Wash-out is not a neutral interval. It is a diagnostic phase.When pharmacological control is removed, system behavior becomes visible—revealing whether treatment effects depend on the drug or persist within the system. Wash-out is commonly treated as a neutral interval used for safety or pharmacokinetic clearance. This paper proposes a different interpretation: wash-out is not a passive phase, but a diagnostic window. From a systems-dynamic perspective, clinical change during active treatment reflects a superposition of direct pharmacological effects and endogenous system responses. These components cannot be separated while the drug is present. Wash-out removes active pharmacological control while allowing system dynamics to continue, thereby distinguishing effects that depend on continuous drug presence from those that persist because the system has reorganized. The paper introduces wash-out as both a separator and a temporal filter. As a separator, it differentiates between presence-dependent pharmacological effects and system-mediated changes. As a temporal filter, it reveals how the system regulates itself once external control is removed. Patterns observed during wash-out—such as improvement, stability, rebound, or delayed change—provide information about regulatory capacity, dependence, and timing sensitivity. Clinically, this perspective reframes non-response and treatment evaluation. Instead of relying solely on escalation, wash-out can be used as an interpretive tool to determine whether a treatment acts as ongoing control or as a phase-shifting intervention. It can also distinguish delayed system-level effects from true lack of response. This work is part of the Timing & Failure series and is consistent with the broader framework of the Universal Resonance Model (URM), in which disease progression reflects transitions between dynamic system states. The paper does not introduce new experimental data, but provides a conceptual clinical framework for interpreting treatment discontinuation as a source of diagnostic information.
Anita Domargård (Sun,) studied this question.