And, yet, when I inquired in post #73: "Let me take it one step further: Given the information available in this case, is it conceivable -- or inconceivable -- that the only way Tommy could have recovered would have been to give him a measured dose of belladonna?" -- you responded in post #76: "The answer is yes (ignoring your requirement for "only" as there are other sources of similar anti-cholinergics) - for example atropine would terminate seizures from nerve gas poisoning."There seems to be no point in attempting to discredit the story. The story is without credit in the first place, except to people who wish to be credulous. And your desire to remain credulous can easily overcome any attempts to inform you in a setting such as this forum. I think we should drop the pretense that providing information has the power to persuade (either side) under these circumstances.
Linda
So, don't you find it kind of odd that this story, which you now seem to think "is without credit in the first place, except to people who wish to be credulous", could actually be true, and that Tommy did, in fact, recover because Dr. House followed Cayce's recommendation to administer a measured dose of belladonna (and a hot poultice made from the bark of a peach tree)? In other words, wouldn't you feel a tad more comfortable if you could state categorically: "It is medically impossible for a 3-month old infant in Tommy's condition to have been cured by Cayce's recommended treatment"?