It's a clever idea but I don't think it quite flies, does it? Slowing down blood could increase the oxygen extraction from a given volume of blood...
Maybe it was a mind over body psychosomatic address.
That sounds complicated. Excessive venous pooling would presumably be due to vasodilation rather than constriction? Maybe venodilation in the...
If you look at my posts you will see that that is precisely my point,. POT doesn't seem to be mostly what is causing OI in ME/CFS patients. But...
But still in Sheffield for yesterday's Lancet paper?
We were discussing the more general relevance of POT. In fact EndME set up a new thread as a result of that side discussion. I am being consistent...
The other thing is that a high proportion of people with ME/CFS have OI yet do not show POT on testing. So there are good reasons to think POT...
Sorry but that is simply not the case. The arguments I was making made no reference to NIH data. I don't know anything about their POTS data and...
I wasn't referring to the NIH findings. I was referring to how one makes a coherent physiological story around the implication of POT in ME/CFS....
Except that venous pooling with preload failure would indicate failure of vasoconstriction rather than excess vasoconstriction. I guess it might...
But presumably the same Chris Burton who has co-authored on other occasions with these Aarhus people giving his address as Sheffield. Maybe he moved?
A bit sneaky really?
Is this another Chris Burton - cloned from the one in Sheffield or wherever, or the same one with two addresses? To answer my own question it is...
I understood that POT was defined as in the absence of orthostatic hypotension. I would have thought that the relevant blood pressure was ongoing...
And what evidence do we have for that? And how do we explain the cerebral symptoms with normal blood pressure if that is the case? 'Neurovascular...
Yes, but what would be the mechanism of origin? Why would you get preload failure in the context? Maybe some selective autonomic defect, but as...
Mycoplasma is an interesting organism because it produces a range of atypical immune reactions. It can produce Reiter's but also the antibody...
That is an interesting history. I have in my study the small wooden cabinet constructed by John Honor, who was chief technical officer to Thomas...
A typical example of how 'lived experience' and 'empowered' are manipulated to justify poor work. And the usual 'multidisciplinary' garbage.
This looks pretty enlightened. I guess that the wording of requests e.g. 'need a list of outcomes, appreciate links' is a reasonable way to...
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