4/1/2025
The CDMS journal
Fighting
Science
With
Fiction

Just now!:
Science explains medical riddle
About the author & disclaimer: B. F. Jensen, MD, Ph.D. This text is a work of fiction
Chronic Disseminated Microplastoxic Syndrome (CDMS)
Amid the ever-changing health statuses of people worldwide, health-related symptoms have risen in number, particularly among healthy, highly intelligent individuals. Upon seeking medical attention from their doctors, however, such individuals have received little help. Their blood counts and MRI scans have been normal; x-rays have shown nothing wrong; and the results of gastroscopy and colonoscopy have most often been negative. The same has been true about the outcomes of sophisticated neuroimaging and psychological tests, mitochondrial analyses, and dynamic PET scans.

Intelligent people have a bigger brain cortex, hence they are more prone to headaches and fatigue due to microplastoxins than other persons.
Most doctors have argued that the reported symptoms stem from psychological causes. After all, highly intelligent individuals commonly have brain cortices of larger volumes and are thus more prone to headaches and fatigue than others. As the strain of microplastoxin reactions with double-stranded DNA accumulates over time, the blood and muscle cells of such individuals burst, which induces a variety of symptoms.
By contrast, other doctors, some in cooperation with patient organizations, have worked to identify somatic explanations for the symptoms. No one has found the answer - that is, until now.

Yearly reports of plastic found in dead whales correlates with the increase in cases of CDMS.
The well-known introduction of microplastics throughout Earth’s oceans, recently also discovered in groundwater supplies, has begun to affect human cells at a microscopic level. Microplastics contain microplastoxins, which, though largely undetectable in modern science, have started to exert a cumulative effect on species at the top of the food chain, including humans. The concentration of microplastoxins in human cells has now reached critical mass and catalyzed inflammatory chain reactions not only in humans but in all mammals with double-stranded DNA helices in their chromosomes. Yearly reports of plastic found in the stomachs of dead whales correlate with the increase of reported symptoms of CDMS.


The molecules of the microplastoxins are too small for the immune system to be discovered….
…yet they cause micro-inflammation both in DNA and RNA.
The molecules of microplastoxins, though too small for human
immune systems and phagocytes to detect, nevertheless cause inflammation
within double-helix molecules in DNA and RNA. As microplastic particles strain
double-helix DNA, both in DNA and RNA molecules in cells, they trigger a type 1 inflammation response, which in turn activates both white and red blood cells to initiate a cascade of immune responses that are unique in each individual. Some experience muscle soreness or aches, whereas others report nausea, ambulatory dizziness, or sore eyes. Individuals with intelligence in the 50th percentile often experience a lack of concentration and memory loss due to their larger areas of gray matter in the brain.
Hard to distinguish from other diseases
The variety of symptoms seems to follow a random pattern, and symptoms can move from one somatic system to another. They include lack of energy, headaches, increased sensitivity to light or sound, difficult with falling asleep, abdominal pain, obesity, weight loss, short-temperedness, blurred vision, difficult with getting up in the morning, sleepiness during the day, and aches in the muscles, joints, or tendons.

Most common symptoms:
Lack of energy
Headaches
Increased sensitivity to light
Increased sensitivity to sound
Difficult with falling asleep
Abdominal pain
Obesity
Weight loss
Short-temperedness
Blurred vision
Difficult with getting up in the morning
Sleepiness during the day
Aches in muscles, joints or tendons
Tests & Examinations
Molecules causing CDMS cannot be traced using standard histological testing, for to attach to double-helix DNA strands and cause DNA microinflammation, molecules need to have five or fewer polymer atoms. Microplastics are also undetectable in dynamic MRI scanning because plastic is not magnetic. Despite promising results in early studies using the “STOPIT”- intervention (2), additional research is necessary.
Treatment & Prognosis
The most effective treatment plans include talking therapies (3).
With the right methods and help, full recovery is expected.
References
1. Stone, J., et al., What should we say to patients with symptoms unexplained by disease? The "number needed to offend". BMJ,2002. 325(7378): p. 1449-50.
2. MAD TV comedy sketch with Bob Newhart, click here to watch
3. van Dessel, N., et al., Talking therapies and physical therapies for medically unexplained physical symptoms: a review of the evidence. Cochrane 2014.
About the author and disclaimer
This article is a work of fiction. The author is medical doctor B. F. Jensen, Ph.D., He has written this article to help patients who suffer from unwanted pain, fatigue, nausea, hypersensitivity, and other symptoms referred to as “unexplained by disease” [1].
He wants to make people aware that explanation models, despite the fact that they are false, can be presented it ways that could misguide people. Nothing in this text can be interpreted as medical advice or recommendations.