Jonathan Edwards
"Gibberish"
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Perhaps. But that was offered only as an example.
My point stands: The greater history of testing ME/CFSers has been challenging because of lack of adequate control over who is included in the samples. That includes inadvertent sampling issues due simply to poor definitions and selection criteria.
So, it is very difficult to state concretely whether or not there are already tests out there that can discriminate between us and healthy controls.
I think that argument wears a bit thin if we are talking about diagnostic labs used by people like Dr De Meirleir. If Dr De Meirleir cannot recognise real ME then we don't know if the lab test distinguishes PWME. If he can then where is the paper from the lab that shows the distinction?
The dilution argument is very convenient but if there was a test that could reliably pick out PWME then even a fourfold dilution would not be a major problem - you just have 25% of 'ME' samples more than two standard deviations above the normal mean. I have seen results on PR for cytokines apparently 100 times the upper limit of normal. In the Hornig blood study the mean difference was more like 1.2 times. We do not have scatter plots but I rather doubt she had any values 100x normal. There is a rabbit loose here, or maybe more of a mammoth loose. Research labs need to sit down and sort out between themselves why the results are so inconsistent.