Easily. Endurance was my strong point. I did 50 km bike rides as a child.
Another one of those BMJ Christmas specials?
They need to recognise that this is a special case and the name is just a temporary placeholder. Names based on vaguely defined symptoms are not...
I haven't spent the time making sense of this yet, but the supplementary tables look interesting as mentioned by @Forbin. I will say that on...
Exactly. These sorts of studies are suggestive of further study only, they are not generalisable treatment outcomes.
Thanks Simon. This particular point is certainly of interest to those of us who have a strong family pattern of autoimmune disease.
The problem is that well, 'malaise' is one of those objectionable words too. The central characteristic of CFS is fatigability, rather than...
The choice of 2-Day CPET as an outcome measure is certainly very interesting. The downside is that it will create a bias towards who will...
The problem is that we don't have processes to firstly identify what name will be most useful in terms of patient preferences and secondly test...
I was under the impression that larger sample sizes are not about establishing efficacy, they're about uncovering potential rare adverse events....
I plan on applying, just sorting out my referees! :)
Yes it should be scrapped. CBT can be useful for some people, as far as coping with chronic illness is concerned. But it is never useful when the...
It's very frustrating when people who aren't in remission are promoted with great testimonials. It's common with a lot of "treatments" that are...
Doesn't look that bad to me, but I understand concerns that some of the people involved don't look at the evidence very deeply and thus may be...
Twitter is not exactly the right place for this discussion, but then we haven't been able to chat with Dr Sharpe in any other way so...
By now Sharpe is likely well aware of this thread, just FYI...
This is making the assumption that the underlying demand for funding by high quality proposals/teams is not there. But what concrete evidence do...
"I'm going to block you because" I don't want to answer difficult questions and then saying "kind regards". This is passive aggressive to a tee.
There is also patient selection bias - those who are unable to exercise would never have participated in the PACE trial in the first place.
Given the EBV-lymphoma link, could this simply be a long term consequence of prolonged EBV infection, rather than ME or CFS in general?
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