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  1. Jonathan Edwards

    2025: The 2019/24 Cochrane Larun review Exercise Therapy for CFS - including IAG, campaign, petition, comments and articles

    I am doubtful that my Rapid Response will appear. There are none up and I suspect this indicates that none will be put up. The potato is too hot.
  2. Jonathan Edwards

    2025: The 2019/24 Cochrane Larun review Exercise Therapy for CFS - including IAG, campaign, petition, comments and articles

    Absolutely it would. In clinical pharmacology we use different categorisations all the time. I have done studies on rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory arthritis, seropositive rheumatoid arthritis, active rheumatoid arthritis, arthritis in general - you name it. Asthma is an outdated concept...
  3. Jonathan Edwards

    2025: The 2019/24 Cochrane Larun review Exercise Therapy for CFS - including IAG, campaign, petition, comments and articles

    That argument is incorrect. You can legitimately apply results from wider criteria to a population with narrower criteria. It is the opposite, true generalisation that is not legitimate. If bones are good for dogs you can assume they are good for whippets, unless you have evidence otherwise...
  4. Jonathan Edwards

    United Kingdom: News from #There for ME

    The problem is that if most patients are not well-enough informed to know what they really want or need you end up with the same old mish-mash. How do you 'prevent' people with ME/CFS getting worse?
  5. Jonathan Edwards

    2025: The 2019/24 Cochrane Larun review Exercise Therapy for CFS - including IAG, campaign, petition, comments and articles

    No, it should never have been proposed. We know all we need to know from the NICE analysis. It was only ever playing Cochrane's own brand of football where if they are losing they are allowed a free kick with the goalie blindfolded. If the old review was bad enough to justify a rewrite it...
  6. Jonathan Edwards

    Could bone marrow studies be useful?

    If they were killed in a traffic accident maybe but the cost of organising that would be astronomical - many millions. No because B cells only grow in bottles if you bock normal selection controls - so the population of antibodies produced would be entirely an artefact of the culture system.
  7. Jonathan Edwards

    Mind and Body in the Guardian again

    I am very unclear what you are trying to argue. We are probably agreed that there are cases of blindness not currently explained by structural pathology. It would be fair to call them functional but that term has been appropriated by doctors who use it to mean conversion disorder, even if they...
  8. Jonathan Edwards

    Mind and Body in the Guardian again

    It isn't ad hominem. It is pointing out that simple explanations tend to be more likely to apply than complicated ones. Opticians often get things suboptimal.
  9. Jonathan Edwards

    Mind and Body in the Guardian again

    Ophthalmic problems can heal. Central nervous blindness can improve. And we have no idea what causes these unexplained problems so we have no idea whether or not they can improve.
  10. Jonathan Edwards

    Placebo effect discussion thread

    That might not be at all surprising. Wikipedia says: In accordance with its partial agonism, although naltrexone is described as a pure opioid receptor antagonist, it has shown some evidence of weak opioid effects in clinical and preclinical studies.[6] It is a painkiller!
  11. Jonathan Edwards

    Mind and Body in the Guardian again

    I suspect you need a better optician. I have had similar problems in the past.
  12. Jonathan Edwards

    Mind and Body in the Guardian again

    Where does that come from. What is somatic modification if not strudel change? Or by somatic are you meaning psychosomatic? Structural change in cancer occurs without intention and isn't functional so what has intention got to do with it?
  13. Jonathan Edwards

    Mind and Body in the Guardian again

    That tells us sweet FA. These are not controlled trial data. Of course people will improve with time. It is hard to credit just how bad the research I this field is but it is. This is worse than the Cochrane exercise review.
  14. Jonathan Edwards

    Could bone marrow studies be useful?

    yes The problem is that one bone marrow sample is very unpleasant. People with life-threatening leukaemia may get half a dozen bone marrows over a period of months or years but one at a time. To do this B cell sampling in ME/CFS you would need ten samples on the same day. A bit like being in...
  15. Jonathan Edwards

    Placebo effect discussion thread

    I think there was one who reported permanent recovery from the blinded phase. And what makes it all the more spooky is that of course at that stage the expectation was for permanent benefit or perhaps indeterminate benefit. The expectation of a six month optimum came later after I had pointed it...
  16. Jonathan Edwards

    2025: The 2019/24 Cochrane Larun review Exercise Therapy for CFS - including IAG, campaign, petition, comments and articles

    I don't know but I suspect not. Presumably the trial authors said that Cochrane could only have their raw data if they could be authors. Not sure what sort of theatre but maybe No?
  17. Jonathan Edwards

    Could bone marrow studies be useful?

    I think we know what the question is and I think @MelbME would agree. It is whether any skewing to VH3-30 is occurring because of a shift in checkpoint-dependent selection in the bone marrow environment or once the cells have gone out into lymph nodes. If we could answer that it would be of huge...
  18. Jonathan Edwards

    Placebo effect discussion thread

    We can consider the possibility but I think the probability is vanishingly small. What I think people forget sometimes is that for any given chemical compound that might be called drug D, the chances of producing any improvement in Illness I is unbelievably small. Thee are probably at least...
  19. Jonathan Edwards

    Placebo effect discussion thread

    Well if you raise all these interesting and difficult questions, @Sasha, you may be obliged to start answering them one day!!
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