JaimeS
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
x gazillion.
And, I should add, treat us like the partners we are.
x gazillion.
Actually think I've looked at this the wrong way round. Recent papers e.g. Lipkin/ Montoya et al on microbiological/ metabolomics had 50 subjects by combining results. Mortens study in Oxford will have 100 subjects and I think Neil Harrison is aiming for 200? Fluge and Nella have data on more than 100 ,so I guess efforts are now being made to have large numbers....or several other things. Including emotional trauma and physical trauma -- anything that would induce a flood of cortisol -- as in severe, severe stressor -- can knock out NKCs. Or so says some pretty preliminary research that looks credible at first glance.
That's not a bad idea. We're basically saying a very rudimentary meta-analysis. Find out just how deep a hole we're in.
[Edit: I wonder if anyone who worked on the IOM report already has such a list? They did review 9K studies, after all.]
There’s a very large group, the hypermobile group, most of whom still have no gene identified (although it has an autosomal dominant form of inheritance, so the genes are following Mendelian rules so it seems not that hard—yet hasn’t been found, but I don’t think there’s many researchers, much funding, or many studies here, either), and is thought to be likely to end up in several categories eventually.
2-day CPET (with 48 hours inbetween) seems to be the best biomarker for now
I wonder whether this type of EDS can sometimes occur as a developmental disorder that requires at least two factors: genetic predisposition (which could include a variety of genetic profiles), plus a precipitating event?