Scribe
Scribe

¿Te gusta? Haz que Scribe sea aún mejor dejando una reseña

Obtener Extensión para Chrome

Explorar

  • Videos Populares
  • Videos Recientes
  • Todos los Canales

Herramientas Gratuitas

  • Descargador de Subtítulos de Video
  • Generador de Marcas de Tiempo de Video
  • Resumidor de Videos
  • Contador de Palabras de Video
  • Analizador de Títulos de Video
  • Búsqueda de Transcripciones de Video
  • Analíticas de Video
  • Creador de Capítulos de Video
  • Generador de Cuestionarios de Video
  • Chat con Video

Producto

  • Precios
  • Blog

Developers

  • Transcript API
  • API Documentation

Legal

  • Términos
  • Privacidad
  • Soporte
  • Mapa del sitio

Derechos de autor © 2026. Hecho con ♥ por Scribe

— Si esto hizo tu vida más fácil (o al menos un poco menos caótica), ¡déjanos una reseña! Prometemos que nos alegrará el día. 😊

Related Videos

Exercise Actually Makes Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Worse

Video thumbnail
197.61k1,416 Palabras7m readGrade 8
Compartir
Channel
SciShow
If you’re feeling tired during the day, some common advice might be to go for a walk, do some light exercises, or simply take a nap. But for some people, no amount of sleep or calisthenics will help. That’s life with myalgic encephalomyelitis, also known as chronic fatigue syndrome or ME/CFS.
And while there’s still a lot scientists don’t know about the condition, they’ve learned quite a bit in the last few years about how different it is  from other kinds of fatigue. Including the fact that exercise actually makes it worse. [intro music] You might have heard of chronic fatigue before as a social media buzzword, or maybe as a symptom of other chronic illnesses.
But when we’re talking about ME/CFS, just calling it chronic fatigue syndrome doesn’t tell the full story. It’s not the kind of fatigue you might feel after pulling an all-nighter. ME/CFS is a neurological disease.
It’s not just being tired because the grind never stops. /CFS When no amount of sleep makes you feel refreshed, you may have ME/CFS. Or when exercise makes you feel like you have the flu, that’s also a symptom.
There are probably 15-30 million people around the world living with ME/CFS. If you haven’t heard of the condition, maybe that’s because some researchers estimate that around 90% of people with it are undiagnosed! That’s a big deal because, as you might have gathered from the symptoms I just mentioned, it can totally change the way you live your life.
You may find that doing chores or schoolwork is suddenly much more exhausting than before. You may be forced to give up hobbies that once filled you with joy because your body can’t keep up with them anymore. Ultimately, up to 75% of people with ME/CFS are unable to work and some can’t leave their bed.
And a reinvigorating stroll around the block won’t help with these symptoms. People with ME/CFS see their blood oxygen levels and heart rate drop significantly after exercising. AKA, pretty much the opposite of how you want to feel after a workout.
One of the most characteristic symptoms comes after physical or mental strain. It’s called post-exertional malaise, or PEM, and it’s a huge, debilitating result of ME/CFS. .
It can happen when you’ve spent a lot of energy of any kind, including exercise, writing, sensory overload, or stress. But it can be difficult for people with ME/CFS to realize what caused that response because PEM usually doesn’t show up until about 24 hours after whatever happened to trigger it. .
So living with ME/CFS comes with a good amount of detective work to figure out what triggers your symptoms and whether they’re even symptoms of the condition or something else entirely. The whole diagnosis process is enough to earn you one of those Sherlock Holmes hats. This SciShow video is supported by JMP, a statistical analysis software hat makes powerful analytics quick and accessible.
And I mean it when I say powerful. You can generate almost any type of process control charts in JMP, from x-bar charts to P charts allowing for effective monitoring at each step of the process. And it’s all drag and drop, so you can monitor quality without pulling your hair out along the way.
Using JMP’s tools, you can evaluate your processes and how you’re measuring those processes. That way, you keep measurement bias from interfering with the true data, and stick to making decisions based on signals and not noise. .
JMP helps you understand the impact of your measurement protocol on the data. And they offer a 30-day free trial for anyone, anywhere. Go to jmp.
com/scishow to see the benefits of visual  statistics for yourself. ME/CFS comes from a combination of both genetic and environmental factors, but it’s most often triggered by an infection from another disease. Epstein-Barr virus, the virus that causes mono, is one of the more common  culprits for triggering ME/CFS.
To be clear, not everyone who  gets mono will develop it. For the people who do, it can be confusing and frustrating to feel like you’re not getting better, while other people recover in a few weeks. Plus, ever since the COVID-19 pandemic, doctors have found that more and more people are developing ME/CFS after being infected with SARS-CoV-2.
In general, long COVID is  the term used to describe when you have symptoms that don’t go away for at least three months after getting COVID. ME/CFS is just one possible outcome that falls under the general  umbrella of long COVID. In fact, some studies suggest that half of people who have long COVID also meet the criteria for ME/CFS.
. There are some notable overlaps in symptoms, namely cognitive impairment, reduced blood flow to the brain, and fatigue They can be tricky to tease apart because we’re not entirely sure what’s going on in the body that leads to ME/CFS. One possibility is that an infectious virus can switch on a gene that messes with your immune and nervous systems.
ME/CFS is classified as a neurological disease. But that doesn’t mean it’s independent from the immune system. Some of the most well known neurological diseases, like multiple sclerosis, work this way too.
So there’s research that suggests broadly that several cells of the  immune system work differently than they otherwise would in people with ME/CFS. Since increased inflammation  is a hallmark of the disease, it’s worth further research to figure out exactly which immune cells could be problematic here. .
Ultimately, figuring out what led to your symptoms and getting a diagnosis can  be literally exhausting. To get diagnosed with ME/CFS, you have to experience a variety of symptoms, from PEM to cognitive dysfunction, lightheadedness when you stand up, and extreme fatigue. Plus, you have to show a specific combination of these symptoms for at least six months before diagnosis.
And that diagnosis is just the beginning. The next step is learning  how to manage your symptoms. One early management idea was to make patients slowly increase the amount of exercise that they did, until they could tolerate a  healthy amount of exercise.
If that sounds like a bad plan to you, given what we know about ME/CFS, you’d be absolutely correct. While this type of increased exercise can be helpful for physical therapy after an injury, this only makes ME/CFS symptoms worse. You can’t run away from low blood oxygen levels.
Literally. Unfortunately, this idea was spread throughout the scientific community due to a controversial study called the PACE trial. The trial reported that patients with ME/CFS showed normal physical function after increasing their exercise.
But the researchers defined “normal” functioning as lower than the measurement that patients needed to be included in the study. . So they could get worse and still be counted as normal by the end of the study.
And even though patients and professionals alike have denounced the results of this study, that paper has still not been retracted. So since there are all sorts of less thought out conclusions about the condition floating around out there, here’s what we do we know about managing ME/CFS effectively. While there are no FDA-approved medications for the condition yet, people who live with it have found that some medications can help ease a few of their symptoms.
These can include painkillers or prescription medications to help with sleeping issues. . .
Outside of the pharmacy, patients can adjust their activity to match their energy levels from day to day. Keeping a daily activity log may be helpful for figuring out where any one person’s exertion limits and PEM triggers are. And once someone figures out their limits, they probably shouldn’t push past them.
The general idea is if you’re feeling good, do your thing. If you’re feeling tired, rest. In fact, people with ME/CFS can even plan for big, energy-expending events like giving a presentation by taking extra rest beforehand.
This way, they can minimize the chance of triggering a PEM flare as much as possible. With the boom of people getting diagnosed with ME/CFS since the pandemic, a lot more research needs to be done. But, as we learned from the PACE trial, those studies should keep actual patient experiences in mind.
If you don’t have ME/CFS, exercise is often still the best medicine. At least preventative medicine. But if exercising is causing damage to your body, trying to push yourself past your limits is not the answer.
Sometimes, no pain is a lot of gain.
Videos Relacionados
How Not Sleeping Actually Kills You
11:58
How Not Sleeping Actually Kills You
SciShow
1,201,011 views
How Sociopaths Actually Work | Authorized Account | Insider
48:02
How Sociopaths Actually Work | Authorized ...
Insider
1,490,822 views
Facebook & Content Moderation: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
29:40
Facebook & Content Moderation: Last Week T...
LastWeekTonight
3,038,599 views
Australia's Quiet Collapse
19:16
Australia's Quiet Collapse
How Money Works
1,294,426 views
Why don't movies look like *movies* anymore?
7:55
Why don't movies look like *movies* anymore?
Patrick Tomasso
2,730,097 views
Arctic Climate Collapse! This time it's REALLY flipped!!
11:15
Arctic Climate Collapse! This time it's RE...
Just Have a Think
488,863 views
Reddit Exposed a Dangerous Food Loophole 3 Years Ago. It's Still There
13:26
Reddit Exposed a Dangerous Food Loophole 3...
More Perfect Union
404,371 views
Your Brain on Birth Control - Dr. Sarah Hill
18:35
Your Brain on Birth Control - Dr. Sarah Hill
After Skool
158,607 views
Korean Shamanism Explained
23:28
Korean Shamanism Explained
ReligionForBreakfast
102,534 views
JWST Made a Cosmological Crisis Worse
13:00
JWST Made a Cosmological Crisis Worse
SciShow
293,821 views
Psychologist Answers Couples Therapy Questions | Tech Support | WIRED
30:40
Psychologist Answers Couples Therapy Quest...
WIRED
1,422,919 views
What Makes ADHD in Women Different
39:25
What Makes ADHD in Women Different
HealthyGamerGG
580,498 views
Algorithms are breaking how we think
37:52
Algorithms are breaking how we think
Technology Connections
1,577,612 views
Bird Flu Should Have Killed One Billion People
39:01
Bird Flu Should Have Killed One Billion Pe...
SciShow
728,315 views
Microplastics Are More Dangerous Than You Think
23:21
Microplastics Are More Dangerous Than You ...
Our Changing Climate
126,753 views
Elon and Zuck are INSECURE Men
23:51
Elon and Zuck are INSECURE Men
Adam Conover
468,954 views
iPhone 16e Review: Who Are You?
14:40
iPhone 16e Review: Who Are You?
Marques Brownlee
1,835,502 views
How to Identify Quality in Clothing (A Rant)
24:16
How to Identify Quality in Clothing (A Rant)
Bernadette Banner
936,935 views
John Oliver: The 60 Minutes Interview
13:34
John Oliver: The 60 Minutes Interview
60 Minutes
1,571,444 views
The Anatomy of a Failed Economy
13:23
The Anatomy of a Failed Economy
Economics Explained
314,310 views