From my experience I've noticed that almost everyone tests positive for atleast one mycotoxin in Realtime Labs mycotoxin panel, no matter if they had any known WDB exposure or not (or even ill).
I'm wondering if it's a pointless panel (misleading) to take, since these mycotoxins occour naturally in alot of our foods and in that sense it would be quite unusual to be completely negative. Unless you eat foods completely free of them ofcourse.
What would make a little bit sense however is that ME/CFS patients might tend to detox these substances slower, and for that reason have a higher tendency to get a positive result. But if this would be the case, what does it say about the patients mold exposure - not much.
In all studies I've found they always refer to "Negative control patients had no detectable mycotoxins in their tissues or fluids." and I can only find one study who confirms this, which is:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2680627/ by Dennis G Hooper. Everything comes back to this one person and he is the one person running Realtime Labs. Have anyone found any other sources of healthy controls _not_ having mycotoxins in them - in either urine or serum?
Could anyone confirm if this LA Times article is about the realtime labs Dennis Hooper?
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-kdday3dec07-story.html
I'm sure alot of things in it is exaggerated in standard journalism-style. But some disturbing things pops up though like:
"The Health Care Financing Administration determined that Hooper had falsely claimed the lab was accredited by the College of American Pathologists. In fact, he had never applied for such accreditation, government records say. The regulators also found that Hooper closed the lab to avoid an inspection. The government banned him from owning or operating a pathology lab anywhere in the United States for two years."
"He captivated friends and colleagues in the mid-1990s with ideas for
lucrative diagnostic and research labs."
"Colleagues and other investors say Hooper appeared to be the
high-rolling businessman, entertaining them in casino suites and fancy restaurants."