| Then you should fund it. The entire field is to my understanding absolutely starved of science funding. There are two fairly strong clusters of findings that are objective, repeatable, and consistent. And that is the autonomic testing in long COVID patients is coherent in its dysfunction, and so is the Small Fiber Neuropathy testing that is now consistently showing abnormalities. Lets go step by step. Small Fiber Neuropathy. Nerve fiber density is a count with age/sex-normed reference ranges. In previously healthy post-COVID patients with no diabetes and no risk factor, then the test shows whether the nerves are there or they aren't. https://jdc.jefferson.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1284&c... https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.03.04.25323101v... https://www.neurology.org/doi/pdf/10.1212/NXI.00000000002002... https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12847426/pdf/fnhum-... We have brain structure changes showing in the UK Biobank studies
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9046077/ Associations with complement dysregulation
https://www.cell.com/med/fulltext/S2666-6340(24)00041-2 Muscular abnormalities in long COVID patients reporting reduced exercise function
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S104327602... Potential that persistent infection shows up in Long Covid patients in abnormal rates
https://www.massgeneralbrigham.org/en/about/newsroom/press-r... If your argument is that people are showing up with abnormalities, then diagnosed with Long Covid, then spurious biomarkers are associated to it - you are just wrong. Wrong multiple times. Demonstrably so. What we are seeing is more likely to be exactly what it looks like - an novel condition being captured by downstream effects of previously unknown or understudied mechanisms. |
The MRI studies are particularly egregious examples of this. Just because you see a difference on an MRI does not mean that the difference is due to the thing you’re blaming. In fact, it almost never is.
> If your argument is that people are showing up with abnormalities, then diagnosed with Long Covid, then spurious biomarkers are associated to it - you are just wrong. Wrong multiple times. Demonstrably so.
I am? I have now followed every link. Literally every paper you posted is following this exact pattern. I don't know how you could possibly conclude otherwise, unless you just didn't read past the titles.
They each take a (typically small) cohort of people who self-identify as "long covid sufferers", they subject them to random combinations of tests, and report only what they find to be significant. It's literally the XKCD comic about jelly beans.
https://xkcd.com/882/