Pietrangelo, T, Mancinelli, R, Toniolo, L et al. · International journal of immunopathology and pharmacology · 2009 · DOI
Researchers examined muscle tissue from ME/CFS patients and found abnormalities in how genes are expressed—essentially, certain genetic instructions were turned up or down compared to healthy people. The biggest changes involved genes related to energy production in cells, muscle structure, and communication between nerves and muscles. These findings suggest that problems at the cellular level may explain why ME/CFS patients experience muscle weakness and fatigue.
This study provides molecular-level evidence that ME/CFS muscle symptoms have a biological basis rather than being purely psychological, which validates patient experiences and may guide future therapeutic targets. Identifying specific genes and pathways involved in muscle dysfunction could lead to biomarkers for diagnosis and inform treatment strategies.
This study demonstrates correlational findings in muscle tissue but does not prove these gene expression changes directly cause muscle symptoms or ME/CFS. The research does not establish whether these changes occur in all ME/CFS patients, progress over time, or respond to treatment. Additionally, altered gene expression may be a consequence of the disease rather than an initiating factor.