For years, people with myalgic encephalomyelitis or chronic fatigue syndrome have lived in a frustrating gray zone. They struggle with crushing exhaustion, brain fog, and physical crashes after even mild activity, yet no test could confirm what was wrong.

Diagnosis has often come only by ruling out other illnesses, leaving many patients misjudged or dismissed entirely.

Now researchers at the University of East Anglia in partnership with Oxford BioDynamics believe they have cracked a clue that could change everything.

They have designed a blood test that detects distinctive DNA folding patterns in people with chronic fatigue syndrome. The team claims it can tell affected individuals apart from healthy volunteers with about 96 percent accuracy

A Fresh Way To Read The Genome

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