I guess you never read my posts about studies. I don't use studies as a sole basis for what I say, I use experience. ALL scientific studies are, at best, misleading. The majority is just fraud, deception and lies - the rest are bias and misleading. I've worked with many people on cycles, diets, gyno treatements etc... From experience, I can say that letrozole is effective for progesterone gyno - it's not magic, but it is effective. Arimidex is not...if you had used both of the products for gyno treatement, you would know the huge difference between the two.
A good example:
http://www.nature.com/news/2006/060501/full/nj7089-122a.html
"DeNino had uncovered one of the most serious cases of scientific misconduct reported in recent years. His boss,
obesity expert Eric Poehlman, had
committed scientific fraud for more than 12 years in numerous publications and grant proposals1. Now debarred from receiving federal research funding for life, Poehlman must repay $180,000 and is one of only two researchers ever charged in a US criminal court for misconduct."
http://www.boston.com/news/science/articles/2006/01/10/a_look_at_other_scientific_frauds?mode=PF
--Last March, Dr. Gary Kammer, a Wake Forest University rheumatology professor and leading lupus expert,
was found to have made up two families and their medical conditions in federal grant applications. He resigned from the university and was suspended from receiving federal grants for three years.
--In 2004, federal officials found that Dr. Ali Sultan, then an
award-winning malaria researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health, had
plagiarized text and figures, and
falsified his data -- substituting results from one type of malaria for another -- on a grant application for federal funds to study malaria drugs. Sultan resigned.
--As a researcher at Bell Labs, Jan Hendrik Schon
made up or altered data in electronics experiments at least 16 times between 1998 and 2001, an investigation concluded. He was fired in 2002.
--The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory said in 2002 that its
reported discovery of two chemical elements in 1999 was based on bogus research. The results were retracted in 2001.
--Stephen Breuning, a well-known research psychologist, pleaded guilty in 1988 to
falsifying research data on drug therapies for mentally retarded children while working for the University of Pittsburgh.
--In 1981, Dr. John Darsee, a Harvard cardiologist and medical researcher,
was found to have faked data in an experiment on heart attacks in dogs. He was later found to have made up much of his data in more than 100 papers published over 14 years while he worked at Harvard and Emory University. Darsee was dismissed and cut off from federal research funds for 10 years.
--In 1974, Dr. William Summerlin resigned from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York after admitting he had
forged an experiment on the immune system's reaction to foreign tissue. He used a dark, felt-tipped pen on a white mouse and made it appear that tissue had been grafted successfully from a black mouse