні тому

      ⁠@@sweettaterpie7009the original commenter had enough errors to the point where I only *think💜* I know what they’re trying to say but
      I’ll piggy back and high five YOU!
      Nurses rock. You all are the best. Time after time- watching generations of folks in my family and with my own experiences.
      Why is a nurse hug or hand squeeze 1048484993 times better than one from almost everyone else???
      I don’t feel like trying articulating this at 3:30 AM but it’s the truth 😊❤😊

  • @nocomment2468
    @nocomment2468 Місяць тому +961

    Oliver Sacks was such a brilliant neurologist and writer. Probably most people watching this channel already know of him, but if you don’t, I’d recommend starting with the book “The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat”. It’s a fascinating and moving piece of work.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Місяць тому +50

      And Robin Williams in "Awakenings".

    • @Spudcore
      @Spudcore Місяць тому +9

      Excellent book, very much worth reading.

    • @ksharma103
      @ksharma103 Місяць тому +32

      Dr. Sacks is an inspiration for so many future neurologists (and I’m sure writers as well!). Nowhere else is the inspiring humanness of a “patient” and their life experiences described as wonderfully as that book. As a med student, his writing always serves as a personal reminder whenever taking medical history and seeing to anyone with an ailment.

    • @lunacouer
      @lunacouer Місяць тому +14

      One of my favorite books ever. Highly recommend.

    • @lundworks9901
      @lundworks9901 Місяць тому +22

      He also theorized that people experiencing spiritual rapture were having petit mal seizures due to the same brain area firing neurons.

  • @trishayamada807
    @trishayamada807 Місяць тому +1276

    My mom had long covid. She now, can’t walk without a walker, she has a shake to her hands and head and loss of balance. The neurologist said the virus attacked the little hairs in your ear that helps you balance. I feel bad that her last years of life were made worse. Everyone gets old, but she went from an active elderly person, to hospitalized, the in a rehab center and now home and I take care of her.

    • @Blinkerd00d
      @Blinkerd00d Місяць тому +72

      I'm so sorry to hear that. Love her while you have her- I lost my grandma recently and she went from independent, living on her own, still driving etc to bed ridden and then gone in about a week.

    • @trishayamada807
      @trishayamada807 Місяць тому +59

      @@Blinkerd00d thank you and I’m so sorry about your grandmother. My mom went from working at the free clinic (retired RN), going to craft classes, singing in the choir and driving her red mustang around town to me taking care of her. Everyone knew her and her car. She was fun. She says it’s so hard to loose your freedom. I do as much as I can but I have 3 kids from 8 to 13 years old. They deserve a childhood with their mom too. It’s hard to balance it all and somedays, I feel I’m failing all of them. I remind myself I’m one person but it’s tough.

    • @lifesbutastumble
      @lifesbutastumble Місяць тому

      Meanwhile, donald trump and right wingers were running about the place as if it was no big deal/all fake and made up

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Місяць тому +23

      Yeah, took some similar, but thankfully milder damage to the balance section of my cochlea. Worse damage to my mitral valve, which is degrading from moderate regurgitation to severe, with some increasing symptoms. Still keeping as active as possible, it just takes a bit longer to walk that 2 1/2 miles to and from the supermarket at times.
      Cared for my father in his final years, damage from diabetes causing vascular dementia, turning him from a gregarious, active elder into a withdrawn and eventually helpless shell of his former self. The worst and long dreaded thing, getting asked where Mom was - she had died over a decade previous, the month after their 50th anniversary. I knew it was coming, didn't make it any easier. For him, it was like losing her all over again, with far less self-control.
      It's not tough, it's double tough, but it's also appreciated, as the elder can no longer do many things for themselves.

    • @shoveI
      @shoveI Місяць тому +34

      I'm really sorry to hear that, my wife has the same symptoms in addition to being bedbound most of the time and she's just 35 years old, there's a possibility she will live decades like this. I'm taking care of her but that really just means money and cleaning, we are unable to have a romantic life really (going on dates, casual hanging out just to enjoy time, travel) .
      Life's a B.

  • @denisematteau
    @denisematteau Місяць тому +176

    I was a nurse's aid in the 1980's and one of the patients was similar to that, caught in a rigid posture, but he was conscious. He was quite a character with a colorful history from before getting sick and he would joke about never having expected to become a human pretzel.

    • @weareallbornmad410
      @weareallbornmad410 9 днів тому

      He could still talk? And interact with you guys?

    • @denisematteau
      @denisematteau 8 днів тому

      @@weareallbornmad410 yes. He was conscious. There were several patients in my experience who were physically rigid in one posture but who were conscious. We nurse's aids were not shown the precise diagnosis but were told only the treatment plans that we were part of, mainly physical assistance etc. Sometimes the RN's would explain something as cancer but meaning brain tumor.
      One woman was described as being this way because of "depression" and she was a survivor of Treblinka. (She was not Jewish. She was Polish Catholic.) We were told she was "unresponsive" but I was one of those people who didn't always get the memo lol. She had very limited interaction and we had to feed her which was not easy because she was bent over. I actually got her to feed herself with me just hold her hand around the spoon by doing what I always did: I always found a way to make eye contact and talk a little bit.
      I left that line of work because of the horrors of how people are treated. I was reprimanded for doing that because it was not in the instructions. This happened after a doctor reprimanded the facility for their lack of interaction. He had been called for a man who was also semi-comatose and some idiot thought he was dying. This man was very tall and required two aids to turn. We were shorthanded that night and so, while the doctor stood there I apologized for having to do it "my way" and I went down to the foot of the bed, stopped down to where I could make eye contact, tapped on his toes and called to him until he opened his eyes and saw me. Then I made turning gesture with my hands and loudly said "turn over". He grunted and reached for the bedrail and I was able to turn him. The doctor was furious. His nurses' reports had consistently told him the man never interacted. He asked me about this and I told him the truth: we nurse's aids always interacted this way but we weren't supposed to. I was reprimanded after that for "not following orders" and I went to work at another nursing home, one that was more "upscale". The nurse's aids there followed orders and during my first week orientation I witnessed such abuse that I wanted no part of it. I was reprimanded again and left immediately, never to seek that kind of work again.

  • @katymitchell8200
    @katymitchell8200 27 днів тому +58

    I'm flabbergasted by your information. I'm a retired RN after 30 years in ICU, ER, and psychiatric care. You speak like you have a larger understanding of medicine. Do you have a medical degree? If you don't, you have a wonderful talent for research. Thank you for this information. You have a great speaking voice and easy to listen to.

    • @smithandpepper4308
      @smithandpepper4308 10 днів тому +4

      Have you read any of the books by Anthony William? He explained why and how viruses affect the central nervous system years ago. I used his books to heal a chronic cough, severe asthma, and 24/7 allergy symptoms (that made life intolerable) that I got post Covid.

    • @chrismay2298
      @chrismay2298 2 дні тому

      I know it's shocking, but people without formal education can be VERY fluent in lots of subjects.

  • @linwoodnymph6113
    @linwoodnymph6113 Місяць тому +884

    That the patients improved with l-dopa, but eventually regressed, reminds me of "Flowers for Algernon".

    • @Preinstallable
      @Preinstallable Місяць тому +76

      I remember reading that in middle school, very sad story.

    • @alysononoahu8702
      @alysononoahu8702 Місяць тому +9

      Yes

    • @HayTatsuko
      @HayTatsuko Місяць тому +65

      That story _still_ makes me incredibly sad, decades after I first read it.

    • @PaulSolomon
      @PaulSolomon Місяць тому +18

      Beat me to it. First read that book in HS

    • @1realtruthrightnow742
      @1realtruthrightnow742 Місяць тому +11

      Incredible book!

  • @scottofford3061
    @scottofford3061 Місяць тому +376

    Another reason to be thankful for the vigorously healthy body I have had for 71 years.

    • @peeledbananas9840
      @peeledbananas9840 Місяць тому +2

      Did you just say the n word?

    • @clevelandplonsey7480
      @clevelandplonsey7480 Місяць тому +17

      @@peeledbananas9840what?

    • @bumblebaa2327
      @bumblebaa2327 23 дні тому +1

      celebrate! I recovered from CFS and have to take it easy at 54 yo and I am thankful to never have had pain, like fibromyalgia or arthritis or back pain. Celebrating with you!

    • @leehaelters6182
      @leehaelters6182 22 дні тому

      @@peeledbananas9840, yeah, what?

  • @NorthernKitty
    @NorthernKitty 29 днів тому +137

    I experienced "long COVID" for nearly 6 months. Mental fog, physical fatigue and difficulty doing daily tasks. It was like I slowed down to 20% my normal speed, tasks would take about 5 times longer than usual. Oddly, though, I was perfectly OK with this, like it didn't matter. I was aware of it, but it didn't bother me, worry me or upset me. It went away gradually, until one day I just realized, "hey, I feel normal again!" But there is one lingering side effect - I am easily at peace with things that previously would've caused distress. I am able to accept things more easily just as they are and simply move on with my life in a positive way in spite of negative circumstance. It's not apathy or indifference - it's not like things don't matter, just that I'm at peace with whatever comes. It almost feels like I've moved on to a new spiritual level. It's difficult to explain, but I see it as a plus and I hope that it continues.

    • @jstokes
      @jstokes 29 днів тому +6

      I had a similar experience.

    • @centrald.
      @centrald. 27 днів тому +7

      Man ive had long covid as a 16 year old for the past 6 months and have had all those exact same problems its nice to know im not the only one

    • @deborahaumiller7391
      @deborahaumiller7391 27 днів тому +7

      I nearly died from covid. 89 out of 93 symptoms, yep, including neuromuscular problems, falls, sleeping, etc. Hard to come back from. I feel about 80%, not 100, but I'll take that 80% gladly. I saw a lot of my peeps die from it. Gives a person a whole new perspective. I also don't worry anymore, especially with prayer and Jesus by my side 24/7. I still have long covid. Pesky little booger, ain't it?😢 but 😄😄😄😄👍🙏✝️❤️

    • @SmogginMog
      @SmogginMog 26 днів тому +12

      Johnson and Johnson or Moderna?

    • @george1982ok
      @george1982ok 25 днів тому

      @@SmogginMogor Pfizer ?

  • @revelle8605
    @revelle8605 Місяць тому +48

    As you were describing their symptoms, I went, "that's got to be something to do with dysfunctional dopamine production/use in the body." Reminded me so clearly of how I felt when my fibromyalgia had me bedridden--barely able to stay awake, struggling to move, struggling to feel, struggling to think, bleak and losing myself. Now I'm healing; and many signs point to my fibro being rooted in dopamine issues. Most compelling might be in how the Adderall I was prescribed for ADHD has had completely unexpected, powerful effects on the fibro pain and fatigue!
    There are so many mysteries surrounding the human body and nervous system to this day. Here's hoping we can unravel those mysteries further and bring life to people suffering.

    • @christyharrington-brown4519
      @christyharrington-brown4519 29 днів тому +6

      I have fibro and it's carved my life down to the absolute bare minimum - at 40 I'm currently unable to look after myself so I'm having to stay at my mum's as I recover from a cold I had in January - and I've been struggling through the start of an adhd diagnosis. It'll be around a 3 year wait with the NHS but it sounds like it might well be worth it.
      Can you point me to any research on this? I'll try some googling but the brain fog is thick at the moment.
      I'm glad you're healing!

    • @qynoi42
      @qynoi42 25 днів тому

      ​@@christyharrington-brown4519 As a fibromyalgia sufferer myself, I wish you luck!

    • @zenfrodo
      @zenfrodo 13 днів тому

      Raising a hand here to second the need for where you got your information. My husband suffers from severe fibro, and its cut his life to almost nil. If there's something we could show to his doc that might help and give us a different direction than the current ineffective treament, GODS, please? Response? Anything??

    • @patrickherke8947
      @patrickherke8947 12 днів тому

      ​@@zenfrodo from PubMed "Fibromylagia, chronic fatigue, and adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the adult: a case study"
      Abstract
      Adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) may share common features with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) and chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). In an outpatient psychiatric clinic, a number of adult patients who presented primarily with symptoms of ADHD, predominately inattentive type, also reported unexplained fatigue, widespread musculoskeletal pain or a pre-existing diagnosis of CFS or FMS. As expected, ADHD pharmacotherapy usually attenuated the core ADHD symptoms of inattention, distractibility, hyperactivity, and impulsivity. Less expected was the observation that some patients also reported amelioration of pain and fatigue symptoms. The utility of ADHD medications in FMS and CFS states may be their innate arousal and enhanced filtering properties. This model supposes that FMS and CFS are central processing problems rather than peripheral disorders of muscles and joints.

    • @patrickherke8947
      @patrickherke8947 12 днів тому

      ​@@christyharrington-brown4519 "Fibromylagia, chronic fatigue, and adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the adult: a case study" and "Fibromyalgia patients show an abnormal dopamine response to pain" from PubMed seem like good places to start

  • @PharmDRx
    @PharmDRx Місяць тому +1737

    First thought was ... "Hahaha yea april fools mf!"
    Then, the "well shit..." kicked in

    • @zay7958
      @zay7958 Місяць тому +51

      Real life dr stone shit

    • @lochlanmuir2291
      @lochlanmuir2291 Місяць тому +40

      For me April Fools was yesterday…
      🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Місяць тому

      Another thing that's not an April Fools joke is the fact that certain substances in pIastic are mimicking hormones, and are making us fat, almost sterile, and giving us cancer. I think it's the next esbest0s. PIastic is over-used anyway, so it would be great if its use was greatly cut back, and the harmful stuff in it eliminated. Shrink-wrapped potatoes and cucumbers??

    • @rigocolas
      @rigocolas Місяць тому

      Me too ..now​@@lochlanmuir2291

    • @follantic
      @follantic Місяць тому +5

      666 upvotes!

  • @rickclapp6560
    @rickclapp6560 Місяць тому +275

    My Mom had Sleeping Sickness as a child. She was living in Roslyn Washington. Her Dad worked at the coal mine and it was a company town. If you worked at the mine you could live in the town. She came down with Sleeping Sickness and also a super high fever that cooked her brain. My understanding is she was sick with 2 or 3 things at the same time. Kind of hard to say since they really didn't have a good way to test for things back then. My best guess is someone came to work at the mine from the East Coast and carried the sickness with him. She was in a coma for several weeks and when she did wake up, she had to start school over. She was a couple of grades ahead when she became ill. It was a hard road to recovery, but she ended up living a full life.
    Since she was one of the few that had it on the West Coast and recovered, she would be called in to donate blood to help other victims many years later.
    I'm so glad she didn't end up the way these people did. She recovered and they never did. Maybe because she was a child.

    • @supremepizza3710
      @supremepizza3710 Місяць тому +21

      I too, 1950's 60's cusp... Polio, Scarlet Fever and possible Sleeping Sickness, heard it mentioned. Hush Hush it was... Couldn't move except turn my head. Then remember nothing, 9 weeks later became conscious as if nothing occurred. Tried to get out of bed and splat like a pancake on the floor. 10 weeks out of school and tried to hold me back... Today over 70 and like a Timex, keep on ticking, likely windup model... mustn't forget to wind it.😎 The pain, what I call Polio Pain... I recalled when stricken with the magic elixir 19... just as crippling.🤔

    • @rickclapp6560
      @rickclapp6560 Місяць тому +31

      @@supremepizza3710 my mom wasn't able to walk when she came out of her coma. This was back around 1920. Her legs were starting to pull up and the doctor wanted to cut the tendons so her legs could be straightened. Her mother wouldn't let him and instead was able to get Some olive oil, and started rubbing her legs with it every day. It was in the bible so she figured it might work, and it did! I think it was physical therapy not the oil. Back then they didn't do physical therapy. Anyway she was able to walk again, and have 5 kids. Another thing the doctor said she couldn't do.
      I'm glad you made you made it and are still around. She died from lung cancer when she was in her late 70's.

    • @SZG65
      @SZG65 Місяць тому +10

      "Since she was one of the few that _had it_ on the West Coast and _recovered_ , she would be called in to _donate blood to help other victims_ many years later."
      Seems we forgot this during the most recent 'demic.

    • @zorakj
      @zorakj Місяць тому +12

      @@SZG65There we’re specific blood drives for people who’d had Covid.

    • @SZG65
      @SZG65 Місяць тому

      @@zorakjOh? But the mainstream media played off natural immunity as if it were taboo. All part of the plan, as China and other countries lied about the number of cases to justify deployment of the real bio weapon of mRNA, then they didn't take the mRNA themselves. Go figure.

  • @maximusmidnight2591
    @maximusmidnight2591 Місяць тому +48

    Great video. I've developed POTS as a post-covid condition, and while I'm mostly functional thanks to medication, the feeling of going from fairly healthy to unable to climb a hill was horrible. Thank you for the awareness on long- and post-viral conditions. I hope a good thing from COVID is more awareness & research about these things.

    • @youtubecensors5419
      @youtubecensors5419 29 днів тому +3

      That's also a very common side effect of the injections we were given during Covid. Hopefully it improves for you! 🙏🏿

    • @yotsubafanfan
      @yotsubafanfan 24 дні тому +1

      I developed it as a preteen before COVID even existed. It freakin sucks. I feel as if I lost our on what we're supposed to be my carefree teen years due to it. 😭

    • @wagerword
      @wagerword 24 дні тому

      I'm still looking for answers, but I have similar symptoms.

    • @Wolfie54545
      @Wolfie54545 13 днів тому

      What is POTS?

    • @FaithOriginalisme
      @FaithOriginalisme 11 днів тому +1

      @@Wolfie54545 Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. Essentially, all the stuff your nervous system automatically balances is out of whack. breathing, blood pressure, heart rate, digestion, etc. It's a type of dysautonomia, with the autonomic nervous system being the one that automatically adjust those things

  • @jenssimsandotherthings1571
    @jenssimsandotherthings1571 9 днів тому +7

    I don't normally comment on stuff like this, and I don't know if anyone will see it, but my Grandma's mother passed away when my Grandma was 3 years old in 1921. All she was told her entire life was that her mother had the sleeping disease and died from it. No one explained what it was or what it did, and because of her age she didn't even remember her mother much. In fact, her dad's mother raised her and her sister, which her sister was 10 years older, but she wouldn't tell Grandma anything other than it was the sleeping disease. I imagine the adults back then did not talk about stuff like that with their children. I don't know if it's the same thing, but it is around the same timeline. Now, my Great Grandma was from Germany and her family came over before WW1, but she had family that did live in New York. And the one thing that my Grandma did remember was that when her mom passed away, her mom's sister and mother came to visit, and her Grandmother only spoke German, and Grandma couldn't understand her. This was the only time that my Grandma met her mom's sister and mother. Also, there is a picture of her mother with her older sister, who at that time was between 2 to 3 years old, and she looks fine and even slightly smiling. So, no one in the family knows when the sleeping disease started, or at least my Grandma and her sister were never told. But as far as we know, no one else in the family has ever had it. So, I don't know if it's the same thing or not. But it would explain why her dad and his mother called it the sleeping disease and why her mother passed away in 1921.

  • @apricake
    @apricake Місяць тому +319

    All I can think about after you said Strep is how today strep is being studied for causing so many neurological and psychiatric conditions including seizures, PANS/PANDAS, catatonia, POTS, scarlet fever obviously, rage and/or extreme behavioral and emotional changes, Tourette’s like ticking, and the list goes on.

    • @Non-religiou
      @Non-religiou Місяць тому

      I highly doubt strep would cause all that. Next they'll say it's caused by something else, they did it before. Doctors really don't know crap.

    • @Non-religiou
      @Non-religiou Місяць тому +8

      I doubt strep would cause all that, next they'll say it's something else, they said it before.

    • @oneminuteofmyday
      @oneminuteofmyday Місяць тому +46

      I had a lot of strep growing up. I had scarlet fever from it while in grade school. Then at the end of junior high school, I had several strep infections and then mononucleosis at the same time. I ended up with encephalitis and meningitis as a result. I’ve never fully recovered. I now have several neurological conditions due to the neurological damage (dysautonomia), including POTS.
      While the mononucleosis is blamed for the encephalitis, as it is a rare complication, some of the specialists have considered the amount of strep that I had as significant in what happened.

    • @Sadkoi
      @Sadkoi Місяць тому +5

      Tourette’s like symptoms? …can it straight up cause Tourette’s syndrome?

    • @majorzipf8947
      @majorzipf8947 Місяць тому +6

      I’ve had a few really bad cases of strep over the years and I’m so grateful that I recovered fully

  • @jaredbaker1183
    @jaredbaker1183 Місяць тому +112

    Long covid and Chronic fatigue syndrome do seem to have a lot of crossovers. As someone that has had debilitating chronic fatigue syndrome for 30 years I can tell you what I have learned.
    1. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) is really more of a "catch all" term for anyone experiencing debilitating fatigue. Long covid falls under that description. Think of it like how we classify "colds". Each cold virus is different. They just have the same symptoms. CFS seems to be similar.
    2. CFS has long been a condition that surfaces after the body goes through a traumatic, physical event. Usually a bad reaction to some sort of infection. Covid would certainly qualify. But this can also happen from other traumatic events such as a car accident. My specific case surfaced after surviving a cardiac arrest as a young teenager.
    3. We don't know how these traumatic events cause these lingering effects, or why only a small percentage of the population suffers long term while most do not. Research is ongoing. But, until long covid, many looked at CFS as a psychosomatic condition and didn't treat it seriously.
    It's interesting you mentioned how there was a treatment that helped those with EL begin to "come back to life" only to have the condition eventually overwhelm the treatment and bring them back to that same state. I participate in many trial studies to treat CFS. A recent one had a similar affect on me. My health and energy improved. I felt mostly better. But eventually, the CFS overwhelmed the treatment and I was back to 80% bed ridden.
    So, yes. EL is not long covid or CFS, but there are a remarkable amount of things that rhyme with all three conditions. I believe your conclusion that there will always be a very small percentage of a population that will suffer, permanent, debilitating symptoms from traumatic infections and/or other bodily stresses. We should be compassionate to those people.

    • @Db8it
      @Db8it Місяць тому +5

      Yes to all of this. Thank you!

    • @sciencerox9102
      @sciencerox9102 Місяць тому +5

      Yes, there are similarities of symtoms following from concussions (Post Concussion Syndrome), minimal brain trauma, whiplash injuries, brain surgeries, post sepsis, autoimmune diseases, fibromyalgia, chronic stress, post infections like post-covid and ME/CFS. And probably more.
      Unfortunately, there is a lack of scientific research in chronic fatigue and accompanying symtoms, but post-covid may provide more resources into this.
      There are many who suffer from chronic fatigue, brain fog, and such symtoms, around the world.

    • @sisterthesister4870
      @sisterthesister4870 Місяць тому

      The way I see it, Long Covid is basically a subtype of CFS. Maybe not all forms are (organ failure secondary to Covid would fall under the Long Covid umbrella, but maybe not the CFS one, for example) but many would. Many folks with Long Covid would fulfil the diagnostic criteria for ME/CFS. And as most forms of ME/CFS are post-infectious, Covid is - unfortunately - one of the many infections that can cause CFS symptoms.
      The fact that research into Long Covid caused a change of heart for some doctors and researchers who didn't take CFS seriously before, is kind of a double-edged sword, in my mind. On the one hand, it's great that so many people like you are finally getting some more recognition. On the other hand, it's kind of f'd up that it took a pandemic and another group of patients getting those debilitating symptoms for that to happen.
      The one thing I'm hoping for now, is that this renewed interest in Long Covid and other illnesses like it will finally provide some answers and hopefully also more treatment possibilities for many people out there who are suffering.
      And I too would not be surprised if one day we would find out that that are some underlying pathways that CFS has in common with EL.

  • @lisastevens682
    @lisastevens682 10 днів тому +5

    My paternal grandmother had Addison's disease in the 1950's. It was so bad, they had to sell the farm and move to the city for her treatments. She lacked the energy to get out of bed. It got to the point that she wasn't eating. I don't know what treatment they gave her, but she was super-woman to me! She cooked, cleaned, and worked 40 hrs a week. Every weekend had the grandkids, baked bread, went to church and Sunday and dinners! I have been diagnosed with chronic fatigue. I WISH I had her treatment plan!!!

  • @Kmurphyvcom50
    @Kmurphyvcom50 Місяць тому +8

    It’s what makes neurology so fascinating and nuanced, with encephalopathies affecting cognitive, language, motor, and sensory functions differently, depending on regions involved, extent of derangement, extent of recovery, and global versus local impact. It’s an amazing field.

    • @Madonnalitta1
      @Madonnalitta1 26 днів тому

      That's why you don't put poisonous unknowns into the body.

    • @Kmurphyvcom50
      @Kmurphyvcom50 26 днів тому

      @@Madonnalitta1 It really depends on the definition of poison substances, as the liver has evolved the cytochrome P450 system to metabolize substances (we rely on this mechanism to metabolize medicines that we ingest), the both the kidneys and liver have evolved systems to eliminate substances from our bodies.
      There are various proteins and metals that the body can’t readily eliminate and end up accumulating in tissues such as the brain which then disrupts function.
      The immune system and infectious disease medical treatments have evolved (the former via structural changes and the later via research and development of treatments) to address various pathogens (viruses, bacteria, etc.) by catabolism, opsonization, or responding via various pathways to inactivate, disrupt mechanism of infecting cells, deactivating mechanisms of pathogen reproduction, or eliminating the infected cells to clear the virus from the body.
      There are substances that are ingested for recreational purposes (illicitly, legally, or as a perceived harmless form of practice - i.e., herbs, minerals, metals,etc.); despite the body’s ability to metabolize and excrete, cause harm while in the body either immediately or over repeated exposure.
      This is part of what makes neurology such a diverse field of study and treatment despite focusing on one particular organ system.

  • @annekabrimhall1059
    @annekabrimhall1059 Місяць тому +282

    Your connection with chronic fatigue is interesting. I’ve had it since I was 16 and the majority of people assume I’m lazy and need more exercise, even doctors. But now that people have suffered that from long Covid, I am being helped more and judged less.

    • @yippee8570
      @yippee8570 Місяць тому +15

      I've had it since 14. I've not really noticed any difference since the pandemic. Not that I care any more.

    • @annekabrimhall1059
      @annekabrimhall1059 Місяць тому +17

      I’m sorry, just keep swimming, swimming, swimming! My life motto.

    • @ulbuilder
      @ulbuilder Місяць тому +16

      Have you had a sleep study? Narcolepsy can cause excessive daytime sleepiness without causing cataplexy aka the stereotypical suddenly falling asleep that is typically associated with narcolepsy. It's caused by a disorder in REM sleep. People with narcolepsy have REM sleep shortly after falling asleep and for long periods of sleeping. REM sleep is when you have dreams where your brain is active. With nearly constant REM sleep the brain never gets to rest so it constantly wants you to sleep so it can get the rest it needs but no matter how long you sleep it never gets to rest.

    • @empathopinion6251
      @empathopinion6251 Місяць тому +31

      Me too. 26 years of exhaustion. Well intended but poorly educated people who give bad advice thinking they can relate to the level of exhaustion and neurological limitations that we endure. Because it's invisible, people just can't imagine what they can't see. It took 15 years to get a CFS/ME diagnosis because literally not one person believed me when I told them how sick I was.

    • @axollot
      @axollot Місяць тому +8

      Chronic fatigue is what I thought of too. Especially the name EL (encephalitis lethargy)
      I had SARS late 90s, 27yrs old,healthy and nearly died. Full blown double pneumonia that req immediate attention. Pneumonia physical therapy and inhalers etc. Basically exactly how we settled on treating Covid. Antibiotics, inhaler,steroids etc. I never fully recovered from it. I went autoimmune. Extreme fatigue etc. Over 20yrs later Cvid is recognized as causing chronic fatigue.
      Lets hope this will lead to funding for understanding the condition

  • @leeselset5751
    @leeselset5751 Місяць тому +525

    Diana, aka Physics Girl, is a long covd sufferer. I keep hoping to hear of some miraculous cure that restores her, and all other sufferers, to health and life. I miss her putting out new stuff, she was really fun to watch.

    • @jacopomorganti404
      @jacopomorganti404 Місяць тому +20

      Me too!

    • @tonydagostino6158
      @tonydagostino6158 Місяць тому +65

      Diana's story is so sad. Her husband and care giver needs support too

    • @mrnice4434
      @mrnice4434 Місяць тому

      @@tonydagostino6158 yeah it's amazing that he sticks with her and helps her so much

    • @_QA_
      @_QA_ Місяць тому +29

      Miss her too, still follow, hoping she's getting better.

    • @rodchallis8031
      @rodchallis8031 Місяць тому +25

      My thoughts went to Diana too.

  • @vixky89
    @vixky89 25 днів тому +2

    As someone who was diagnosed with Autoimmune Autonomic Ganglionopathy in 2016, I have never accidentally come across a video that brings up the connection between catching viruses and developing dysautonomia (like Long Covid). Thank you for bringing more light onto the subject, it's sorely needed.

  • @Zer0Cat0
    @Zer0Cat0 24 дні тому +3

    As someone struggling with symptoms similar to POTS, Dysautomnia, Dysphasia, PEM, issues with flashing lights, tremors, and even somewhat EL (to a degree of course) ever since I got COVID last year, I appreciate the added insight and all the information from the video. Thanks for speaking about Long Covid.

  • @heatherrhodge2588
    @heatherrhodge2588 Місяць тому +202

    I related so much to this. I've been more or less bedridden for 12yrs. I just turned 40 & havnt had a life since 27.
    Not only do I suffer from debilitating physical fatigue, but also mental fatigue. My exhaustion prevents me from being able to even type comments like this (sometimes I'm able to push thru, but it takes so much out of me, I usually can't finish & have extreme difficulty putting words 2 thoughts.)
    In my opinion, this is the worst illness a person could experience. Others cannot relate in the slightest & assume it's just laziness, even Drs!
    When my body/mind has allowed, I've researched my symptoms over the yrs. I used to think it had to be Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. I haven't ruled that out, but a yr or so ago I learned of a condition called Chronic inflammatory response syndrome. Based off of so many similarities (published in research studies) I'm convinced these illnesses could very well be one in the same.
    There are actual biomarker tests to diagnose CIRS, but the vast majority of the medical community has no knowledge of the condition & (from my experience) refuse to look into it (despite there being published studies spanning back to the early 90s).
    There's also a treatment protocol by Dr Shoemaker(the person who actually figured out what was going on down to the proteomic level. (I.e. the production of certain proteins).
    I'm very much aware of everything going on around me, yet my body doesn't allow me to function. It's so depressing, it's beyond explanation. I WANT nothing more than to be able to get up and live normally, but I'm unable to even do my own grocery shopping or play with my child. Heck, I barely can make it to the bathroom!
    I can't get disability since no Drs care to help. There are a FEW Drs in the USA knowledgeable of CIRS & certified 2 manage it, but they're practically all integrative medicine Drs (who spend time with patients, making it financially unfeasible for them to accept health insurance, since it's based on quantity over quality!) And as said, I have NO income, & can't even buy essentials, much less pay a Dr.
    I spent so many yrs continuing to hold onto hope. But ive gradually gotten worse & worse. Currently I'm unable to even stand without feeling like I'm gonna black out & my body is forced to lay down all the time! I've missed recent Dr appts n dnt kno how I'm gna manage actually making it to a Dr. This is absolute hell!
    Thx 4 bringing awareness that this type of suffering is still being experienced.

    • @empathopinion6251
      @empathopinion6251 Місяць тому +19

      I'm so sorry! I don't have CIRS but I can relate to almost everything you've shared. The only reason I'm alive today is because I got Disability, but getting approved took 19 years. (to be fair, it took 15 years to diagnose ME and 3 to get Disability, in which I went bankrupt paying out-of-pocket doctors to prove my case since regular MDs have no training.) I can't tell you how to go through the Disability process, but I hope you can find a support system in which to get you through it. It was a nightmare for me, and I now have PTSD from the doctors and the process, but it's the only reason I've survived. Good luck.

    • @ununhexium
      @ununhexium Місяць тому +39

      @@billb.950 what? what is wrong with you?

    • @jani7166
      @jani7166 Місяць тому +14

      I know what your talking about.I have mitochondrial disease,fibromyalgia. Extreme exhaustion. Very rare leave my home. 10 times a year. Pain in bones and nerve spasms. Just want energy to get back to living. Wish you very best in your future.

    • @Wesenskern
      @Wesenskern Місяць тому +9

      So very sorry to read what's going on for you. I had some sort of major fatigue, too, could not go to work, to Drs or grocery shopping, but recovered after a few years. It was hell and back. Life isn't fair. Praying for a little miracle for those of you who want it. Much love. ❤

    • @cathymadsen2930
      @cathymadsen2930 Місяць тому +15

      I got a virus 16 yrs ago from a lady that came into work coughing and spluttering. I caught it and never recovered. This story is an example of stay home when sick... she had quarantined in her office but everyone got it.
      I got so sick and after 2 months had to leave my job. They thought I had Ross River fever, Dengue, and many other viruses but all were negative.
      I was diagnosed with chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia.... then they threw on serum negative arthritis and gave me 30 pills a day. I felt slightly better but always sore and sick.
      I managed to get a good job in a hospital and started studying to be a scientist. Then I crashed, had debilitating migraines, vocal chord dysfunction, peripheral neuropathy, POTS, and fatigue. I had so many blood tests, and finally, after a lumbar puncture was diagnosed with Monocolonial Gamopathy of Undertermined Significance, MGUS.
      Turns out a rare side effect is all of those symptoms, an M Spike protein multiplying in my bone marrow, coating my nerves in my body, and reducing their ability to work.
      I had plasma exchange for 4 years, which changed my life, but now it's developed into multiple myeloma, and I'm heading for stem cell treatment.
      Chronic fatigue and fibro are not medical conditions, they are symptoms of an illness and sometimes those illness are rare and difficult to find.
      I can list 10 nerve conditions they tested for, MS, CIPD, and CIRS are just to start.
      An easy start for most people will be to ask for serum electrophoresis blood test to see if you have an M spike protein problem.
      I have started a carnivore diet to reduce inflammation while I wait for the stem cell option to become a reasonable option, and after 2 weeks, I'm happy to report a 50% improvement and 4kg loss of fluid/weight. Well worth other people in the same situation to look into it.

  • @dougms9790
    @dougms9790 Місяць тому +151

    In the fall of 1959 I spent more and more of my day asleep, until one day I started sleeping 24 hours a day. I then spent the next 10 days in an EL coma with a fever. On the 10th day I woke up, totally fine and coherent. My MD had a spinal tap performed and said he suspected mosquito borne virus.

    • @alexiiconner
      @alexiiconner Місяць тому +10

      what was life like back then? sometimes i wish i experienced more no-internet times

    • @ericf7063
      @ericf7063 Місяць тому +50

      @@alexiiconner
      I was from '63. Libraries and the dewy decimal system were the thing if you needed information on anything. Phone numbers were still like Xenith 4245 instead of like they are now. And every house phone on the street went up or down sequentially, so everybody knew everybody's number. Also, party lines were still a thing. If you were in school and had to call your parents, you'd better have a good reason or else the secretary wouldn't let you. If you were expecting an important call and had to leave, better make sure people know where you're going so they could try getting hold of you there. Drive-in movies were fun. In movie theaters, they had songs that everyone would sing following the bouncing ball. Summers were like baloney sandwiches and riding your bike with friends all day until the streetlights came on. Polio and small pocks were still things to worry about. Duck and cover drills in case the Russians attacked us. Having a church key in the drawer was mandatory because not all canned beverages were pull tabbed and twist top bottles didn't exist yet.
      Hope this helped some.

    • @graysonmorrow7886
      @graysonmorrow7886 Місяць тому

      @@ericf7063thank you for sharing, a pleasure to read

    • @queenofdahouse1591
      @queenofdahouse1591 Місяць тому +1

      I was born in 1959

    • @frankmccann29
      @frankmccann29 Місяць тому +1

      ​@@alexiiconnerwe had to know what we were doing to screw it up this bad.

  • @ravencrovax
    @ravencrovax 20 днів тому +3

    As someone with narcolepsy, it is quite interesting seeing that COVID and other flu based diseases seem to be able to trigger EL, CFS, and even narcolepsy in some cases. I actually developed narcolepsy after getting a flu shot when I was in the army. It was the only time I had ever recieved a flu shot and the only reason I got it was because I was required to as part of the unit I was with. I regularly wonder if that had any effect on my narcolepsy.

  • @YanestraAgain
    @YanestraAgain Місяць тому +6

    The first ever video analysis on Encephalitis lethargica (quite lacking) I've viewed. Good work.

  • @anna9072
    @anna9072 Місяць тому +46

    My mother had a form of Parkinsonism. She didn’t have the hand tremors, but she had periods where she simply couldn’t move. Fortunately, dopamine helped. But one thing I recall is that at some point we were told that an early sign of incipient Parkinsonism that is frequently overlooked is the loss of the sense of smell.

  • @sarahleavengood853
    @sarahleavengood853 Місяць тому +171

    I have fibromyalgia which is a chronic fatigue and pain syndrome, long-covid friends, I see you, your difficulties both physically and mentally are totally valid. Everyone should advocate for the disabled. It is only a matter of time before you or someone you love is disabled, help us and your future self now.

    • @Dark_Harmony
      @Dark_Harmony Місяць тому +13

      I have some fibro & a lot of chronic fatigue, which has gotten worse since Covid. I don't have anyone to help me. My Medicaid won't pay to have someone help me with some domestic chores around my apt, because, it's not medical. How is it not medical?! My physical disabilities are why I need help cleaning in my apt!

    • @mysmirandam.6618
      @mysmirandam.6618 Місяць тому +6

      I have fibro as well. I am un so much pain

    • @coronalight77
      @coronalight77 Місяць тому +2

      Try MS.

    • @sofri4451
      @sofri4451 Місяць тому +2

      That's what these vid's are for. Connect the dots.

    • @charlottecoolik9872
      @charlottecoolik9872 Місяць тому +1

      I have fibromyalgia as well and some other things and it's hard it really is it's like we have to choose what's the most important thing for each day and get those things done and anything else is gravy but just pace yourself and rest when you need to and I eat cloves in the morning which help inflammation cuz I have arthritis from Lymes Disease but I also do smoothies in the morning and eat a lot of fresh ginger and vegetables from the farmers market and it really makes a difference because we are what we eat

  • @jonahmoore2941
    @jonahmoore2941 24 дні тому +3

    I am struck by the compassion in your delivery. I immediately subscribed.

  • @raindancer6111
    @raindancer6111 29 днів тому +2

    My uncle got this as a child. He was "frozen" periodically. He was somewhat disabled when awake, he could walk and run with an odd gait. He was certified by doctors but my grandparents kept him at home. He could be prone to tantrums mainly from frustrations with his limitations. Physically he was very strong as a young man and could easily just swat someone away to the other side of the room. He survived until his late forties, passing away around 1958.
    As a side note, my father, the younger of the two contracted rheumatic fever as a child.

  • @familyfulkerson3257
    @familyfulkerson3257 Місяць тому +273

    Robin williams movie, awakenings. Great movie.

    • @milesteg8183
      @milesteg8183 Місяць тому +27

      Hard watch to this day. Beautifully tragic.

    • @familyfulkerson3257
      @familyfulkerson3257 Місяць тому +10

      @@milesteg8183 Agreed, I have a mental illness with some similarities. Making that film hit home hard. I still have my mental faculties and mourn for those who don't.

    • @joshschleininger8888
      @joshschleininger8888 Місяць тому +5

      Coincidentally I Totally watched this on Saturday it’s on Hulu 😂

    • @davidmacphee3549
      @davidmacphee3549 Місяць тому

      @@joshschleininger8888 And Disney +

    • @paulmichaelfreedman8334
      @paulmichaelfreedman8334 Місяць тому +24

      And don't forget Bob de Niro as the patient!

  • @pjsisseck915
    @pjsisseck915 Місяць тому +56

    Blood test back in 62 or 63 showed I carried antibodies to Equine Encephalitis, and still did six years later. I was part of 2000 samples taken in my school district in Central Washington. Of those 2000 samples, eleven showed antibodies. My brother, two kids from a family that bought raw milk from our farm, and a kid who would have eaten at the church potlucks (Mom usually made strawberry shortcake with real whipped cream). Anyway, I now have Fibromyalgia, as do three of my siblings. We did have plenty of mosquitos...

    • @etsprout
      @etsprout Місяць тому +5

      That is absolutely fascinating. I’m sorry about your fibromyalgia though! 😢

  • @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst
    @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst 29 днів тому +11

    I've got long covid, my PCP, my pain care Doctor and my Naturopath say my brain fog, lack of energy, balance issues are all related to fibromyalgia, which I've had for about 12 years. These symptoms became very apparent after I recovered from covid, but nobody listens to me. Argh! It's so frustrating.
    Also, new subscriber 👋🏼

    • @michellebaker6302
      @michellebaker6302 21 день тому +1

      Have you had your intracranial pressure tested?

    • @FaithOriginalisme
      @FaithOriginalisme 11 днів тому +1

      it's because the health system uses fibromyalgia as a waste basket diagnosis. if you have enough of the symptoms and they don't know what's wrong, they'll often just give you that label and send you on your way. I am in no way saying you don't have fibro, but this is why lots of the health care system doesn't take it seriously

    • @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst
      @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst 9 днів тому

      @@michellebaker6302 I've never heard of that. I'll see what my doctor says. I'm in Canada and our healthcare system is a mess. Just because it's universal health care doesn't make it good, especially in the Niagara Region 🇨🇦

    • @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst
      @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst 9 днів тому +1

      @@FaithOriginalisme I probably do have fibromyalgia, I've had symptoms for years but nothing like what's been happening to me since I've had COVID. I can barely get out of bed, the dishes are piling up because I don't have the energy to do them and now I've got severe balance issues and I have frequent falls. My Doctor just brushes it off. I can't get a new Doctor either because no doctors are taking patients who take an opioid (even if medically warranted) or a benzodiazepine. Unfortunately I take both. I'll be pushing my Doctor for answers. Hope he'll listen.

    • @FaithOriginalisme
      @FaithOriginalisme 9 днів тому

      @@JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst my best friend saved herself by studying and reading studies. She started with no knowledge while stuck in bed. It took her many tries while she was so sick. But little by little, she learned.
      Perhaps, you could try a bit of that and go to your doctor with studies in hand. I know I couldn't do what she did, but I have learned to research and my doctor is much more likely to listen

  • @teddlemmon2599
    @teddlemmon2599 Місяць тому +2

    Thank you for your great service. It was very informative.

  • @Farasha210
    @Farasha210 Місяць тому +81

    When I was a kid in the ‘50s, my grandmother was always always afraid we would get encephalitis from mosquito bites. So maybe back in the ‘20s, people thought mosquitoes caused it?

    • @Farasha210
      @Farasha210 Місяць тому +19

      @Nulli_Di Hmmm…. My great-great-great grandfather died of “ague” in December 1842 that he contracted while helping to drain the swamps of Nauvoo, IL. Maybe her fear was from historical family trauma. Oooo…. Such a rabbit hole!

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod Місяць тому

      Eastern Equine Encephalitis is a real disease that can infect humans. It's also called "Sleeping Sickness" and is caused by _Togavirus_ that is spread by mosquitos in the Americas. There are other variants as well.

    • @rivitraven
      @rivitraven Місяць тому

      Malaria would t cause it but there are so many diseases that mosquitos carry that there is a disease that can lead to encephalitis from mosquito bites. In this situation though, it's generally in Asia than elsewhere.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 Місяць тому

      Where I live, ticks spread meningo-encephalitis, and that´s real and SUPERBAD. Luckily, there is a vaccine. Because, boy, are there many ticks in some years. They also carry Borreliosis, though. Huge pITA, but at least curable.

  • @ProgressiveRoxx
    @ProgressiveRoxx Місяць тому +188

    I recently saw the Netflix version of Neil Gaiman's Sandman comic that features a "sleeping sickness" in the early 1900's that lasted for decades. I had no idea it was based on a real condition! I guess that is what happens when you trap the Lord of Dreams.

    • @matthewdove5528
      @matthewdove5528 Місяць тому +22

      Referencing "The Sandman" gets your comment a thumbs up, my friend! Have A Nice Day!

    • @davidmacphee3549
      @davidmacphee3549 Місяць тому

      Was "The Sandman" originally created by the Great Jack (King) Kirby?
      Even the Great Curt Swan admired him a lot. Kirby was so amazing.
      Curt told me that himself when I met him. (Wow)!

    • @GhostRydr1172
      @GhostRydr1172 Місяць тому

      ​@@davidmacphee3549that version of the Sandman was created by writer Neil Gaiman and artist Sam Kieth.

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Місяць тому +3

      Was it any good? I kinda forgot about that show until now, Netflix blue balled us with it in their new release "worth the wait" section for like a year and then barely mentioned when it finally came out

    • @GhostRydr1172
      @GhostRydr1172 Місяць тому +7

      @@arthas640 it was pretty good and faithful to the source material. Production of S2 got delayed because of the strikes last year.

  • @nik09865
    @nik09865 20 днів тому

    Love your stuff! I'm a neurophysiologist where part of my dissertation research is on NMDAR function, so it was exciting to hear you talk about them. They're wildly interesting receptors because while they are very prominent in diseases, they're also crucial for the "fire together, wire together" type of plasticity!

  • @PunmasterSTP
    @PunmasterSTP 6 днів тому +1

    I had no idea, or else had completely forgotten, that encephalitis lethargica even existed. This video was sad, but also mind-blowing.

  • @jarrett8042
    @jarrett8042 Місяць тому +111

    Shoutout to the study that suggested long covid was due to the epigenetic changes. They noticed a number of genes that were turned on during the bodies battle with covid that subsequently didn't return to their dormant state after the body got rid of the virus. Bodies being stuck in fighting mode against an enemy that it's already beaten essentially.

    • @tillerbrady6624
      @tillerbrady6624 Місяць тому +9

      Do you have a link to the study?

    • @NathanHigger
      @NathanHigger Місяць тому

      Long COVID = vaccine injury

    • @dottyjyoung
      @dottyjyoung Місяць тому +4

      Yeah, I'm gonna need to read this.

    • @RobertNowagarski
      @RobertNowagarski Місяць тому

      Couldn’t be the vaccine that was designed to change your dna could it?

    • @DesertSessions93
      @DesertSessions93 Місяць тому +1

      So... Immunity

  • @BlazeFox89
    @BlazeFox89 Місяць тому +169

    I'm still recovering from long swine flu 14-15 years later with a majority of the symptoms of long covid. Up until a few years ago we had no name to give this condition, all we knew is it was triggered during the swine flu infection. Several others I knew who contracted swine flu are still having nerve issues to this day, one was left in a wheelchair and one perfectly healthy person with no medical issues died. It was said on the news that only people with pre-existing conditions passed but I can confirm this is not true in at least one case (legally and medically confirmed). I myself received partial blindness in my right eye along with painful migraines, nausea, dizziness and other symptoms. I was bed ridden for 2 years and house ridden for a further 4. I pray that people take infections seriously in the future. It's sad to see friends currently suffering daily while risking loosing their jobs, homes and livelihoods over something that could have been prevented. Swine flu just didn't make enough impact at the time for people to remember

    • @goingslowlynowhere
      @goingslowlynowhere Місяць тому +7

      Hey! Same here! I am in the middle of a disability case due to the auto immune shit it started up in me. Not nice that you have it of course, but sort of "nice" to run into someone with a similar situation ^_^

    • @GoBlueGirl78
      @GoBlueGirl78 Місяць тому +9

      I’m so sorry to hear of your suffering. The H1N1 pandemic was awful, I was working in hospital and our ICU was full all winter, so many young people were sick and died, I had never seen anything like it in my life. And yet, like you said, it’s barely acknowledged. I hope you are healing. ❤

    • @laa4438
      @laa4438 Місяць тому +15

      I had something in 2013. I lost 60lb in a couple of months (10lb in 1 week)
      My personality changed, I had been very involved in a hobby for 20 years but suddenly had zero interest. Severe insomnia, mood swings and hemeplegic migraine.
      I was told it was in my head and was sent to therapy.
      It wasn't until 2 years later a neurologist off handedly said I had probably had a virus that affected my hypothalmus, but too late to do anything by then.

    • @goingslowlynowhere
      @goingslowlynowhere Місяць тому

      @@laa4438 The hypothalamus is a fickle little twat. If you have issues with temperature regulation, you MIGHT benefit from cold shower (Wim Hof has a lot of decent info, albeit a bit peculiar style). I got far less fevers after a month or so with those.

    • @spvillano
      @spvillano Місяць тому

      It was relatively recently discovered that the primary cause of death from the 1918 Spanish Influenza pandemic was damage from a cytokine storm - precisely what caused deaths from COVID. The virus invaded white blood cells, disabled by infecting those cells, so their response was blunted and basically when the immune system noticed the infection was unaddressed, went into scorched earth mode.
      The "stronger" the immune system, the worse the damage was. Preexisting conditions also made things worse.
      Had the Swine flu, it royally sucked and it took me six months to properly recover. Until then, I couldn't figure out how the flu could kill someone!
      During the April wave of COVID, before they had much figured out, I suddenly had trouble breathing. No other symptoms, but declining SPO2 (old military medic and still have my old pocket pulse oximeter and some other equipment that I personally bought), when it hit 85 and I was tripoding, my wife came outside (was out for the cool air, hoping it'd help me breathe) "Are you going to go to the doctor yet?!", my reply on seeing that 85 was, "fuck it, call 911". She didn't say a word, but went in and dialed 911.
      ED doctor said, "Well, I have good news, you don't have COVID". I replied that I was sure that it wasn't, all other symptoms being absent, so what was wrong?
      "Oh, a type of heart failure, due to a thyroid storm".
      "Oh! Thank God it's only heart failure - wait, did I just say those words?!"
      Doctor gave a badly needed belly laugh and said he understood.
      Was immediately admitted, as a thyroid storm can easily become fatal quickly, wheeled to my floor and to my horror, I saw beds staged in hallways and elevator lobbies, as well as rooms with containment precautions for COVID patients abounding. The rooms being occupied and containment didn't bother me, beds in elevator lobbies and hallways is a frigging hail Mary play.
      Thankfully, that never had to be implemented, the shutdowns helped blunt the worst. Admitted on a Saturday, was walking the halls in boredom by Wednesday and was discharged Thursday close to COB.
      Needless to say, I was even more attentive in masking when out and about getting necessities! My wife had so many checkboxes for preexisting conditions, that virus would've killed her.
      Ended up with COVID in August the following year, didn't know that I had it, as I had the shots and booster. It still damaged my mitral valve, I'd hate to think about what else would've gone sideways without the vaccine! Especially given my autoimmune disease already having my immune system on a hair trigger.
      Not taking stupid chances, as I only play stupid at meetings. Dad may have raised a dummy, but he didn't raise no damned fool!

  • @KY_CPA
    @KY_CPA 28 днів тому +3

    Awakenings was SUCH a good movie! RIP Robin Williams

  • @kennymorelandiii9406
    @kennymorelandiii9406 8 днів тому

    Holy hell this is fascinating. I had no clue about this and things like this is exactly why I love this channel. You do such a great job at explaining complicated topics in a simple way for everyone yet being extremely informative so it wouldn't be boring to those that have some knowledge about it. Just a perfect blend and you're a great narrator

  • @familyfulkerson3257
    @familyfulkerson3257 Місяць тому +225

    I have a bizarre condition that is like day one of having this condition. I have narrowed it down to either brain damage from a car wreck, or extreme adhd paralysis. Either way, I have been unable to get helpful care and it has basically taken my life away. Dopamine medications are the only thing that touch it, but the writing is on the wall. Its less effective as time goes on, and i do not currently have an rx. I spend days without leaving the bed, independent of mood or "willpower". If you are a Dr with any experience here, please contact me. I've recently given up after a 15yr investigation.

    • @ryantwombly720
      @ryantwombly720 Місяць тому +27

      I’ll issue a strong disclaimer that I am not qualified to dispense medical advice, but you might consider “caloric restriction” aka fasting. Extended fasts have been shown to have positive effects on neurological function. You might try intermittent fasting first and work your way up. Just be careful, take it slow, and trust what your body tells you.

    • @SuperMrHiggins
      @SuperMrHiggins Місяць тому +26

      Just posting to bump the thread. Best wishes.

    • @touka32able
      @touka32able Місяць тому +11

      Have you considered looking into the carnivore diet? It can help with neurological issues

    • @chrish3175
      @chrish3175 Місяць тому +13

      I hope someone sees this who can help you. Bump

    • @BallstinkBaron
      @BallstinkBaron Місяць тому +36

      I'm not going to recommend a specific diet because that's dumb, but if you haven't ruled out foods/substances yet it may work out. Gonna be difficult when you have trouble moving though

  • @becklyn3
    @becklyn3 Місяць тому +52

    I remember watching the awakening movie in 8th grade.....it greatly disturbed me. Being locked in your own body is such a nightmare for anyone to go through.

    • @kevmasengale6903
      @kevmasengale6903 Місяць тому +6

      I saw it on TV at some point, don't even know when or why.... Didn't know anything about it or what it was even called.
      It has stuck with me since I saw it. I had a feeling this video was about that when I read the title.

    • @Grimaldus1701
      @Grimaldus1701 Місяць тому +1

      same here, starred the great Robin Williams in a completely serious role, good movie if anyone hasn't seen it!

  • @UnKnown-xs7jt
    @UnKnown-xs7jt Місяць тому +1

    Thanks 4 this presentation !
    I learned useful information

  • @extraincomesuz
    @extraincomesuz 22 дні тому +1

    I had long Covid symptoms of joint aches and mental fog, so much so, that I stopped exercising and had severe sciatica causing me to lie down in the car when a drive was over 30 minutes. However, about a year ago, when I turned 60, I started pushing myself into walking 7k steps a day, even while my left hip and leg screamed in pain. But, the more I worked, the better I felt. Then 6 months ago, I started doing cardio videos Grow with Jo on UA-cam every day. The consistent exercise took away the sciatica and Covid symptoms. I also lost 10 kilos and the aches and brain fog went away. I started doing cardio weight training recently, to drop more weight. I have 10 more kilos to get slim. I feel great now and often feel "the runner's high" when I workout. I hardly skip a day of exercise and often walk and do a video on the same day. I also increased my protein and fiber intake. You are what you eat and you must keep moving.😊

  • @BrandonFox720
    @BrandonFox720 Місяць тому +23

    I really appreciated this video Joe. I am a long covid sufferer with quite a few neurological effects that the doctors still haven't been able to figure out. Over 2 years ago I had my covid infection which was fairly mild for me, but 6 months later I began to have some strange neurological effects starting in the left side of my body. Over the course of time it spread from my left leg up to my left arm then into my face, then right arm right leg and then the rest of my body.
    Muscle twitches were the first symptom, then cramps and spasms, burning pains, tingling and dystonia. Eventually I developed dead spots where I have no nerve sensation at all, mild hand atrophy, and joint issues that have led to dislocations. My body aches all of the time, I struggle with fatigue, and have issues with my autonomic nervous system and balance problems.
    I walk slower than I used to with an observable limp, and my physical strength is down in some places by 50% from where it used to be.
    But I don't let it stop me. I still live a full life as much as I can. I may be in a lot of pain, but I'm stubborn. And I still go and hike and explore and adventure as much as my body will allow.
    2 years on and many medical tests later, the doctors still don't know what's wrong with me. But the theory of a covid caused autoimmune condition has been floated, but with no positive ANA, it's hard to get approval for further tests.
    Like many of these people, I'm now in limbo. Nobody really knows what to call it. For now, it's just been generally diagnosed as fibromyalgia and small fiber neuropathy, with likely more that will become clear as time goes on.
    Sorry for the long comment, but this video really hit close to home. Covid upended my life, and led to quite a few scary moments waiting for test results for very serious and fatal diseases to come back. But no real answers yet.

    • @johnnybravo9096
      @johnnybravo9096 Місяць тому

      Did you get vaccinated?

    • @rosetealatte9282
      @rosetealatte9282 Місяць тому +1

      Please research Chronic Regional Pain Syndrome. A loved one had it. Extremely debilitating. If the symptoms match, INSIST that you see a specialist. It could save your life (as in living it the way you want to.) Physio helped my loved one. It is 'somewhat' neurological as it can be worsened with a poor mental state. I really hope you find the answers you are looking for.

    • @chasethecat3839
      @chasethecat3839 Місяць тому +1

      The neuro is from the vaccines. My mom's had the exact same but never had Covid just vaccinated. Dr Campbell on yt explains the neuro and has guests who tell their experiences

  • @orange-micro-fiber9740
    @orange-micro-fiber9740 Місяць тому +301

    Shout out to Physics Girl, Diana, still suffering Long Covid.

    • @shoveI
      @shoveI Місяць тому +20

      Hardtail Party (here on youtube) has a milder version of the same, which has made it impossible for him to effectively demo mountain bikes. My wife is somewhere between those two but she's not a youtuber. I hope for everyone's sake a solution is found immediately if not sooner.

    • @TheVerendus
      @TheVerendus Місяць тому +7

      This is what I thought of too when he mentioned the flu and these fatigue symptoms. There is definitely some link between the flu, sleeping sickness, and the immune system that causes these complications.

    • @ephemera2
      @ephemera2 Місяць тому +2

      Somebody tell her to wear nicotine patch for 6-7 and, it'll go away

    • @jennifermcmillan9518
      @jennifermcmillan9518 Місяць тому +1

      I LOVE HER!

    • @JerseyMiller
      @JerseyMiller Місяць тому +6

      Everyone I know who got long covid took the jab

  • @CeleWolf
    @CeleWolf 3 дні тому +2

    You talk about long covid but people forget that M.E and Fibromyalgia have been around for a long time and the symptoms are made to sound far far more trivial than they are. Those of us in those communities are hoping that long covid helps research into M.E, CFS, Fibromyalgia for once. We have been here suffering and are still here suffering.

  • @Jaydaydesign
    @Jaydaydesign Місяць тому +2

    I have fibromyalgia post contracting scarlet fever with secondary cellulitis infection at age 8. At age 54 in 2020 I developed transverse myelitis 9 weeks post an influenza vaccination. Subsequently became a quadriplegic within 12 hours of onset of first symptoms. The neurology team were monitoring me for the sleeping sickness condition at the time as part of confirming diagnosis. A lot of the niggling illnesses and neuro symptoms that presented in the lead up to me being hospitalised and post diagnosis had them all scratching their heads.
    This was a very interesting doco.

  • @lacyclairewhitten4991
    @lacyclairewhitten4991 Місяць тому +28

    One thing I find interesting is that narcolepsy also has this type of correlation to epidemics and pandemics. There was an uptick in cases after the Swine Flu of 2009. Not a scientist by any means, just did some of my own researching when I was getting tested for and diagnosed with narcolepsy a few years back, so take this with a grain of salt. But yeah from what I read, some researchers suggest it could be an autoimmune disorder that attacks certain areas of the brain controlling sleep cycles. It's scary how little we really know about the lasting effects of some viruses.

    • @empathopinion6251
      @empathopinion6251 Місяць тому

      Narcolepsy can correlate to epidemics? fascinating.
      Agree on the lack of science on autoimmune and brain disorders - also gut, since the immune system is 90% located in the gut. I recently learned serotonin largely resides in the gut too, not the brain. The brain-gut relationship is only just beginning to be studied. Oh well, I'll be dead before science find answers to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Wishing I could donate my brain tissue to help with evidence!

  • @Nico-ch9ul
    @Nico-ch9ul Місяць тому +92

    My gf has long covid and from the research ive read there are many overlaps with ME/CFS. Its a shame bc many governments are cutting funding for long covid research and watching my gf (who studied physics before getting sick) struggle with taking a shower or get dressed is really tough. I hope we do find a cure or at least some way to reduce the fatigue and dizzyness so we can all resume our normal lives...

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Місяць тому

      The USA is still funding Long Covid research. A year ago the NIH reported pouring $1 billion into Long Covid research projects, down from $1.15 billion in 2021. Two months ago NIH putting another $515 million into research.
      You might be interested in the MedCram videos about sunlight and near-IR for treatment of COVID and possible treatment of Long Covid. It appears the light affects mitochondrial function directly... we can hope.
      As for the actual day by day suffering, I have no words for the bleak outlook at this time. I can only wish her luck because there is not much else right now.

    • @Glipsnarp
      @Glipsnarp Місяць тому +8

      Did she get vaccinated?

    • @jjets8775
      @jjets8775 Місяць тому

      Dr Pierre Kory says most long covid is actually long covid vax

    • @Nico-ch9ul
      @Nico-ch9ul Місяць тому +14

      @Glipsnarp I don't see why that information is relevant, long covid affects both people who were and weren't vaccinated. I think it's easy to blame something on whether was vaccinated or not, bc if I say she is then she got it bc of the vaccine and if she isn't then she got it bc of the vaccine...

    • @Glipsnarp
      @Glipsnarp Місяць тому

      @@Nico-ch9ul well the people who suffer from long covid are the ones who took the vaccine.
      Every single person who I met who suffers some sort of long term symptoms, have been vaccinated.
      The folks who didn't take it all got over covid in a few days and never got sick again. No symptoms after.
      I understand you have been tricked into believing there was a solution, but its okay to admit you were wrong.

  • @MoonLitChild
    @MoonLitChild 9 днів тому +1

    I developed fibromyalgia after getting really, really sick visiting a friend, and after four years of dodging it, caught Covid very early this year. The most surreal thing about having both was *feeling* the blood/brain barrier being crossed by the Covid. Like, physically feeling it. Absolutely bizarre. Very hard to describe other than it feeling like my skull was shrinking or that there some sort of vacuum-sealer being applied to my head. It's a shame that so few of my doctors actually believe that's what I was feeling but it was so different from a normal fibro flare.

  • @GenieBee
    @GenieBee Місяць тому

    This came across my recommendations while watching Sandman on Netflix for the 50th time.
    I've been meaning to learn more about this.
    Much appreciated!

  • @MadameCirce
    @MadameCirce Місяць тому +17

    My grandmother's brother suffered from the recoverable-with-Parkinsonism version of this (she always just called it "sleeping sickness and Parkinson's") and then later passed away from Lou Gehrig's disease. Long before I was born, of course. Poor guy definitely got a raw deal.

  • @SandyDiVa
    @SandyDiVa Місяць тому +95

    I don’t have long covid but i am bed ridden from Hyperadrenergic postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. One day my body said…nope i cannot tolerate gravity.
    My nervous system broke from ovarian cancer or the surgery to cure it. There is no treatment, no cure, and no one seems to care about curing it because only .2% of the us population is disabled by it…its not profitable. Well…until long covid. A lot of those patients are getting diagnosed with my condition. My only hope is that long covid brings breakthroughs into finding out how to fix my body. It just seems like they give up on nervous system disorders because they are too hard to figure out. But it really does come down to, if we research this, how much money can we make. So i lay in bed, can get up for 10-60 min, and run back to bed to feel better again. Im going on 8 years of living this way, watching the world pass me by, losing friends and family because i cant get to them (since i lost my car, i can still drive). My world is online now, its the only thing that keeps me going.

    • @dogsaregods6748
      @dogsaregods6748 Місяць тому +7

      I really hope you recover ❤ ( have you tried Taurine or PEA supplements ?)

    • @TheLittlestViking
      @TheLittlestViking Місяць тому +20

      @@dogsaregods6748 from a disabled person's perspective, this is so goddamned infuriating. Just don't ask. Assume they've tried everything. This is the modern version of "but have you done Pilates?"

    • @empathopinion6251
      @empathopinion6251 Місяць тому +5

      I'm so, so sorry. I don't have POTS but I know fellow ME folks on zoom who do. It seems like one of the most limiting illnesses/symptoms. Once when I complained to my brother who is in biotech that ME gets almost no funding, he said, "There's no money in it." that response was heartbreaking.
      We are all praying that Long Covid, since it's getting lots of funding dollars, will achieve some useful research that could be applied to the constellation of similar illnesses that are being ignored.

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie Місяць тому

      ​@@dogsaregods6748having a disability doesn't mean people can't parrot ability bullshit

    • @aazhie
      @aazhie Місяць тому

      I hope you can be helped by something soon, it's the one upside of such a shocking pandemic, a lot of folks who were previously unrecognized may get some help and funding. I do hope you can get a breakthrough

  • @theneighborhood2280
    @theneighborhood2280 Місяць тому

    Great program, very informative, nice presentation - in other words, well done.

  • @scottlawson9206
    @scottlawson9206 9 днів тому

    Joe, you always have fascinating material, and excellent presentation. 👍👍

  • @larrywoolford8978
    @larrywoolford8978 Місяць тому +27

    I was very close to my great grandmother who was born in 1899 , and we used to have great conversations about her life and experiences,and I remember one conversation about the Spanish Flu epidemic and also the “sleeping sickness” that followed the flu epidemic. The one thing that stuck with me is how the threat of the sleeping sickness terrified people because you were basically conscious and stuck in a body that didn’t work anymore ( kind of like ALS ) . The thing that really frightened people was unlike the Spanish Flu , which people understood,the sleeping sickness was seemingly random and no one knew what caused it or how it could be contracted . A common belief where she lived at the time was it was spread by mosquitoes because apparently there was a tropical disease with similar symptoms- I have no idea how valid this thought was and neither did my grandmother.

    • @ritadyer9295
      @ritadyer9295 Місяць тому +2

      Wish I’d had sense enough to talk to my grandma about history. She was born in 1900 and would have been full of interesting things to know!

  • @Enn-
    @Enn- Місяць тому +17

    Joe, I've had ME/CFS since 2012, after a viral lung infection. I think post viral illness has been dismissed for a long, long time. My hope is that with so many suffering after COVID infection, that medical science will make some progress on treating post viral illnesses. Thanks for another great video!

  • @Flymochairman1
    @Flymochairman1 17 днів тому

    Thank you for the best wishes. I'm overwhelmed by the kind regards from so many people suffering the way I do and I wish you all the very best of what you can get from life and God Bless you all. With Love and Regards. Cheers!

  • @whirledpeas3477
    @whirledpeas3477 Місяць тому +1

    I remember years ago saying, Joe deserves million subscribers. Well done

  • @larrymccandless8723
    @larrymccandless8723 Місяць тому +26

    I had an old family member that was born in 1889 and moved from Nacogdoches, Tx -> Rule, Tx in 1914. IN A COVERED WAGON...
    She lived until early 1998 and lived through both World Wars, cars, the invention of the airplane, rockets, satellites, a man on the freakn MOON.
    What changes would have to take place for us to live through that kind of change???

    • @andrasbiro3007
      @andrasbiro3007 Місяць тому

      You'll know soon. Similar big changes are knocking on the door right now. Like AI, robots, radical life extension, mainstream gene editing, curing all diseases (including cancer), large scale space colonization, lab grown food, and more.
      The greatest impact will be AI and robots. That's going to be the biggest change in human history, and it's already in progress. In 5 years most or all white-collar jobs will be automated, and 5-10 years later blue-collar jobs too. Unemployment will start to increase soon, and accelerate until hitting 100% sometime in the next decade.
      If we manage the transition well, we'll enter a post-scarcity and post-labor world. It's like every human on the planet becoming a billionaire. Money will lose meaning. We'll have to radically re-imagine society. I think the US will have the hardest time, because American culture revolves around money, work, and self-reliance.
      Well, that's the optimistic version. There are many ways this can go horribly wrong, including human extinction. But one thing I can guarantee, the next few decades will not be boring.

    • @jayceewedmak9524
      @jayceewedmak9524 Місяць тому +5

      My grandparents were born between 1898 and 1903 - died late 1980's - early 1990's. Great grandparents (who I remember !) were born 1870 and 1880 - died 1960's. How much their lives changed is unbelievable today.

    • @User31129
      @User31129 Місяць тому +3

      Wow, 1889. Jeez. My great grandmother lived from 1917 to 2012. She was in middle school when the Great Depression hit. And get this, she traveled of course, but lived that entire 95 years within the same tight radius of an area. Was the #1 most senior member of her synagogue at her death.

    • @TheLittlestViking
      @TheLittlestViking Місяць тому +2

      Yeah, I remember my great-grandmother on my father's side. She was born in a covered wagon as it crossed the US, and was fed from an eye dropper because of issues with her mother's milk coming in. MADNESS.

    • @sokjeong-ho7033
      @sokjeong-ho7033 Місяць тому +2

      I know of someone else who was born in 1889. He died in the mid 40's though.

  • @cynvision
    @cynvision Місяць тому +28

    I didn't think I lost taste or taste smells with COVID, nothing tasted lastingly burnt or soapy, but lately I've been more aware of ambient enviromental smells. Like sometimes my noseblindness wears off? Hits me at the oddest times I think I smell an odor and wonder where it's from. It's also been a big spring tree allergy symptom year for me.

    • @louisechantellejohns
      @louisechantellejohns Місяць тому +2

      The problem being that loss of a sense of smell is a known disorder going back over 100yrs, which unsurprisingly leads to a loss of taste. Smelling odd smells like burning, cats urine etc can be caused by many neurological states including tumors, pituitary gland issues and strokes. Its not just a post viral issue, yet it can be caused by the common cold.

  • @user-mx7qp9ls3o
    @user-mx7qp9ls3o Місяць тому

    I dont watch UA-cam all that much anymore, i used to watch you a lot before glad you are still doing good!

  • @lindafoltz1627
    @lindafoltz1627 Місяць тому +1

    Nice to find a thinking person's channel. I'm always interested in movies based on real events ie: Awakenings. I've watched oodles of times. It always makes me cry. Anyway, looking forward to watching more of your videos. Be well.

  • @robw2379
    @robw2379 Місяць тому +115

    "There may be a link between Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Long COVID".
    ... This is an active area of research for medical researchers. As a CFS patient, I was recruited to participate in some neurological research. The subject group had three pools: CFS patients, Long COVID patients, and healthy control subjects. FMRI and blood sampling was being used to study similarities and differences in neurological responses.
    As I understand it, the study I was participating in was just one of many avenues of research. When I told my niece about the study she said: "so you had long COVID before long COVID was cool." Pretty funny.

    • @Reiman33
      @Reiman33 Місяць тому +2

      Federal agent.

    • @lesliehyde
      @lesliehyde Місяць тому +4

      I developed symptoms of cfs/me soon after having surgery on my right wrist in November '22 (carpal tunnel release) with extreme fatigue, dizziness, confusion (brain fog), increased generalized pain and sore throat along with worsening of my orthostatic intolerance (I've had a diagnosis of dysautonomia since 2012) after excertion of any kind (post exertional malaise). All of these symptoms that I developed worsened after having my second surgery on my left wrist (April '23) (carpal tunnel release and ulnar nerve decompression).
      I got lucky as I have a neurologist who has a good understanding of cfs/me and I was diagnosed with it in July '23.
      I then got a new sleep medicine provider who happens to be a ENT surgeon. I've found that I would get about a 3% reduction of the symptoms after getting lidocaine spray to numb my throat so that he could scope my upper airway, so he ended up scripting me for injectable lidocaine (2% with no epinephrine) as it's sterile for me to nebulize it to help with reducing the symptoms. Lidocaine tastes fing nasty as frick, but the tiny reduction of the symptoms makes it worthwhile. My neurologist and ENT provider thinks that by reducing the sore throat that I get after exerting myself helps with the reduction of overall post exertional malaise episodes length time wise. So far, this seems to be true (reducing the triggered pain from post exertional malaise episodes which is causing further exertion on my body helps to reduce the time frame that I'm in a post exertional malaise episode). I don't understand it and neither do my providers, but we are not willing to question what seems to be helping.

    • @freyathewolf4909
      @freyathewolf4909 Місяць тому +7

      I got CFS/ME from mono in January 2020. Truly ahead of my time. I'm lucky that it's pretty mild and improves when I take stimulant medication (ADHD meds) but when I forget to take my medication I'm basically only slightly better than bedridden all day.

    • @woy8
      @woy8 Місяць тому

      well, as long as they take the vaccin status into account, I'm all for it. also for the people that have this, look into dr Sarno's work, I believe a lot of it is psychosomatic and can be healed (not all of course), but if you have emotional issues/stress etc then that is likely.

    • @usainengland
      @usainengland Місяць тому +24

      @@woy8​​⁠​​⁠The problem is that “psychosomatic illness” shuts down the conversation and is very patronising. I developed fibromyalgia in 2003 after falling down in the shower. My ribs were so inflamed that it hurt to breathe. I was denied help because, “It’s all in your head.” Meanwhile my shrink became so infuriated at her colleagues, she asked me to refer anyone saying “psychosomatic” to her. Systems within women’s bodies are particularly poorly understood. Endocrine, immune, lymphatic and reproductive systems of women are not copies men’s. Most chronic illnesses have physical, not mental, origins. Just because the physical origin is unknown does NOT mean that it is mental. Everyone should do what she thinks is best. This Dr. Sarno has probably helped many people. Good for him. But theorising that most chronic pains are most likely psychological is just BAD medicine.

  • @YasuTaniina
    @YasuTaniina Місяць тому +17

    My brother has long covid. He can still work full time, but he's frequently exhausted. My mom and I are chronically ill unrelated to covid. I have POTS. Should have been diagnosed in 2016, though I have mild symptoms years earlier. My mom got sick in her early 20's and has never had a diagnosis, too much medical gaslighting, but its likely also a form of dysautonomia.

  • @HuntBobo
    @HuntBobo Місяць тому +1

    Well said. This was my first Joe Scott video.

  • @missyfaulker3797
    @missyfaulker3797 17 днів тому

    Thank you for the information!

  • @vasimir3183
    @vasimir3183 Місяць тому +55

    Thanks for mentioning Long Covid 🙏 Post-viral illness has long been ignored as ME/CFS patients are well aware. People are still getting disabled by this virus, one of my friends got it this winter and hasn't been able to get out of bed let alone even use a phone to text me and stay in contact. It's scary

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Місяць тому +11

      Ive had it for 3 years - its has utterly destroyed my life. It is exhaustion on a MOLECULAR level that I can not describe.
      Its like your iPhone when the battery is warn out - it changes fully, then 2 hours later it just dies. One second its working then black screen. I dont expect people to understand cos there is no way I could have understood it if I didn't have it.

    • @Jesingtoan
      @Jesingtoan Місяць тому

      Just wondering did y'all get vaxed​@@piccalillipit9211

    • @freyathewolf4909
      @freyathewolf4909 Місяць тому +3

      ​@@piccalillipit9211that is a perfect description of how I feel. ME/CFS from a mono infection in January 2020 here.

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Місяць тому

      @@freyathewolf4909Im sorry -= I KNOW what you are going through. I was 5'8" 200lb of muscle at the gym 6 days a week, ran 3 miles a day with my dog halfway through writing a book on new training routines - I no longer walk with a stick - which is GREAT, but I did for 2 years. I have to save my energy up to go to the centre for shopping, Im borderline able to look after myself. I walked 1 mile today - had to sleep for 3 hours.
      My Covid infection was week 3 of Jan 2020. Im convinced I got it at the gym - its next to the port of Burgas - literally the first port of call in Europe for ships from China and lots of the guys on the ship use the gym.

    • @angelachouinard4581
      @angelachouinard4581 Місяць тому +2

      @@piccalillipit9211 You Have my deepest sympathy. My friend at uni, got Epstein Barr and developed CFS. This was in the early 80's. I also had a friend with post polio syndrome. These post viral conditions have been around for decades but they are not dramatic fund raiser diseases so they don't get the research. Your comparing it to the iPhone thing is spot on, just like my friend. The disease is bad for anyone but she was a dancer. It destroyed her life top.

  • @Golden_Ace
    @Golden_Ace Місяць тому +47

    Okay you got me, I subscribed just for one line and one line only. "Constantin Von Economo which unbelievably isn't the name of a Marvel villain with the power to destroy the economy". I got a good chuckle out of that. thank you.

    • @joescott
      @joescott  Місяць тому +17

      Glad I'm not the only person I crack up. :)

    • @chuckjones8459
      @chuckjones8459 24 дні тому

      That mortal sin is called " Usary".

  • @Ercarret
    @Ercarret 2 дні тому

    Interesting video. I had heard about the subject previously, but never so in-depth. So thanks.
    It's scary stuff. I've been through the wringer health-wise in the last few years and can relate to some of the symptoms. For example, the complete fatigue sounds very similar to the fatigue you can get with severe depression. I got hit hard by that at around this time last year and it's kind of scary how much physical energy it took from me. You'd think depression would just take a mental toll but no, I physically couldn't get out of bed and do stuff that I needed to do. Since I live on my own, that was kind of distressing.
    Same thing with limbs getting stuck in strange settings. I had undiagnosed gaut for several years and it would lock the affected joints in place whenever it would hit. However, I was thrown for a loop when you revealed that it wasn't a physical ailment (like me - I literally couldn't move my joints) but a mental one, where the doctors could easily move their limbs however they wanted and they'd then just stay that way no matter how uncomfortable it should have been for the sick person. That was not my experience at all.
    And then we come to the brain fog. I've become a bit cautious about using that term since it has had a tendency of making doctors think they know what's wrong with me and how to fix me, neither of which has been true so far. But I also don't know how to describe it better than that either. I often feel like two different people when I'm in the company of other people (then I'm a very social person who is very capable of following directions) and when I'm on my own (then I basically shut down and am incapable of doing even the simplest things). It's really annoying. However, I'm still in the world. From the descriptions in the video, it seems like you could throw a ball at the patients and they wouldn't even react. I'd still very much catch the ball. Or at least yell out, "Ouch!" if I missed it.
    I've not lived with all of these symptoms at the same time and continiously for years on end, and I can't imagine how it would feel like to do so for decades on end. However, I will say that trying to reintegrate into society after several years of debilitating sickness is *hard*. You don't really recognize the world you're stepping out into and you can no longer relate to the people around you (at least those of a similar age as you). I've found that the people I get along with the best nowadays are typically much younger than I am myself, simply because I've missed the "typical" experiences between their age and my own. That can sometimes feel like I'm a living, breathing version of that "How do you do, fellow kids" Steve Buscemi meme.
    Being sick is weird.

  • @markseagram2771
    @markseagram2771 19 днів тому

    I watched Awakenings 2 weeks ago. I hadn't seen it since the theatre when it came out. I still loved it. Wonderful and heartbreaking.

  • @TheLittlestViking
    @TheLittlestViking Місяць тому +41

    I was diagnosed with CFS/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome several years before the pandemic. In January 2020 I had COVID (flew home through 3 international airports through Chattanooga from 3 weeks of holidays with my SF in 2019/still had pneumonia in February 2020. In March of 2020 I was diagnosed with "Covid Toes," and my toes STAYED PURPLE for over a year (still have purple photos of them from after March 2021). I've since ALSO been diagnosed with Long Covid due to marked increase in fatigue levels since my infection (and second infection over Christmas 2022). I currently sleep 15-18 hours a day which SUCKS. I was also placed on a walker in 2022.

    • @JoeRogansForehead
      @JoeRogansForehead Місяць тому +2

      Covid toes😂
      This country has lost its mind since Covid . The media really broke y’all brains

    • @mgjk
      @mgjk Місяць тому +2

      @@JoeRogansForehead I had them, it was frick'n bizzare. Little red dots, then small sores, then big sores, eventually swelling, burning throbbing pain in my hands and feet, a day later, the pain subsided my hands and feet began to heal, then all my callouses schluffed off, like I mean every callous I've had on my feet since I was a teenager. Weeks later, my nails started splitting, I was gluing them back together with superglue and scraps of paper. It was WEIRD. Then it all went away, my nails eventually grew out until the problem areas were gone, and my callouses slowly came back. Except for being gross and cringe, and a couple uncomfortable nights, for me it wasn't even that terrible. Horrible to see OP had it much worse.

    • @ivytarablair
      @ivytarablair Місяць тому +1

      CFS or other post-viral autoimmune disease and THEN getting LC - right there with you. Horrendous

    • @bite-sizedshorts9635
      @bite-sizedshorts9635 Місяць тому +1

      Did you get any shots? These problems may be side effects.

    • @armageddon1403
      @armageddon1403 Місяць тому

      And you still dont understand its the fake vacccine that harms you?

  • @grahamstewart615
    @grahamstewart615 Місяць тому +25

    Remember a friend of the family who visited our home 5 nights a week in the 1960s.
    He was born in the 1890s.
    The family fed him, he talked a little and then fell asleep for a couple of hours in a chair then went home.
    The family said he had "sleepy sickness".
    Guessing the man never worked.
    Family are dead so there's no one around to explain what happened.
    What i do remember is the man dressed as though it was the 1930s.
    Come to think the man did have a tremor.
    Nobody back in the 1960s seemed to think a there was anything particularly odd about any of this.
    People spoke of "sleepy sickness" as though the man was lame in one leg.
    It was just something that was there.

  • @musickat344
    @musickat344 7 днів тому

    I've been dealing with long covid symptoms and have also in recent months found my muscles randomly getting rigid and difficult to move. It's only affected my fingers and arms so far and goes away in a couple of hours. I got a little freaked out when you started describing the "parkinsonism" symptoms.

  • @moondogaudiojones1146
    @moondogaudiojones1146 18 днів тому +1

    Very interesting. I have a couple of friends who have long Covid. They talk about the exhaustion and brain fog. It seems to come in waves.
    Not catatonic but definite lethargy.
    I hope more gets figured out about long Covid.

  • @anderscoffey1729
    @anderscoffey1729 Місяць тому +7

    I had encephalitis when I was younger and remember feeling really weak and almost unable to move. While I did eventually get treatment, it seemed to almost miraculously go away.

  • @1GoodWoman
    @1GoodWoman Місяць тому +15

    Thank you for this. I had a childhood friend who supposedly had sleeping sickness back in the 1960s. I was very young but to the best of my knowledge I never saw him again…. I now wonder a bit about the diagnosis but in any case this is fascinating. My daughter has a post infection autoimmune situation and so far no one has any solid diagnosis but she and her team have managed it enough so that she has a full life we once thought impossible. Hopefully more to come.

  • @gabpintov
    @gabpintov Місяць тому

    I respect you for not bringing her case in your video and I respect you even more for bringing up her case in this short. Both are the right call.

  • @shannonpincombe8485
    @shannonpincombe8485 17 днів тому

    Good vid Joe. Interesring topic.

  • @coolbreeze5683
    @coolbreeze5683 Місяць тому +10

    There was also something that happened in Incline Village, NV in the mid 80s that left many people with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. They didn't investigate it thoroughly enough at that time and basically said it was a psychosomatic condition.
    Many patients were dismissed. Here we are today with ME/CFS and long COVID.

    • @Bunnyliver52
      @Bunnyliver52 Місяць тому +4

      The history of ME/CFS and how it’s been mistreated and abused would make a great video! With potential to help millions of sick today by raising awareness.

    • @empathopinion6251
      @empathopinion6251 Місяць тому

      @@Bunnyliver52 I'm sure you must be familiar with the 2017 documentary, "Unrest." It made the long list for Oscar's best documentary that year but didn't make it to the short list. If it did, perhaps more people would have seen it.
      It's not exactly a history, but it gives a lot of examples, mostly extreme ME. One of the most compelling features, in my opinion were:
      1. Comparing the stigma of ME to how people with MS were believed to be insane prior to the invention of brain scans, and,
      2. The conditions in (Denmark? my memory is foggy) where a girl was forcibly removed from her home and taken to a mental institution where she only got sicker, because in that country (at the time) it was believed CFS/ME was "in their heads."
      Like you, I'd like to know more about the history but I suspect, CFS/ME has been so badly stigmatized that it's been virtually unrecognized until maybe the 1980s? (Remember the Yuppie Flu?)
      Unfortunately it would just be a history of so-called "lazy people."

  • @lilywhite6933
    @lilywhite6933 Місяць тому +14

    Awakenings was one of my favorite things I learned about from my high school psych class.

    • @flaming_bentley
      @flaming_bentley 29 днів тому +1

      Excellent movie. I watched it in nursing school

    • @466rudy6
      @466rudy6 26 днів тому +2

      In med school we watched Patch Adams. No. We studied very hard.

  • @anotheryoutubechannel4809
    @anotheryoutubechannel4809 24 дні тому

    My grandfather was born in 1901 and i love thinking of all the change his life went through! CRAZY! WW1 at 19, Spanish flu at 19 or so, global great depression at 28, WW2 at 38, Polio in the 40's, let alone all the technology advances! Cars, phones, radio, TV, indoor plumbing, in home heat and so much more!

  • @frankreyes4
    @frankreyes4 26 днів тому

    Thank you for the great video

  • @rebeccadoty-evans4499
    @rebeccadoty-evans4499 Місяць тому +5

    My grandma( born in 1912)and her younger sister had the "Spanish Flu" as young children. Their mother who was pregnant also caught it ( it caused a premature birth/still birth) . Their mother was also pregnant when the next flu outbreak happened and neither she nor the baby survived. My grandma and her sister both developed Parkinson's later. I've always suspected that the flu was linked to their Parkinson's as no one else in the family has been diagnosed with it before or since.

  • @cynthiana8328
    @cynthiana8328 Місяць тому +8

    I suffer from Autistic Catatonia when overstimulated. I can attest personally that being trapped within my body, sometimes aware of my surroundings, sometimes not, is like something out of a horror movie. It is a hell, a nightmare. And the longest it's ever lasted for me is only 13 hours. I cannot fathom 40 years...
    As an added joy, I do also suffer from Long Covid. I get hemi-dystonia.

  • @ginnystark4878
    @ginnystark4878 28 днів тому +1

    Saw the picture of Dr Sacks and my first thought was "oh he looks like Robin Williams in that one doctor movie I've been meaning to watch" 😂

  • @easternflower6476
    @easternflower6476 5 днів тому

    My grandfathers uncle, who was beloved by everyone in our family, got this disease when he was only 25. He passed away after being in a statue like state for 4 years. My grandpa and the rest of the family would spend all day at the hospital with him. They took it in shifts, so he was never without a family member for more than a few hours. My grandpa told us how they’d play music for him, and sometimes when they would fly kites, they’d wrap the string around his hand so he could feel like he was doing something :( Rest in peace, uncle George, you were so loved and are remembered ❤️

  • @Filboid2000
    @Filboid2000 Місяць тому +65

    Unless I missed it, you didn't answer one question: although these poor souls were living statues, were they aware of their surroundings during their statuesque period?

    • @cartti
      @cartti Місяць тому +6

      Was left wondering this as well.

    • @tinkerstrade3553
      @tinkerstrade3553 Місяць тому +11

      I think he mentioned that most of them were aware, but just didn't have a desire to communicate. They just ceased to care about anything except sleeping.

    • @joescott
      @joescott  Місяць тому +119

      I did kinda leave that hanging didn't I?
      My assumption is that many of them were not aware of their surroundings, based on the fact that many responded poorly to "waking up" and realizing 40 years had passed. If they were conscious and aware the whole time, it probably wouldn't have been such a shock.
      Also in the movie, "Awakenings" De Niro's character, as he starts to slip back into his state, says that everything stops, and that there's just nothing, and then he wakes back up. He says it's like dying. But I didn't want to quote the film because they did take some liberties in it (like the fact that Dr. Sacks is renamed Dr Sayer).
      So yeah, my assumption is that they were just not there consciously. Really not sure which is worse.

    • @Alfred-Neuman
      @Alfred-Neuman Місяць тому

      OK but was it an experience from the CIA or even the aliens?
      Or maybe some aliens working for the CIA??

    • @christophergaus3996
      @christophergaus3996 Місяць тому +7

      ​@@joescottThank you for this addition 🖖

  • @marccheban194
    @marccheban194 Місяць тому +18

    This is a superbly constructed video. Clear, pithy, and full of essential information. Congratulations on this great effort!

  • @user-rc7ld1db8v
    @user-rc7ld1db8v 26 днів тому +12

    My daughter (once the pinnacle of health) has been suffering from long covid since 2020. She has 90% recovered, but still has chronic fatigue. There is absolutely some kind of connection! When she eats a super strict anti-inflammatory diet her chronic fatique almost disappears. But as soon as she eats the wrong foods and disrupts her precarious gut health, she gets a bout of chronic fatigue immediately. The link is definitely there. Gut health and long covid suffering are strongly connected.

  • @majesticmythicalsart7563
    @majesticmythicalsart7563 Місяць тому +1

    I was diagnosed with post viral syndrome after Covid 3 years ago and it has caused me tachycardia which really caused me trouble in my daily life and caused anxiety. I am almost back to normal now but still have episodes.