Participating in this trial has made me more skeptical about the results of any study. I'm not suggesting that the people running this study were any less diligent than the average researcher, but here's a few of examples:
The subjective assessments of recovery time were probably just nonsense. I know that I was not at all clear on when I had recovered from the test - or whether any ill-effects were from the whole effort of travelling. And actually I felt ok afterwards, and when I got home and still ok while hosting visitors. It was a while later when I got infections and was generally wrecked.
I'm not sure about the determination of the VO2Max point. Clearly I'm not an expert in this but the cycling didn't seem that hard, it seemed like there was only a couple of minutes of effortful cycling and I was nowhere near thinking 'I need this to end'. If I did some exercise like that at home once, I wouldn't expect it to give me PEM. Standing waiting for the pickup before the test for 15 minutes was far more physically stressful. It looks like there were a range of ways that a test could be termed maximal. I wonder if there were differences in the criteria used for the ME/CFS and control groups.
My conclusion is that ME/CFS is bloody hard to study. And there needs to be a lot of effort to manage and record activity levels prior to, during and after a 2xCPET study to avoid confounding.
I don't know what I think about the 2-day CPET now. Of course this study doesn't disprove the idea that people with ME/CFS show a drop in VO2 and/or workrate at anaerobic threshold 24 hours after an exercise test.
I didn't get a diary to fill in.Page 26: All participants completed a fatigue diary for 7 days prior
Organising my household to survive in my absence, packing, waiting around in an airport and walking to the gates and taking taxis and flights is not my 'usual activity'. The team knew I was travelling a long way to get to the mobile laboratory. It's possible that some participants were in PEM on day 1.Page 48: Effort was made to reduce these limitations by ... asking that participants partake only in usual activity outside of testing times i.e. nothing that would further exacerbate fatigue and other symptoms. Furthermore, through the use of the mobile laboratory, participant fatigue was reduced.
The subjective assessments of recovery time were probably just nonsense. I know that I was not at all clear on when I had recovered from the test - or whether any ill-effects were from the whole effort of travelling. And actually I felt ok afterwards, and when I got home and still ok while hosting visitors. It was a while later when I got infections and was generally wrecked.
I'm not sure about the determination of the VO2Max point. Clearly I'm not an expert in this but the cycling didn't seem that hard, it seemed like there was only a couple of minutes of effortful cycling and I was nowhere near thinking 'I need this to end'. If I did some exercise like that at home once, I wouldn't expect it to give me PEM. Standing waiting for the pickup before the test for 15 minutes was far more physically stressful. It looks like there were a range of ways that a test could be termed maximal. I wonder if there were differences in the criteria used for the ME/CFS and control groups.
All tests were termed maximal by meeting at least two of ACSM’s criteria; a plateau in VO2 consumption, an RER of more than 1.10, HR within 10bpm of age-predicted max and an RPE of greater than 17 on the Borg scale (ACSM, 2014).
My conclusion is that ME/CFS is bloody hard to study. And there needs to be a lot of effort to manage and record activity levels prior to, during and after a 2xCPET study to avoid confounding.
I don't know what I think about the 2-day CPET now. Of course this study doesn't disprove the idea that people with ME/CFS show a drop in VO2 and/or workrate at anaerobic threshold 24 hours after an exercise test.