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Scientist Smackdown: Is a Virus Really the Cause of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome?

Chronic fatigue syndrome links to the XMRV virus have sparked debate, as new research challenges earlier U.S. findings.

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An estimated three in 1,000 people suffers from the mysterious affliction chronic fatigue syndrome. Those people were probably enthusiastic in October when a team of U.S. medical researchers released a study arguing that not only is the syndrome real (some doctors dismissed it as purely psychological "yuppie flu"), but also that they'd connected it to a specific virus. DISCOVER covered the hubbub after the paper came out in the journal Science. But now, in a study in PLoS One, a British research team has cast doubt on the American team's findings, saying there's no conclusive link between the virus and chronic fatigue syndrome, which is also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis. The U.S. team's findings sounded robust when they came out.

They found the murine leukaemia virus-related virus (XMRV) in blood samples of 68 of 101 patients diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome. Just eight out of 101 healthy "controls" drawn at ...

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