Ok, so you're saying that we shouldn't be believing everything that neurosurgeons and other surgeons or psychiatrists theorise and recommend as treatment within their own field of specialty, but we should take your word for it, on an online forum, without you providing any citation of evidence that backs up what you're saying, just because physiology is your field of specialty?
I think the point is, whenever anything is posted on this forum which presents a new hypothesis, we will examine it in two ways. One, does the hypothesis make sense within current understanding of physiology? Two does the research evidence presented fulfil the requirements of research, for example, does a clinical trial have either double blinding or objective outcome measures.
On the first of these, problems that strike me as not making sense physiologically include the hypothesis that stugeron has an effect on blood flow in a large vessel like the jugular, even if there is stenosis. I find
@Jonathan Edwards explanation about the size of blood vessels helpful in understanding that this doesn't make biological sense.
On the second, he points out that the trial mentioned of surgery on the jugular vein for Menieres disease appears to have been unblinded and to have subjective outcome measures, so scientifically unreliable, just like the PACE trial.
We are a science based forum. It is not a matter of the eminence of researchers making claims, it is a matter of the quality of evidence placed before us, whether in an anecdote, or a secondhand report from a researcher, or peer reviewed publication.
As the paper linked in the first post says the field of jugular vein stenosis and whether it leads to symptoms, and how it can be treated is not an established field. So it is hardly surprising if we want to challenge an unproven and seemingly implausible hypothesis based on a single anecdote.