Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Karl Popper, in Conjectures and Refutations, points out that testing a hypothesis need not necessarily require new experiments. You can test it firstly for internal consistency and ability to make precise enough predictions and secondly against existing observation.
In this case I think existing clinical observation refutes the hypothesis because it's predictions are not found in any consistent form in people with LC or ME/CFS. None of the authors are physicians , I suspect, so they may not be aware of what is known.
If there was significant endothelial malfunction at least a few cases would show overt clinical signs in a consistent pattern. They do not.
In this case I think existing clinical observation refutes the hypothesis because it's predictions are not found in any consistent form in people with LC or ME/CFS. None of the authors are physicians , I suspect, so they may not be aware of what is known.
If there was significant endothelial malfunction at least a few cases would show overt clinical signs in a consistent pattern. They do not.