Guest guest Posted August 26, 2005 Report Share Posted August 26, 2005 The e-mail address for the Science Editor at the New York Times is: scitimes@... Sue , Upstate New York Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2005 Report Share Posted August 26, 2005 Well, all IGeneX would have to do is produce some negative test results, right? Then they can simply claim their testing is more accurate than everybody else's. I hope they've got those neg. test results. Anyone here test negative with IGenX? I was equivocal. I hate to say this (and it IS hearsay) but a reliable friend spoke to one of their top guys a few years back and he told her that pretty much ALL patients DO test either positive or at least equivocal. Then on the other end of the scale is the standard testing that shows all kinds of false negatives, So what do do? why isn't the government concerned about that? This is why my friend decided to not get tested. She didn't trust any of the results. I only did the IGeneX testing to make my doc happy. My doc says 80% of his patients who are getting testedthere are coming back positive. And he's willing to treat equivocal reults as positive too, so I can kind of see some people's concern over accuracy. (although, I'm sure that " concern " is more politically and financially motivated than driven by concern for people's health). Has anyone here had a straight ahead negative test result from IGenX? If so, I don't see how they can really be in trouble. But I'd want to know what their positive/negative testing ratio is before joining a campaign. I want reliable testing results too. If they're reliable, then we need to fight for them. I'm still upset about hearing that Esoterix was purchased by LabCorp. That just took one of our last hopes for good, individualized testing out of the game. penny > Those of you who know something about Lyme Disease: > > Now might be a good time to write a letter to the New York Times. Or > better yet, several short letters. If enough people write, they are > more likely to publish a response to the article below. > > Last year I wrote about ten letters to the newspaper and one of them > was actually published. > > Sue , > Upstate New York > > http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/23/health/policy/23lyme.html > > Unproved Lyme Disease Tests Prompt Warnings > > > > " > > Now the New York State Department of Health has opened an > > investigation of the California laboratory, IGeneX Inc., that issued > > Mr. Courcier's positive result, after receiving eight complaints from > > doctors and patients who said its Lyme tests also gave them positive > > results not confirmed by other labs' results. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2005 Report Share Posted August 26, 2005 Well my son and I have positive IgMs but negative IgGs, like a lot of chronic lymies, so it doesn't look to me like IGeneX comes up with only positives. - Kate On Friday, August 26, 2005, at 01:07 PM, penny wrote: > Well, all IGeneX would have to do is produce some negative test > results, right? Then they can simply claim their testing is more > accurate than everybody else's. > > I hope they've got those neg. test results. Anyone here test > negative with IGenX? I was equivocal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2005 Report Share Posted August 26, 2005 Plenty of people test negative at Igenex - you may be confusing with them with Bowen, which uses a different method completely. Actually, the local doctor I just saw an hour ago was telling me about her PA, who came down with Lyme and tested negative via Igenex, though she had a triple plus on one of the most specific Bb antigen bands - what many Lyme doctors, with I think pretty good justification, would regard as a positive test. Their internal criteria are actually more strict, in terms of Bb specificity, than the CDC's, Penny - they'll flag a test that meets CDC criteria " CDC positive, " meaning that the degree of specificity in the positive bands does not meet their test. And yes, people actually get those, I've seen more than one person asking what it meant on Lymenet. S. > > Those of you who know something about Lyme Disease: > > > > Now might be a good time to write a letter to the New York Times. > Or > > better yet, several short letters. If enough people write, they > are > > more likely to publish a response to the article below. > > > > Last year I wrote about ten letters to the newspaper and one of > them > > was actually published. > > > > Sue , > > Upstate New York > > > > http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/23/health/policy/23lyme.html > > > > Unproved Lyme Disease Tests Prompt Warnings > > > > > > > " > > > Now the New York State Department of Health has opened an > > > investigation of the California laboratory, IGeneX Inc., that > issued > > > Mr. Courcier's positive result, after receiving eight complaints > from > > > doctors and patients who said its Lyme tests also gave them > positive > > > results not confirmed by other labs' results. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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