It shows the level of motivation provided by the exercise physiologists to keep going (their job is to encourage participants until they reach their true VO2Max) is quite inconsisten
We wouldn’t, I misread what you wrote earlier about the encouragement provided. (I missed the “is quite inconsistent” and that changed what I thought you were saying)Why would we assume that patients reached VO2max on day 1 of this study?
The authors don’t claim to achieved VO2max. They use VO2peak throughout. An RER >1.1 meets the claim for VO2peak and is adequate to make comparisons.The conclusions that the authors are making about VO2Peak are assuming that patients and controls actually achieved their VO2Max, something which I am sceptical about.
Not really. The main result that was shown in almost all previous studies - a decreased workload or power output at the ventilatory threshold - was confirmed in this study.So it looks like the results are sort of all over the place on these CPET studies?
I suspect that this would be because participants were not consistently encouraged to go give everything they have as Snow Leopard suggested, making the peak values less reliable than those at the VT. The authors might have been cautious to not push patients too far and might have done the same for controls to have a reliable comparison. The article says:There’s something not right if your controls are having a “significant reduction in VO2 peak between CPET1 and CPET2”.
Given the results of CPET studies we now have, I wonder whether it is really necessary to produce peak values at the second exercise test. Perhaps values at VT are sufficient. This could reduce the negative impact these tests have on patients.It should be noted that the patients experienced considerable symptom exacerbation after the tests, often lasting for weeks.
Congratulations to the Norwegians for making this possible! I saw that the study was funded by patient organizations.Yay! :-D It's finally published!We've been waiting for this one for a while.
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Not really. The main result that was shown in almost all previous studies - a decreased workload or power output at the ventilatory threshold - was confirmed in this study.
We're not cherry picking - it's not that the previous study indicated VO2peak at VT would be the main outcome and that we now switched to another outcome or something like that. Here's what I tweeted when the previous CPET study came out, in March:
Congratulations to the Norwegians for making this possible! I saw that the study was funded by patient organizations.
Is there anyone who was involved with this process who can share some of the details (perhaps in PM) so we could try to copy this success in other countries? I'm interested to know how you got the research team involved and prepared to study on ME/CFS, how much such a study costs etc.
Good that it is finally published.
Not read it yet. I guess you will find significant differences between day 1 and 2 among patients and controls. Maybe this is the only practical way to go about such study (2 days), but the weakness of such a study, is that you often won’t be able to catch the real PEM, the most devastating PEM that often “arrives”(much) later than 24 hours after.
I ask Katarina Lien directly. Is it so that these results show that graded exercise therapy (GET) should be advised against ME disease? I get a clear YES to answer. The ME sufferers get so much worse off squeezing with exercise, and they not only get worse the next day, but sicker for weeks! The study clearly shows this.
Critics can try to keep the training or activity below the patient's tolerance limit, but it is very difficult and also risky, says Katarina. The patients do not always know if one day they take in too much, and something you tolerate a week ago or yesterday may be too much today or next week. When the ME patients came to be tested on day two, some of them were so severely reduced that they barely managed to step on the exercise bike without any load (watts) before reaching their anaerobic threshold and then began to dispense lactic acid.And then higher lactic acid per load than the healthy sheep, which they think is due to the body not being able to reuse the lactic acid as energy in the same way as in healthy ones. So exercise is something that simply lies beyond the reach of the ME patients. One cannot use exercise to treat ME patients. Still, she would like to emphasize that activity that can be tolerated over time without triggering PEM is probably sensible.
"One cannot use exercise to treat ME patients. Still, she would like to emphasize that activity that can be tolerated over time without triggering PEM is probably sensible"
Unfortunately this gets us back to the slippery slopes of activity programs.
I can't self care without PEM and yet this is about activity being tolerated.
It doesn't go far enough to protect us or give the right impression that it's every day basic activities that are beyond the scope of many of us
"One cannot use exercise to treat ME patients. Still, she would like to emphasize that activity that can be tolerated over time without triggering PEM is probably sensible"
Unfortunately this gets us back to the slippery slopes of activity programs.
I can't self care without PEM and yet this is about activity being tolerated.
It doesn't go far enough to protect us or give the right impression that it's every day basic activities that are beyond the scope of many of us
I think she is just saying that exercise we can't manage is bad for us but giving up movement we are coping with is not going to help. The ME community was attacked by them saying the advice we gave was complete bed rest for everyone. She is not giving them ammunition to say we are anti exercise, we are just saying there is a varying individual capacity that the patients must be allowed to decide for themselves.
Maybe this is all just a coincidence and the change is for reasons other than activity levls but this kind of pattern is typical and I've had it for 20 years now.
I agree. My wife actually pushes herself hard within her limits, but she always seems to understand those limits well. My impression is she typically pushes herself to the edge of PEM and maybe into it slightly, unless external circumstances (family visits etc) mean she gets loaded further, then dips more heavily into PEM. This is a major part of my wife's staying-sane strategy.I think she is just saying that exercise we can't manage is bad for us but giving up movement we are coping with is not going to help. The ME community was attacked by them saying the advice we gave was complete bed rest for everyone. She is not giving them ammunition to say we are anti exercise, we are just saying there is a varying individual capacity that the patients must be allowed to decide for themselves.