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Author: Subject: Aconitine, Deadly?
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[*] posted on 21-2-2015 at 11:54


the problem here is when animals and cel cultives , o surprise, receive the "placebo effect"
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[*] posted on 21-2-2015 at 12:43


That problem is called publication bias
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[*] posted on 21-2-2015 at 15:53


Unionized is right. I know this guy is a troll, but I guess other people might read this anyway. First, methodologies are very important. I can stimulate phosphoERK in a cell line by banging on my table before taking a measurement.... Cell lines are not whole organisms, and have many potential problems.

And animal models are not humans. The diseases we model in them are rough approximations of those in people, and choosing them is very complicated. I've talked a little on it elsewhere, but I am not an animal model specialist. I just know enough problems with them to leave any of that kind of thing to someone else.

This is why most drugs fail in clinical trials, often late, in humans after very promising results in other stages. There is a joke in biomedical disciplines that "every disease has been cured... in mice" for a reason.
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