Your Input Needed for 2020 Public Engagement Event

Invest in ME Research and Quadram Institute are arranging a Public Engagement Event in Norwich on 7th February 2020 and are inviting patients, carers and supporters to send them any input to the meeting.

They are collecting information now in order to plan the agenda. If you have specific issues or questions that you feel should be addressed at the public meeting then please use the contact form on this page.

Supporters will know that work has been ongoing to establish a Centre of Excellence for ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) based at Norwich Research Park, which houses Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, University of East Anglia, Norwich Medical School, Earlham Institute (formerly The Genome Analysis Centre) and the new Quadram Institute.

Invest in ME Research is run by volunteer parents and patients. The charity published a detailed proposal for a centre in 2010 and began crowdfunding in 2011 to enable the biomedical research programme to get underway in 2013. The next phase is a clinical treatment trial of faecal microbiota transplantation for ME planned to start in 2020.

IiMER and QI are keen to discuss the planned research with patients and carers, and wish to get views and additional insights to help them shape their future research. They will be discussing logistics for this meeting and will be meeting in the New Year to plan the event.

Please contact them through the contact form on this page.

The meeting itself will be on the morning of 7th February 2020 (the likely time being 10:30 – 12:00) in the new Quadram Institute building near the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital; postcode NR4 7UQ.

More details will be provided nearer the time.

Many of us are too ill to leave our homes or are unable to attend meetings in person for other reasons, but please do take this opportunity to share your thoughts and ask any questions to help shape the agenda.

Let’s Do It for ME is run by severely ill patients supporting Invest in ME Research and their Centre of Excellence for ME projects.

Day 23 of the Invest in ME Research Advent Calendar is about the Centre of Excellence for ME so you can read more about it here.

Link to the meeting info and contact form here.

Thank you for supporting Invest in ME Research!

PRESS RELEASE: £500k Pledged by IiMER!

Invest in ME Research has announced a pledge by the charity of £500,000 to the biomedical ME research underway at Norwich Research Park.

As far as we know, this is the largest single pledge for biomedical research into Myalgic Encephalomyelitis ever made by a charity in UK!

IiMER Press Release
Quadram Institute News

The pledge covers joint funding of a PhD position in partnership with University of East Anglia and over 70% of the required funding for a clinical trial of Faecal Microbiota Transplantation being performed alongside other high-quality biomedical research at Quadram Institute.

Invest in ME Research pledged £435,000 towards the FMT trial earlier this year, so this new pledge represents an increase, thanks to the efforts of the charity and their supporters, including patients, carers, parents, friends and families affected by this disease. On their page describing the recent Centre of Excellence projects, IiMER write,

“The efforts of our supporters are exemplified in the Let’s Do It For ME campaign – started by three severely affected patients from their homes. They have enlisted friends and families to join with Invest in ME Research to create a grassroots movement to fund biomedical research into the disease, and thereby compensating for the meagre offical funding that has been given to research into ME over the years.

Invest in ME Research will now have funded or part funded five PhDs performing research into ME and working in partnership with researchers to initiate a foundation of high-quality research in one of the largest and most prestigious research parks in Europe.” Read more: investinme.org/pr01-Dec19.shtml

The press release is announced on Day 2 of the charity’s Advent Calendar.

Together we have helped raise and pledge over £900,000 for Invest in ME Research since the Let’s Do It for ME campaign launched in support of the charity’s plan to establish a UK/European Centre of Excellence for ME.

This includes a hugely generous pledge to the charity from The Hendrie Foundation towards a clinical treatment trial and their substantial donation to the B-cell ME research performed at UCL. We are enormously grateful to the foundation and to everyone supporting the development of the Centre of Excellence for ME and the ongoing research there.

Thank you all so much for supporting Invest in ME Research!

Let’s keep doing it for ME!

Donate to
Invest in ME Research

Donate/Share Let’s Do It for ME’s
fundraising for the FMT trial

Christmas Contests, Fundraising, Shopping

Welcome to IiMER Research Blog!

Invest in ME Research have created a page on their Centre of Excellence website for blogs by researchers funded by the charity to describe what they are doing, what experiences they have, what they think of research into ME, what they hope to achieve – and allow more communication with patients and the public.

IiMER hope this will help more people understand ME (Myalgic Encephalomyelitis) and the possibilities and opportunities which are available and being created by a strategy of biomedical research into the disease. You can comment on the individual blogs if logged in via Disqus, Facebook, Twitter or Google.

Kindly kicking off the new Research Blog is Katharine Seton, now in the second year of her PhD and based at Quadram Institute, the hub of the Invest in ME Research Centre of Excellence for ME.

Katharine describes her role in the research programme, the study she is currently focussing on, and explains why she has a personal investment and interest in ME research. Click here to read, comment, share: “Defining autoimmune aspects of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS)”.

I aspire to help find a cure for ME … so watch this space!

Katharine Seton – Quadram Institute, Norwich

Katharine was among the PhD students speaking about their work at the charity’s 12th international biomedical research conference in London in June. Their presentations are on the IIMEC12 DVD available here.


(pictured above: Fiona Newberry, Shen-Yuan Hsieh (Ernie), Katharine Seton)

Fane Mensah, currently doing his PhD at UCL, also presented at IIMEC12.
The Research Blog includes articles by Fane that were previously published by IiMER as newsletters, so if you missed these, or would like to comment, they are ME/CFS – Through The Eyes of a Young Researcher (first posted January 2015) and Research News from Fane Mensah (first posted February 2017).


(pictured above: Fane Mensah, Christopher Armstrong and Isabelle de Rooij)

Thank you all involved for your support!

Please share widely: http://www.investinme.org/ce-research-blogs.shtml

Severe ME day 2017; Sophia Mirza, inflammation of the brain and spinal cord and the role of the gut

Severe ME day is an initiative of the 25% ME group for the severely affected. 


It is held annually on 8th August to commemorate Sophia Mirza’s birthday and it’s purpose is to remember and raise awareness of those deceased and severely affected by ME. Sophia Mirza (1973 – 2005) died in distressing  circumstances in November 2005.  The coroner was specific about the medical cause of Sophia’s death and it was recorded as 1a) acute anuric renal failure; 1b) CFS. The second cause was recorded as including dorsal root ganglionitis. Sophia died as a result of acute renal failure arising as a result of ME/CFS.

However there have been a few members of the ME community who’ve seemed keen to place the cause of death on acute anuric renal failure as a result of dehydration. These people are obviously ignorant of the fact that death in dehydration is caused by brain swelling, not renal failure. Sophia’s brain was perfectly normal under standard autopsy examination with no signs of swelling. Her death was as a result of end organ failure as the result of ME.This is not an unheard of before phenomenon in ME/CFS either.

It wasn’t, as has also been claimed, the first known death as the result of ME/CFS.  ME is described as “benign” but this only means non-fatal in the short term. Even though the pathology precipitating death varies widely, as early as 1957, Dr Andrew Lachlan Wallis reported the post-mortem histopathology on a female from Cumbria who had died of ME; the report can be found in Wallis’ Doctoral Thesis (held at the University of Edinburgh and essential reading for anyone with an interest in ME/CFS; see also “Vade Mecum” by E. Marshall and M. Williams; Co-Cure ACT: 29th June 2005, which contains a summary of the thesis). The histopathology report states:

“There are in the entire diencephalon, particularly around the third ventricle, numerous small haemorrhages, which extend into the adjacent parts of the mid-brain. Similar haemorrhages can be seen in the corpora mamillare. The haemorrhages are mostly around the small vessels but some are also to be seen in the free tissue. This is a significant finding”.

In ME/CFS, males die predominantly from cardiac failure and females die predominantly from neurological complications, sometimes manifesting as tumours, and both sexes may die from pancreatitis. A memorial list can be found on the CFIDS website.

The secondary recorded cause of death in Sophia Mirza’s case was dorsal root ganglionitis. This is not surprising as inflammation of the brain and spinal cord is an important part of the ME pathology and indeed what the name Myalgic Encephalomyeitis (M.E) stands for;

  • My = muscle
  • Algic = pain
  • Encephalo = brain
  • Mye = spinal cord
  • Itis = inflammation

Much of this information I gathered from the document “INQUEST IMPLICATIONS? By Eileen Marshall and Margaret Williams, 16th June 2006” which concludes 

“To deny the existence of inflammation in ME/CFS is to deny reality, for which some UK psychiatrists (and those members of the medical profession who support their ill-founded notions without bothering to consider the actual evidence) are notorious.

The only way forward is biomedical research, but it seems that in the UK, science and humanity count for nothing when dealing with those blighted by the devastation of ME/CFS. 

This was concisely exemplified by Professor Peter White’s remarks to Dr Vance Spence at the third Oral Evidence Session of the Gibson Parliamentary Inquiry into ME/CFS on 7th June 2006, which were words to the effect that:
 “If WE hadn’t got the money, do you really think that the MRC would have given any money to YOU?”.

It seems inevitable that there will be many more cases like that of Sophia Mirza.”

However Eileen Marshall and Margaret Williams underestimated the strength, conviction and perseverance of the ME/CFS community!

That’s enough about the dying, now let’s turn our attention to those who are currently surviving severe ME/CFS.

One of IiMER’s foundation research projects, “A ROLE FOR A LEAKY GUT AND THE INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA IN THE PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF MYALGIC ENCEPHALOMYELITIS”, aim was to find out weather there were any apparent changes in the intestinal barrier function and/or microbiota of people with ME and whether microbe-driven inflammatory responses can provide an explanation for the pathophysiology of ME. It is the foundation research project in their proposal for a research and development facility which could lead to a UK Centre of Excellence for ME in Norfolk.

Autoimmune reactions lead to inflammation, increased permeability of blood vessels (as has been found in ME patients, described above) and migration of lymphocytes to sites of injury. Microglia within the brain can be primed during chronic inflammatory diseases, but can then induce inflammation in the brain when they are triggered by a second inflammatory challenge such as a systemic microbial infection. This raises the possibility that the damaging neuro-inflammation seen during ME may be triggered by systemic infections.

The gastrointestinal tract contains a microbiota consisting of a vast number of bacteria and viruses. The microbiota can influence intestinal barrier function and host defence against microbial challenge. Changes in the microbiota can cause local and systemic chronic inflammation.

This research has included people who are severely affected. It is being led by Professor Simon Carding at the Norfolk institute of food research/ UEA. As there has been no ME specialist in Norfolk since 2007 (something I know only too well as I live in the area and have had to cope without a local specialist consultant for the past decade) and the research requires a named doctor, patients providing samples for the research are under the care of Dr. Amolak Bansal of Epsom and St. Helier NHS Trust in Surrey. The researchers from Norfolk have been traveling down to Surrey to take samples from the house/bed bound patients and from house-matched healty controls to filter out what’s shared in the microbiome from shared environment.

There are now two more research projects undergo in IiMER’s Gut research project. Find out more

What’s more the whole of the first £100,000 of the first foundation research project was raised by “Let’s do it for ME”, a patient driven campaign to raise funds for biomedical research into ME/CFS. Many of the patients who raised it are severely affected themselves. The two later research projects are being funded jointly by IiMER’s LDIFME campaign and the universities involved.

References 

Any views expressed in this blog post are those of the blog author R. Amor and not necessarily those of IiMER or LDIFME 

New Year Update on IiMER Gut Microbiota Research

181k
Good news to start the year, Invest in ME Research (IiMER) posted an update to their gut microbiota and related projects being performed at the UK Centre of Excellence for ME in Norwich Research Park due to some very kind donations to their research being carried out in Norwich Research Park at the Instiute of Food Research (IFR) and University of East Anglia (UEA). They wrote –

We have recently received a wonderful donation from the Freemasons in Norwich and from a Ladies Sunday Lunch raffle in Norwich.

IiMER have decided to supplement this with funds from our biomedical research funds in order to make the total up to £2000.

This means that the total we have now raised for past, current and planned projects at UEA/IFR Centre of Excellence for ME is £181,000.

The cheques were presented at a dinner just before Christmas in Norwich.

Collecting the donations on behalf of Invest in ME Research were Dr Ian Gibson, Professor Simon Carding and Professor Tom Wileman, from IFR/UEA.

At the dinner Dr Gibson and Professors Carding and Wileman spoke of the charity and the research into ME being undertaken at UEA and IFR.

More details of this wil be availble from the Institute of Food Research (IFR) site soon.

We are indebted to the Masons and the Ladies for this wonderful gesture.

(Read post in full here – http://future.cofeforme.eu/ce-news-1701-01.shtml)

Our page about the IiMER Gut Microbiota Research Project

Thanks everyone supporting Invest in ME Research
and their Centre of Excellence for ME