Search results

  1. Cheshire

    Pain Catastrophizing Affects Stair Climbing Ability in Osteo Arthritis (2019), Suzuki, Y et al.

    They equated getting up from a chair to climbing a stair, hence if they can do the former, they can do the latter. I have no knee pain, so may be wrong, but intuitively I would think that the repetition of gestures + the fact that the whole body weighs on one knee when climbing contrary to...
  2. Cheshire

    Psychiatry Advisor: Addressing depression in ME/CFS, 2018, Cindy Lampner

    I was using your logic. No. I think depression can be caused by environmental factors (and have biological factors too), but I won't use ther term "psychogenic", because of all the wrong theories that are linked to this term and also the fact that it simply omits social factors and put all the...
  3. Cheshire

    Psychiatry Advisor: Addressing depression in ME/CFS, 2018, Cindy Lampner

    I don't have a strong opinion about what causes depression but your argument doesn't stand. If an illness is not caused by something, it doesn't mean this something is not causing something else. Your sentence is like stating: diabetes is not caused by viruses, I don't understand why you'd say...
  4. Cheshire

    Developing a better biopsychosocial understanding of pain in inflammatory bowel disease, 2019, Moss-Morris et al

    Psychological taylorism. You have a single and simple model that you apply to every illnesses you happen to work on. You have adapted tools that measure only positive results. Spares time and intellectual activity. You can copy and paste lots of stuff. MM and her mates are geniuses, truly.
  5. Cheshire

    UK: MRC and NIHR announce ME/CFS workshop, November 2019 & ME/CFS Biomedical Partnership FAQ

    Posts about the feedback on the UK GWAS project have been moved to a new thread.
  6. Cheshire

    Genome-wide analysis identifies molecular systems and 149 genetic loci associated with income, 2019, Hill et al

    I read this thread on twitter and found it interesting: In particular:
  7. Cheshire

    Alt-med woo kills a small child. Again.

    The lack of conventional medicine was caused by the belief (widespread in alt medicine) that conventional medicine is chemical and dangerous and bad. Anti-vaxers tropes are part of alt medicine. And the article I linked to is pretty clear, it links to several studies, not anecdotes, that show...
  8. Cheshire

    Alt-med woo kills a small child. Again.

    https://www.cancernetwork.com/news/how-use-alternative-medicine-hurts-survival-rates-patients-cancer The Samoan outbreak of measles is partly due to alt practitioners who recommended not to vaccinate. Do I have to remind how many child died? https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-50682881 Is that...
  9. Cheshire

    The science of craniocervical instability and other spinal issues and their possible connection with ME/CFS - discussion thread

    And a list doesn't tell us how you gathered these symptoms, in which trial and how these symptoms were assessed, how common they are, what criteria were used to define the illness etc...
  10. Cheshire

    An Alzheimer treatment: lecanemab (Biogen)

    Biogen, the lab selling this new treatment, seems very involved in this, which is a red flag to me. Is it a story of a missed opportunity for Alzheimer patients, or is it a lab trying to create a narative to sell their product after a mitigated trial? I have no idea...
  11. Cheshire

    Signs of Intracranial Hypertension, Hypermobility and Craniocervical Obstructions in patients with ME/CFS (Pre-print 2019/published 2020) Bragée et al

    A lot of doctors are, in good faith, convinced that their clinical judgment is better than a clinical trial because they are biased, and it's human. That's why clinical trials are set up: to eliminate all imaginable biases or unwanted elements that can interfere with the results. Untill...
  12. Cheshire

    Signs of Intracranial Hypertension, Hypermobility and Craniocervical Obstructions in patients with ME/CFS (Pre-print 2019/published 2020) Bragée et al

    Where are the solid studies with decent control groups, solid blinding and sound methodology that prove this? (and i don't mean the first studies one can find googling).
  13. Cheshire

    The science of craniocervical instability and other spinal issues and their possible connection with ME/CFS - discussion thread

    You can keep up with all your speculations, as long as you cite studies with no control group or mathematical model, that's all it is: speculation.
  14. Cheshire

    Open Cervicocranial dysfunction, neuroinflammation and infection in ME/CFS compared to healthy subjects, Bragée & Bertilson [MEPRO study]

    I guess there are differences between standing and lying MRIs in healthy people too. Is there a study comparing EDS (the example given in the tweet) patients and healthy control's supine and upright MRIs?
  15. Cheshire

    Special Report - Online activists are silencing us, scientists say Reuters March 2019

    Oh dear, the Russian bots were missing from this story, thanks Mickael for adding them. How many times has this guy retired from ME research ? Seems like he needs an announcement each year.
  16. Cheshire

    UK: MRC and NIHR announce ME/CFS workshop, November 2019 & ME/CFS Biomedical Partnership FAQ

    Is it only for people from the UK or can everybody participate?
  17. Cheshire

    Oxidative stress in exercise training: the involvement of inflammation and peripheral signals, 2019, Francesca et al

    Posted here: https://www.s4me.info/threads/relationship-between-exercise-induced-oxidative-stress-changes-and-parasympathetic-activity-in-cfs-2018-polli-et-al.7747/ :)
Back
Top Bottom