Saturday, November 16, 2024

It’s the illness that has no cure. But this doctor believes he’s found the answer to chronic fatigue syndrome

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“We now know there are seven weak spots that allow large molecules into the brain so large toxins can get in, so we need the lymphatics to drain those large molecules out,” Dr Perrin explains.

The causes of ME and chronic fatigue remains a contentious subject.

The case of 27-year-old Maeve Boothby-O’Neill, who suffered from severe chronic fatigue syndrome for a decade before she died at home in October 2021, shows how what was once widely known as “yuppie flu” is still poorly understood by medical professionals.

The condition is thought to be triggered by a virus. Dr Perrin believes that is not always the case. While Dr Perrin agrees a virus can trigger a disturbance in the sympathetic nervous system, which then causes an imbalance of overall body functions, so too, he says, can bacterial infection, emotional stress, and trauma to the brain or spine.

Many of Dr Perrin’s patients have been those who have suffered from postural issues, or sports people who have put their body under lots of stress. Most obviously, footballers heading balls.

“Common symptoms such as fatigue in the muscles are as a result of lactic not being drained away. Brain fog is caused by the toxicity in the brain affecting neural networks,” explains Dr Perrin.

In a new book, Through the Looking Glass, he explains how long Covid is similarly caused by inflammation and impairment of lymphatic drainage.

“Covid can be the final trigger that builds too much inflammation in the brain because the drainage isn’t working properly in the first place,” he says.

To help this dysfunction, the Perrin technique involves manual techniques that stimulate the lymph and drain it down, or upwards, towards the collarbone.

“Eventually, as less toxins invade the brain, the hypothalamus starts working properly. This regulates the autonomic nervous system and lymph system so that health is restored,” says Dr Perrin.

One of the main areas the technique focusses on is around the nose. The cribriform plate is a perforated bone that separates the nasal cavity from the brain case. It is a key site for cerebrospinal fluid drainage and has been proven to drain 50 per cent of all lymphatic fluid into the neck.

As well as having trained osteopaths in the technique, Dr Perrin has self-massage routines available on his website (see videos below). For some the manual techniques alleviate all symptoms, others need regular treatment.

Betty Ross, Jonathan Ross’s daughter, who was bed bound with ME and fibromyalgia for two years, is a high profile success story of the Perrin technique.

Women are disproportionately affected by ME/CFS and long Covid for three reasons, according to Dr Perrin: the hypothalamus, the mother of the hormonal system, is affected and women’s hormones are more changeable than men’s; the hormone leptin, found at higher levels in women, can trigger a lot of inflammatory cytokines that cause more inflammation; if there is a backflow of drainage from close to the collarbones, the first port of calls is the breast tissue and women have more breast tissue which leads to more toxic congestion.

Dr Perrin is not without his critics and the ME Association does not recommend the Perrin Technique, despite the results of its patients’ survey.

“In the absence of any sound scientific evidence to support the model of causation upon which this alternative treatment is based, and the lack of any sound evidence from well conducted clinical trials to confirm the safety and efficacy of using osteopathy and lymphatic drainage to remove toxins from the body, this is not a form of alternative treatment for ME/CFS that is recommended by either the ME Association or the Nice guideline on ME/CFS,” it states.

Asked about the scepticism around his technique, Dr Perrin believes it is because people want to find a pill that will work, rather than a manual technique: “Even though manual techniques are what cystic fibrosis sufferers rely upon [in order to loosen mucus] to stay alive.”

Dr Adrian Heald is a consultant physician in diabetes and endocrinology at Salford Royal, a Research Fellow at The University of Manchester involved in the assessment and treatment of chronic fatigue and long Covid. He has seen a number of patients with chronic fatigue/ME who have also been treated with the Perrin Technique. “Anecdotally we have seen positive results in patients with very difficult to treat chronic fatigue/ME who have been seeing Dr Perrin.”

Dr Heald’s team has recently submitted the findings of a feasibility study, sponsored by the NHS, in which an adaptation of the Perrin Technique for a home-based self-help treatment was used. The results in relation to the intervention were positive.

“We can’t say it definitely works because it’s not a full randomised control trial, but the results were encouraging,” states Dr Heald.

The study has now been submitted for peer review.

It is an avenue of research that Dr Heald believes is worth exploring.

“Chronic fatigue is an extremely complex and difficult condition to treat. It manifests in different ways in different people. But the bottom line for me is that any technique that has potential validity as an approach needs to be looked at in a formal way,” he says.

There is now little doubt that our understanding of the lymphatic system needs further research. Already, the glymphatic system is offering new perspectives on brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s.

“We’re increasingly learning about the physiology on which the Perrin technique is based,” says Dr Heald. “The science is slowly catching up with what Dr Perrin has been proposing as a technique for many years.”

Still, Dr Perrin himself emphasises that his technique is not a cure, but should be used as part of a jigsaw approach to dealing with long Covid. Starting with the corners: rest, relaxation, meditation and pacing.

The edge pieces of the jigsaw are the Perrin technique itself: “Getting the neuronal lymphatic system working better is essential for everything else,” he says.

The middle is nutritional supplements and diet.

“Some people are 20 piece jigsaw pieces, some are thousands of pieces,” he says. “We don’t cure everybody but we keep a lot of people on the right side of health.”

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