Bob
Senior Member
- Messages
- 16,455
- Location
- England (south coast)
I understand your scepticism, but I couldn't disagree with you more, jimells. I think this is exciting research. It's exactly the type of research we need, in my opinion, and it's the same type of research as Ron Davis is doing. And they may have some tools and procedures available that Ron doesn't have.Even if NIH fixes the worst problems with this trial, in the long run it will probably be of limited use because it is not part of a comprehensive research. It feels very much ad hoc, unless there is some strategy that NIH has not bothered to reveal.
(Whether they can do the study competently or not is another matter, but I don't think it can harm us to have an extra team on the case if they get the criteria right, and if they are honestly looking for biomedical differences. But I can't imagine that the lead investigator would get involved if he wasn't serious about it. Why would he bother? And, like others, I've also been very impressed by Vicki Whittemore.)
The two-day exercise test is interesting, in itself, and suggests they've been listening. But the study is so much more interesting than that; They're using cutting edge technology to investigate cellular, genetic and immunological changes during and after exercise. And that's another reason to suggest that they've been listening. (i.e. They're investigating the cellular effects of PEM!) How many studies have comprehensively investigated post-exertional genetic/immunological/cellular changes like that?
To me, this looks like a hugely important study. (But I have a habit of being over-optimistic, and I rely on the community to keep me grounded.)
Last edited: