pteropus
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
your thoughts, please ?
https://medicine-program.uq.edu.au/...fatigue-using-scientific-insights-n-1-studies
https://medicine-program.uq.edu.au/...fatigue-using-scientific-insights-n-1-studies
. The findings from this study will demonstrate the extent to which patterns and predictors of fatigue, and other CFS/ME symptoms, vary over time and how they differ from one individual to another.
Much of the existing research on CFS/ME makes implicit assumptions that individuals with CFS/ME experience symptoms that are stable over time and that all individuals experience symptoms in the same way.
so its a glorified version of what you do for a couple of weeks at the UK CFS/ME clinics noting stuff on a paper chart - I'm sure GETSET Julie would be brilliant at itWhat a wasted opportunity. The picture of the wrist monitoring device makes it look like they are going to monitor things like heart rate, and steps, but no, it seems just to be an electronic notebook on which participants record subjective stuff 3 times a day.
I misread the linked document as recruiting participants to take part in the trial. It's not - it's to recruit undergraduate students to volunteer to help with the literature review and data analysis.
I've not read the blurb, but even some form of comparative group would seem to be useful - healthy controls or another chronic illness to flag up the nature and degree of any differences?What would be interesting is if you had samples from patients before becoming ill and during illness. Or, maybe more likely, in recovered patients, samples during illness and after recovery. It would be interesting to see what changes you could pick up on - either in an individual or as a pattern among many patients.
Maybe that would be a worthy prospective study. Maybe it would give a clear signal on subgroups if they exist. On the other hand, I would think we should be able to get the same information comparing sick people and healthy people, and ultimately we'd be limited by the same lack of knowing what to be looking for.
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The thing at the start of this thread looks like somebody needs to produce a paper and has no qualms as to how dopey it is.
Six weeks may be short to catch most crashes, potentially leading to the erroneous conclusion that most patients don't have crashes.
The patients will carry attometers that will record patterns of activity continuously over 6 weeks.
I had the same impression. I can't access the webpage.It's not clear to me that they are actometers making objective measurement of activity.
The blurb in the opening post describes them as 'a wrist-worn electronic diary' which suggests to me it's just recording symptoms and subjective activity, not things like steps or heart rate.
Does anyone have more information?