Study Validates Benefits of 'Lorenzo's Oil' 21
Torvek writes "New Scientist has an article that discusses the medicinal oil from the Lorenzo movie. Apparently it's been proved to actually prevent the onset of symptoms when taken early enough."
That movie was excellent , Lorenzo's oil. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:That movie was excellent , Lorenzo's oil. (Score:1)
Re:That movie was excellent , Lorenzo's oil. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:That movie was excellent , Lorenzo's oil. (Score:1)
Reasons not to believe (Score:5, Insightful)
2) The study is performed by the guy who has the most to lose if it fails. Unavoidable sometimes, but it makes a study less credible.
3) It looks like he's already had some failed trials with people who've shown an onset of symptoms. This affects the probability of having a false positive effect in your corpus of research -- a false positive that is sure to get headlines.
4) Reading between the lines, it seems that their protocol was poor. "By the end of the study 76 per cent of the 68 boys getting the oil were still healthy and producing normal brain MRI scans. The same was true of no more than about one in three of the 36 boys who did not regularly get the oil."
This sounds like everyone got the oil at the outset. 66% of those who stopped taking the oil had degeneration while 24% of those who continued did. But, of course, parents are much more likely to stop giving their children oil if they think it's not working, so the placebo group will be artificially enriched with failures and the oil group will be artificially enriched with successes. But I can't say for sure because...
5) The study hasn't been peer-reviewed or even published.
Re:Reasons not to believe (Score:1)
Re:Reasons not to believe (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, you say that now... (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with such wonder-drugs nobody understands, is that it after a while becomes very difficult to find a group not taking the drug, so you can know it's effects. And thus, you may never find out why it works.
Re:Sure, you say that now... (Score:2)
As for wonder-drugs, I don't know of very many that are so ubiquitous that you can't do a good trial. People can still do trials with aspirin, after all. The real problem comes when you have an effective drug and want to test it against a new drug. Researchers have to ask themselves when it is ethical to have a placebo trial and deny a patient a reasonably effective medication in hopes of finding a better one.
Re:Reasons not to believe (Score:1)
7)Unless they gave the second group some kind of substitute oil, there was no placebo group.
Dave.
New Scientist (Score:1)
Because it's a great magazine. (Score:1)
Just my 2 cents.
A thought... (Score:1)
It doesn't matter how awful and crippling your disease is. If there aren't enough of you to make money off of, then it isn't worth our time to try and cure you.
Sincerely, The Big Drug Companies