Could vascular damage caused by massive inflammatory events underlie a relapse/recovery phenotype of ME/CFS and Long COVID?

Abstract:

I hypothesize that there is a relapse/recovery type of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS) and Long COVID in which a massive inflammatory event—like the inflammatory cascade prompted by the restoration of blood flow (reperfusion) to tissue that had been deprived of blood (ischemia) or an allergic or pseudoallergic reaction—causes substantial damage to blood vessels, launching a more severe phase of ME/CFS.
People with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and other connective tissue disorders may be at particular risk of this phenotype due to having connective tissue (a key component of blood vessels) that is more easily and severely injured during inflammatory events and slower to heal, causing a much longer recovery.

Source: Tamara Carnac. Could vascular damage caused by massive inflammatory events underlie a relapse/recovery phenotype of ME/CFS and Long COVID? Patient-Generated Hypotheses Journal | Issue 1, May 2023. https://patientresearchcovid19.com/storage/2023/05/Patient-Generated-Hypotheses-Issue-1-May-2023.pdf#page=30 (Full text)

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