This paper looks to be important for the origin of the concept POTS:
Schondorf and Low labeled the condition “idiopathic postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome” in a series of adults, suggesting the cause was “a mild form of an acute autonomic neuropathy”
Schondorf R, Low PA (1993)...
Thanks for sharing. It would be interesting to have data on tilt table testing in a large representative sample of the general population to see how well POT correlates with POTS symptoms.
Does anyone know of such as study?
There author makes three interesting points about POTS in adolescents.
The threshold for standing test should be lower than for a tilt table test because in the former you're still actively using your leg muscles to stand, promoting venous pumping.
An increase of 40pm in adolescents is not...
It's also a strange thing to study: whether making up an explanation for symptoms makes the patient feel less ill.
I assume that the main message from this paper is to tell doctors that it's ok to use some made-up explanation for symptoms they can't explain. It's not only allowed, it's now the...
Apparently, the symptoms are no longer medically unexplained. That seems to be the main message that they want to spread.
In the introduction the authors write:
"People with persistent physical symptoms commonly have poor experiences of health care8,9 and are often told that their symptoms...
Looks like a highly problematic study.
It has the design A +B versus A. The control group got no intervention at all, only the usual care that the intervention group also received (in addition to the intervention itself).
Patients and GPs were not blinded and they only used a subjective...
A critique of this study was published by Paul Garner, Alan Carson and others (but also George Davey Smith). They write:
There are problems with the methodology in this study. Firstly, the authors use levels of CRP relative to other biomarkers to make a large number of possible ratio traits...
The definition seems to be overly inclusive. It does not require any particular symptom, does not require any level of functional disability or impact of symptoms on activity levels, does not require proof of Sars-Cov-2, etc. It is just a list of 'can' and 'may'. Almost everything can fit that...
Now that I think about this, there is probably an easy way to test this. The mean of 'Reward_Granted_Yes_is_1' is 0.48 and if I take the mean for each of the probabilities of reward it looks like this.
So yes I think this variable does not take successful completion into account and simply...
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