“…Compared with many other chronic diseases, patients with ME/CFS have a lower quality of life, with major implications for patients and their families and for society (2,3). Recent research suggests that ME/CFS is associated with changes in fundamental processes of energy metabolism (4,5). Importantly, such metabolic changes may arise from dysregulated physiological response mechanisms that may be relevant in ME/CFS, such as immune activation, inflammation, and receptor-mediated signaling (6,7).…”