I think this is very pertinent. I suspect the real problem is that the term has no very clearly defined meaning but is often used n the assumption that it means reduced brain perfusion. That might apply to one of your symptoms and to the other. From what I hear of PWME talking I suspect the big...
I fully understand your problem and that is why I think having a site like Science for ME where we can discuss these things is so useful.
So let me give a bit more detail of my reasons.
Unfortunately 'the majority of mainstream doctors studying orthostatic intolerance' may not be quite what it...
I think there may be a confusion here. Low serum sodium has nothing to do with low blood volume so is unlikely to have any relevance to OI. I cannot see that potassium or calcium are going to be relevant either, are they?
This is a reasonable question but we can also ask why homeopathy has been recommended for centuries when it does no good. The fact that lots of doctors recommend something is I am afraid not very useful. Doctors used to recommend tonsillectomies or spending six weeks in bed after heart attacks...
No, it has not been scientifically validated and since it has been around for at least thirty years that probably means there is nothing much to it. The general idea that ulcerative colitis, Crohn's and irritable bowel syndrome all stem from a similar leaky gut problem is quite clearly wrong...
If POTS and NMH are due to poor autonomic regulation then I do not think it makes any sense to supplement with salt and water. The kidney will simply restore what it thinks is the 'right' volume but if the autonomic nervous system is not keeping vascular tone right then it is not going to be the...
Why does this lady think she is in a position to lecture other people about getting things right when she is so good at getting things wrong herself?
Seems like teaching grandmothers to take the motes out of their eyes, to mix metaphors.
Sorry Dr Miller but you have clearly missed the point completely. CFS is unusual only in that poor clinical trial research is touted as being competent when it is not. Competent researchers in ME/CFS have no problem at all with patient 'activists', who value good quality research. It is not in...
I don't follow that @MeSci. If the sodium level is low desmopressin is contraindicated. If it is normal there is no need to take any. If desmopressin is going to lower sodium levels then taking sodium will have no effect. With patients with inappropriate ADH secretion pouring sodium chloride...
Maybe, I certainly agree I may have been a bit quick to respond. But on further deliberation I am not sure I end up with a very different view.
Highland says amongst other things:
This paper presents the idea that diseases can be explained and treated with biological theories, mental illness...
I doubt there is much sense to be made.
I suspect what they are proving is that diagnoses are made by people who use adaptive learning and sometimes go maladaptive. Its a bit like psychosomatic research I suppose - all in the heads of the researchers. Symptoms fall into certain clusters because...
A pinched nerve would be expected to show some disc change on MRI but no spinal canal narrowing. The spinal canal is to do with the cord, not the nerves. So that makes sense. Pain affecting jaw and shoulder is a little unusual and suggests something like the third cervical nerve root. It is more...
We could do one of those papers with seventy three main authors and a subsidiary list of six hundred minor authors. We would need to make sure 55% of them were women though, to avoid flack.
I was thinking of something a bit like that. Whenever I have been seriously ill (cancer and stuff) I have benefited greatly from having my wife present scaring the pants off the doctor with difficult and pertinent questions.
Er, one could. Sadly, Einstein made virtually no contribution to science after his early papers. He spent decades trying to prove quantum theory was wrong. And in his final years he realised how much time he had wasted and that he was wrong.
Typical male chauvinist bias I would say. Why would the old men be better at cautionary tales than the old ladies? One man can teach six kids to fish so it does not matter if another five die off. The skills of motherhood are more one to one so grannies would be more useful. And since the women...
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