"The two trials above didn't reach p < 0.05, but that's not the same as nothing."
That is an interesting way to interpret the results. I often hear about people complaining about p fishing in science, but this takes it a big step forward. I'd like to learn more about how you think we can improve our ability to discern what is true and what is false through changes in study designs and data analysis.
It's not a matter of changing study design or data analysis, although both are flawed often enough; it's just that I think it's silly to treat the result of a trial as binary, where if there is a 5% chance that the results were due to random fluctuation, we consider it to be "real", and if there's a six percent chance, then we consider it meaningless. It's a gradient, albeit one that slides into meaninglessness pretty quickly.
"I can point you to pubmed; it's probably all there. "
I looked on PubMed prior to posting to the forum and I a search for "Mitoquinol" and "clinical trial" article type yielded ZERO results. What am I missing?
No one calls it Mitoquinol. If you search for "mitoq", you should get 164 hits as of today. "mitoq" "clinical trial" gave me 7 hits. They are mostly not human RCTs, though.
"The easiest position to take is that of a skeptic. "
I know critical thinking is the lazy man's refuge, but I can't seem to bring myself to blindly accept claims made by anyone, be they a priest, a scienctist, or businessman.
Again, I want what you believe to be true, I'm just not willing to act on faith alone and be a human guinea pig.
Well, I'm with you on not taking anything on faith. I'm particularly wary of businessmen. I'm somewhat less wary of scientists, but not a lot less. Frequently they are businessmen in disguise. I'm not trying to talk you into accepting anyone's claims. I am saying that there is a lot of data on MitoQ and various other compounds that does not rise to the level of a gigantic multi-center RCT costing millions of dollars, but does tell us a lot. We have two pharmacopoeias at our disposal. One is FDA approved, both prescription and OTC. The other is the large number of compounds in the "supplement" category. The second pharmacopoeia forces you to do some digging if you want to see the evidence of utility, and you have to trust the manufacturer to provide a quality product. I admit that is asking a lot, but I'm not willing to forego the value I find there. Forums like longecity are very helpful sources of information and user experiences; for some compounds (e.g. c60oo) we are the only game in town. For most supplements, examine.com is a great reference.