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by carbocation
5812 days ago
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The tests for Celiac are extremely good. 95% sensitivity and specificity? My life would be amazing if we had that kind of accuracy for every disease. The bigger problem is probably that people think they have Celiac when they actually have some other real problem that is not Celiac. Mislabeling things is deleterious for patient and physician alike. This is why, unless you actually have evidence to back up your claims about this test, you really should be much more cautious. If you can point to controlled trials or published works that show that your test is sensitive and specific for -- or even associated with -- Celiac, I'm all ears. However, I refuse to accept anecdote. Why not? I accept anecdote only in the absence of any evidence. We have actual evidence supporting actual tests that, while imperfect, have known error parameters. The fact that these tests are imperfect does not mean that your imperfect test is just as good; that's a logical fallacy. Sure, if eating X makes you feel bad, don't eat X; nobody would disagree about that. But don't label it Celiac unless you can show that your home-grown test faithfully diagnoses Celiac and not something else. |
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Well my bloodwork came "strongly positive", and the biopsy was negative. So what do we make of that?