Friday, July 25, 2008

From the ETS Discussion Forum

ETS surgeons should be measuring heart function, bronco-motor tone, thermoregulation, blood vessel constriction, and thyroid. They should be doing bone scans and exercise tests. They should measure changes in catecholomine levels. At least they should measure sweating. All of this is affected by ETS, and they simply dont want to know. Sorry, but the vast majority of ETS papers are not science. Dr. Goldstein at NIH is doing some good work, and showing some very disturbing results. All in all, ETS is still highly experimental, under-studied, and patients should be warned accordingly.

http://etsandreversals.yuku.com/reply/1861#reply-1861