"Rates"? The key is the severity.
I've had a few friends who have had schizophrenia, their tiredness/lack of energy was mostly caused by a lack of sleep or medication side effects (or undiagnosed cancer causing a major hormone imbalance)...
It actually suggests the opposite - CK spills over into circulation when muscles are damaged. What it really means is patients are less active than controls.
I must admit I did a double take there.
If their symptom reporting is highly biased, then the concept of "people high on medically unexplained symptoms" makes little sense.
It is an interesting hypothesis, but is very much of house-of-cards construction, requiring a lot of empirical validation steps that could easily turn out not to be true.
I do note they've singled out a few things that I have previously talked about in my random/speculative ideas thread, that...
I'm getting a bit bored of these retrospective questionnaire based studies. Why didn't the CDC or anyone else step up to the plate with a prospective community based study? I mean they've had 18 months to get one started!?!
The other viruses have become endemic because societies have tolerated them. We can eliminate this one with global vaccination and quarantine if we choose to do so.
It sounds like the individual is still ill, but is just better able to manage what energy they have by pacing. The stuff about "boom-bust" just sounds like parroting what they were taught by a therapist.
There are two issues here.
The first is whether the test is a highly accurate measure of the antibody titre in the individual. I am suggesting it isn't due to sampling and processing variability.
The second is whether the level of circulating antibodies will help prevent infection during the...
The FDA advice is correct, the tests do not indicate how "protected" you are. The tests are not reliable enough for any sort of quantitative prediction about "protection". The test shows that you have seroconverted and that is all that matters as far as the test goes.
Convenience studies like this don't provide direct evidence about cause-effect relationships like this, yet that is what they are trying to suggest in the conclusion...
It's funny how patients are never included as part of the Delphi method review group.
No long-covid patients want this to be called "Post COVID Syndrome".
One key problem with their criteria is that it poorly discriminates between individuals who have pulmonary damage and those who have other...
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