Mithriel
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I'd argue that this is just what we need. At the moment we have no way of reliably separating the people with TB from those with asthma or lung cancer, and as you say, we need to do this in order to make progress. Perceptive physicians could tease out some of the differences between the groups, IF they were given the time and resources to do so. It's hard when there's no pathology to observe or measure, but progress could be made.
The point is that we do not need a randomised controlled trial to do an initial sort of TB, lung cancer and asthma. A careful history of each patient showed they had different diseases so they were accepted as different.
The emphasis on fatigue in ME was done for ideological reasons. The doctors wanted to study fatigue and were able to claim ME because they acted unethically (ignoring previous work and experts) and were political with no care for patients.
It is the weirder symptoms of ME that are most important. Vision studies are sorely neglected for instance. Becoming exhausted by making small movements may be an important symptom to look at to distinguish it from other fatiguing illnesses.
I am talking about small well defined groups, maybe many separate groups, for research that can then be widened out.
I do not have high hopes of Jason's work, he does not seem to understand ME, just chronic fatigue.