A team led by researchers at Harvard Medical School examined records of blood and saliva samples from more than 917,000 people across three medical databases, looking at patterns in the amount of viral DNA circulating through people's bodies when those infections didn't progress to disease.

The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), for example, became more prevalent with age, while the herpes virus HHV-7 declined from middle age. EBV viral load went up in the winter and down in the summer, while others were more consistent.

The team found that a high viral load for EBV was a direct risk factor for developing Hodgkin's lymphoma later in life. However, the same relationship was not found between EBV and multiple sclerosis (MS), even though EBV is a known trigger for MS. That's an interesting finding because it suggests the link between MS and EBV depends on how the immune system responds to the virus, rather than the amount of virus present.

It's worth bearing in mind that, due to the genome sequencing data they sourced, the researchers behind this study only looked at DNA viruses, which hide in and hijack DNA. Additional work could also investigate RNA viruses, such as coronaviruses, which operate differently.

https://www.sciencealert.com/giant-study-reveals-why-some-viruses-hide-inside-your-body-for-life

Giant Study Reveals Why Some Viruses Hide Inside Your Body For Life

Even the healthiest people among us are usually carrying viruses in their bodies.

ScienceAlert

EBV viral load went up in the winter and down in the summer

Responsible for some of the increase in chronic health issues that happens in fall among sufferers of mecfs and long covid? 🤔

@trendless I wasn't aware of that pattern but if there's data behind it, it seems like the kind of thing those researchers would really want to know about, for future papers?
@datum yeah, the colloquial term is 'October Slide'
@trendless Thanks for sharing it.

@trendless

Very interesting. I'm guessing it has to do with TLR4 activation and near-infrared light exposure.

TLR4 activation can reactivate EBV:
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2f55/9c4b46517668a96a1b8f02373c4098eeeeb7.pdf

NIR exposure can block TLR4:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8451450/

This might explain the seasonal pattern in EBV load, but perhaps not the 'October slide'. Many people with LC and/or ME/CFS don't go outside even in summer, and sunlight exposure can exacerbate symptoms in some people.

~

Interesting article that I have not yet read:

The latitude gradient for multiple sclerosis prevalence is established in the early life course [2021]
https://academic.oup.com/brain/article/144/7/2038/6168130

@trendless Caegiver: "I never get sick" and she kept letting the mask I gave her, slipping off her face several times inside my home.
I got sick a week later.

And the part of MS hits very personal with me, as it is hereditary, and my mom had it, it killed her, slowly, over ten years, watching her lose her mind is an emotional pain I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy.

I'll wear a mask outside if I have to for the rest of my life, so I will never die like she died.