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ME/CFS is not a psychosomatic illness

18 October 2018 by Vincent Racaniello

W. Ian Lipkin, Director of the Center for Infection and Immunity and the Center for Solutions for ME/CFS at Columbia University, has written the following letter several days before the Fourth Annual Conference on Psychosomatics at Columbia University this weekend. The original letter can be found at this link.

18 October 2018

Dear Colleagues and Friends,

The Center for Infection and Immunity (CII) has been committed to ME/CFS research since 2010. We began this research with generous support from the Chronic Fatigue Initiative of the Hutchins Family Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Microbe Discovery Project.

In 2017, the CII was selected to host one of three NIH centers funded for collaborative research into the biology of this disease. The Center for Solutions for ME/CFS (CfS for ME/CFS) includes representatives from #MEAction and Solve ME/CFS as well as clinical and basic scientists drawn from leading academic institutions and clinical sites across the United States.

Our studies of blood, cerebrospinal fluid, saliva and feces, using state-of-the-art methods that include microbial gene sequencing, metabolomics, proteomics, and immunological profiling, confirm that patients with ME/CFS have biological abnormalities that cannot be characterized as psychosomatic.

Committees convened by the National Academies of Sciences, the National Institutes of Health, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have also concluded that ME/CFS is not a psychosomatic disorder.

We are committed to actively investigating the causes of immunological and metabolic abnormalities in ME/CFS. Our hope is that this work will enable insights that lead to treatments.

Sincerely,

W. Ian Lipkin, MD
Director, Center for Infection & Immunity
Director, Center or Solutions for ME/CFS

 

Filed Under: ME/CFS Tagged With: chronic fatigue syndrome, columbia university, conference, ME/CFS, psychosomatic, w ian lipkin

The American Society for Virology

15 December 2014 by Vincent Racaniello

The American Society for Virology was founded in 1981 to promote the exchange of information and stimulate discussion and collaboration among scientists active in all aspects of virology. These goals are achieved in part by organizing an annual meeting that brings together virologists from diverse fields to discuss their work.

As the current President of the American Society for Virology it is my honor to select the speakers for the morning symposia at the annual meeting. Below are the sessions that I have organized and the speakers that I have selected. Note the titles of the different sessions: Listeners of the science show This Week in Virology should recognize them! In addition to the plenary sessions there are hundreds of other talks, poster sessions, and much more.

The 2015 annual meeting of ASV will be held at Western University in London, Ontario, Canada. It should be a terrific meeting. All virologists are encouraged to attend; registration is now open. I hope to see you there next summer!

Saturday 7/11
Keynote Address – Joan Steitz, Yale University

Sunday 7/12
An inordinate fondness for viruses
Curtis Suttle, University of British Columbia
Christian Drosten, University of Bonn
XJ Meng, Virginia Tech
Steve Wilhelm, University of Tennessee

Monday 7/13
The kind that make you sick
Kanta Subbarao, NIAID, NIH
Theodora Hatziannou, Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Institute
Chioma Okeoma, University of Iowa
Heinz Feldmann, NIAID, NIH

Tuesday 7/14
Bucket of bolts
Britt Glaunsinger, University of California, Berkeley
Paula Traktman, Medical College of Wisconsin
Ileana Cristea, Princeton University
Leslie Parent, Penn State
James (Zhijian) Chen, UT Southwestern Medical Center

Wednesday 7/15
Virocentricity
Eugene Koonin, NCBI, NIH
Mart Krupovic, Institut Pasteur
Kenneth Stedman, Portland State University
Susana Lopez Charreton, UNAM, Cuernavaca
Karen Mossman, McMaster University

Filed Under: Basic virology, Information Tagged With: american society for virology, conference, meeting, speakers, viral, virology, virus

Live from the Society for General Microbiology Conference in Manchester, UK

25 March 2013 by Vincent Racaniello

MicrobeWorld and the Society for General Microbiology (UK) to live stream two events from their Spring Conference 2013 in Manchester, England, March 25-28.

Peter Wildy Prize for Microbiology Education
Monday, March 25, 2013 17:20 GMT (1:20 PM EST | 10:20 AM PST)  

David Bhella, Ph.D., will be accepting the Peter Wildy Prize for Microbiology Education, awarded annually by the Society for General Microbiology for an outstanding contribution to microbiology education. Bhella’s acceptance speech will be live streamed at 17:20 GMT (1:20 PM EST | 10:20 AM PST). Vincent Racaniello was awarded the Wildy Prize in 2012.

This Week in Microbiology
Wednesday, March 27, 2013 15:30 GMT (11:30 AM EST | 8:30 AM PST) 

Join Vincent Racaniello and co-host Laura Piddock, Ph.D., with guests Paul Williams, Ph.D., Kalin Vetsigian, Ph.D., and David Harper, Ph.D., for a live-streaming episode of This Week in Microbiology. The live stream starts at 15:30 PM GMT (11:30 AM EST | 8:30 AM PST) and you can watch it below. If you have any questions for Vincent or his guests during the broadcast you can tweet your question using the #sgmman hash tag or type it into the chat function of the video player.

If you live elsewhere in the world, please use www.everytimezone.com, to calculate when the live streams will start in your area.

 

(If you don’t see the video and it is after the official start time please press the play button or refresh the page.)
 

Filed Under: Basic virology, Events, Information, This Week in Microbiology Tagged With: antibiotic resistance, bacteriophage, conference, Dave Bhella, education, Manchester UK, meeting, microbiology, sgm, society for general microbiology, viral, virology, virus

TWiV 99: ICAAC Boston 2010

19 September 2010 by Vincent Racaniello

Host: Vincent Racaniello

Vincent tours the 50th Interscience Conference on Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (ICAAC) in Boston, speaking with exhibitors and visitors, including Professors Derek Smith, Michael Schmidt, Frederick Hayden, and Myra McClure.

Many thanks to Chris Condayan and Ray Ortega of the American Society for Microbiology for recording and editing this episode.

[powerpress url=”http://traffic.libsyn.com/twiv/TWiV099.mp3″]

Click the arrow above to play, or right-click to download TWiV #99 (45 MB .mp3, 62 minutes)

Subscribe to TWiV (free) in iTunes , at the Zune Marketplace, by the RSS feed, or by email, or listen on your mobile device with Stitcher Radio.

Links for this episode:

  • 50th ICAAC
  • ICAAC daily press conference videos (including Prof. Myra McClure)
  • Antigenic cartography
  • Antimicrobial properties of copper
  • Video of this episode – download .mp4 (1.99 GB) or .wmv (935 MB) or view below

Send your virology questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to twiv@microbe.tv or leave voicemail at Skype: twivpodcast. You can also post articles that you would like us to discuss at microbeworld.org and tag them with twiv.

Filed Under: This Week in Virology Tagged With: antigenic cartography, antigenic drift, antiviral, bacteria, CFS, chronic fatigue syndrome, conference, copper, icaac, influenza, pandemic, podcast, racaniello, relenza, swine flu, tamiflu, TWiV, viral, virology, virus, xmrv

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by Vincent Racaniello

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Inside a BSL-4
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