Their Lyme research reminds me of their CFS research: http://lymeresearchuk.org/links/
Ah. Excuse all of my non-sequiturs and try to be patient with me.
So, if the C6 test - created in the US - is executed in the UK, its results are different than if executed to the same specs in a US lab? So all the testing I have had done at the NIH was foolhardy on my part? Only UK labs know how to do it right? I should have had the C6 done in the UK?
Silly me. I should alert the manufacturer - based here in the US.
"Presumably" one way to distinguish between ME/CFS and Lyme is by testing for Lyme.
You implied US labs were inferior...or rather, I inferred that based on your statement "...there are good reasons to think the tests from US labs said to be more 'reliable' are less so."
NIH labs are US labs said to be more reliable. Yes?
Why? Research has shown that a variety of infections can trigger ME/CFS in a small percentage of patients with those infections. Why should EBV or Q-fever be known to trigger ME, but Lyme be presumed incapable of such a thing?@duncan ..i would think CFS and Lyme are mutually exclusive
The LTT has been found to have around 90% specificity and sensitivity in studies so I'm not sure how for sure we know it is not reliable. That sounds pretty reliable to me.I know the LTT is the one test for sure we know is not validated as reliable. Are you happy, Daffodil, that Elaine's daughter may get a misdiagnosis on the basis of your advice?
It's even better than that. Specificity (true negatives) is 98.7%, and sensitivity (true positives) is 89.4%. So the specificity is roughly equivalent to the standard test, meaning there's no increase in false positives, and the huge false negative problem in the standard tests has been improved upon considerably.The LTT has been found to have around 90% specificity and sensitivity in studies so I'm not sure how for sure we know it is not reliable. That sounds pretty reliable to me.
Those are interesting claims, and I don't believe I've seen any research supporting them, aside from the flaws with the urine test Igenex was using 20 years ago. Are you aware of some research which is relevant to the tests currently being used?The discussion was of private labs and the ones that seem to be a problem are in the US as far as I can see (and maybe the Low Countries).
One minor correction: most Lyme doctors treating based upon clinical presentation also frequently supplement the various Lyme tests (mainstream or alternative) with additional lab tests which could support or help rule out a diagnosis of Lyme.There are also some people being diagnosed and treated for Lyme Disease - sometimes in addition to having ME/CFS - on the basis of commercial tests that are not reliable and clinical histories that are not suggestive of Lyme Disease