Showing posts with label Lyme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lyme. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Researchers’ discovery may explain difficulty in treating Lyme disease

June 1, 2015 by Greg St. Martin @ northeastern.edu:

North­eastern Uni­ver­sity researchers have found that the bac­terium that causes Lyme dis­ease forms dor­mant per­sister cells, which are known to evade antibi­otics. This sig­nif­i­cant finding, they said, could help explain why it’s so dif­fi­cult to treat the infec­tion in some patients.
It hasn’t been entirely clear why it’s dif­fi­cult to treat the pathogen with antibi­otics since there has been no resis­tance reported for the causative agent of the dis­ease,” explained Uni­ver­sity Dis­tin­guished Pro­fessor Kim Lewis, who led the North­eastern research team.
In other chronic infec­tions, Lewis’ lab has tracked the resis­tance to antibi­otic therapy to the pres­ence of per­sister cells—which are drug-​​tolerant, dor­mant vari­ants of reg­ular cells. These per­sister cells are exactly what they’ve iden­ti­fied here in Bor­relia burgdor­feri, the bac­terium that causes Lyme disease.
The researchers have also reported two approaches—one of them quite promising—to erad­i­cate Lyme dis­ease, as well as poten­tially other nasty infections.
Lewis and his col­leagues pre­sented their find­ings in a paper pub­lished online last week in the journal Antimi­cro­bial Agents and Chemotherapy. He co-​​authored the paper with North­eastern doc­toral stu­dents Bijaya Sharma and Autumn Brown, both PhD’16; recent grad­uate Nicole Matluck, S’15, who received her Bach­elor of Sci­ence in Behav­ioral Neu­ro­science; and Linden T. Hu, a pro­fessor of mol­e­c­ular biology and micro­bi­ology at Tufts University.
The research was sup­ported by grants from the Lyme Research Alliance and the National Insti­tutes of Health.
Lyme dis­ease affects 300,000 people annu­ally in the U.S., according to the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion, and is trans­mitted to people via bites from infected black­legged ticks. If caught early, patients treated with antibi­otics usu­ally recover quickly. How­ever, about 10 to 20 per­cent of patients, par­tic­u­larly those diag­nosed later, who have received antibi­otic treat­ment may have per­sis­tent and recur­ring symp­toms including arthritis, muscle pain, fatigue, and neu­ro­log­ical prob­lems. These patients are diag­nosed with Post-​​treatment Lyme Dis­ease Syndrome.
In addi­tion to iden­ti­fying the pres­ence of these per­sister cells, Lewis’ team also pre­sented two methods for wiping out the infection—both of which were suc­cessful in lab tests. One involved an anti-​​cancer agent called Mit­o­mycin C, which com­pletely erad­i­cated all cul­tures of the bac­terium in one fell swoop. How­ever, Lewis stressed that, given Mit­o­mycin C’s tox­i­city, it isn’t a rec­om­mended option for treating Lyme dis­ease, though his team’s find­ings are useful to helping to better under­stand the disease.
The second approach, which Lewis noted is much more prac­tical, involved pulse-​​dosing an antibi­otic to elim­i­nate per­sis­ters. The researchers intro­duced the antibi­otic a first time, which killed the growing cells but not the dor­mant per­sis­ters. But once the antibi­otic washed away, the per­sis­ters woke up, and before they had time to restore their pop­u­la­tion the researchers hit them with the antibi­otic again. Four rounds of antibi­otic treat­ments com­pletely erad­i­cated the per­sis­ters in a test tube.
This is the first time, we think, that pulse-​​dosing has been pub­lished as a method for erad­i­cating the pop­u­la­tion of a pathogen with antibi­otics that don’t kill dor­mant cells,” Lewis said. “The trick to doing this is to allow the dor­mant cells to wake up.”
He added: “This gives you an idea that you could, in prin­ciple, estab­lish a sim­ilar reg­i­ment for treating patients for this and other chronic diseases.”
Lewis is a fac­ulty member in the biology depart­ment and directs Northeastern’s Antimi­cro­bial Dis­covery Center. Over the past decade he has led pio­neering work on this spe­cial­ized class of cells pro­duced by all pathogens known as per­sis­ters. Ear­lier this year, Lewis, biology pro­fessor Slava Epstein, and other col­leagues pub­lished ground­breaking researchin Nature pre­senting a new antibi­otic that kills pathogens without encoun­tering any detectable resistance.
In pre­vious work, Lewis’ lab iden­ti­fied a com­pound called ADEP that causes dor­mant per­sister cells in MRSA to self-​​destruct. This com­pound was among the first options the researchers tried out to combat Lyme dis­ease. But it didn’t work, and nei­ther did com­bi­na­tions of stan­dard antibi­otics used to treat the dis­ease. The team thought it had hit a dead end yet remained vig­i­lant in its quest to iden­tify promising alter­na­tive options.
What we came up with was the pulse-​​dosing reg­imen, which worked beau­ti­fully,” Lewis explained. “I think this could be very useful, espe­cially for antibi­otics for which resis­tance doesn’t rapidly develop.”
Though the researchers iden­ti­fied the pres­ence of these per­sister cells, they also note in their paper that the mech­a­nisms by which the per­sis­ters are able to sur­vive remain unknown. More work in this area will be required, they wrote.

Thursday, July 9, 2015

Dr O'Sullivan, Pinocchio Psychiatry and breaching the GMC's Guidance on Good Medical Practice, Duties of a Doctor

"The duties of a doctor registered with the General Medical Council Patients must be able to trust doctors with their lives and health. To justify that trust you must show respect for human life and make sure your practice meets the standards expected of you in four domains.

Knowledge, skills and performance
 * Make the care of your patient your first concern.
 * Provide a good standard of practice and care.
 * Keep your professional knowledge and skills up to date.
 * Recognise and work within the limits of your competence."

Calling ME a psychosomatic disease, ignoring all the evidence that ME is a physical disease is not Keeping your professional knowledge up to date. That normally should mean that doctors who do not do that, land themselves in heavy Waters with the GMC.

It's also interesting if you look at the other domains. For example:

"Maintaining trust"
 * "Never abuse your patients' trust in you or the public's trust in the profession."

Calling a physical disease psychosomatic as Dr O'Sullivan is doing or all in the mind, SSD etc as the Pinocchio Psychiatrists have been doing for decades is severely abusing the public's trust in the profession.

And what about the following one:

"Communication, partnership and teamwork 
* Treat patients as individuals and respect their dignity.
 * Treat patients politely and considerately."

It is that this is a very debilitating disease otherwise it would make you laugh if you know how bad people with this disease are being treated thanks to the Pinocchio Psychiatrists and now Dr O'Sullivan who wants to have a piece of the Pinocchio cake.

If you want to read up on the GMC's Guidance on Good Medical Practice, Duties of a Doctor, you can do it @ the GMC's own website


# Exercise physiologist Prof Keller: "Given what we have learned in the past eight years about this illness, it is intellectually embarrassing to suggest that ME is a psychological illness."

# Professor Hooper: When does ignoring evidence by doctors become serious professional misconduct ?

# Prof Edward Shorter and the psychic epidemic of ignoring clinical evidence

# Evidence that a disease is psychosomatic doesn't exist

# Massachusetts Medical Society's NEJM Journal Watch: "There is still no cure, or even any reliably effective treatment, for CFS"

# Editorial in Jacobs Journal of Physiotherapy and Exercise: it is essential to protect ME patients against harm by exercise regimes

# Rituximab maintenance infusions leads to prolonged disease remission in ME/CFS

# Immunological Similarities between Cancer and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

# Danish study finds patients with MEcfs have the lowest health-related quality of life of 21 conditions looked at which means / confirms that CBT and GET are at best totally useless

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Discovered: the central nervous system lymphatic system

@ Nature, Published online 01 June 2015:

  Structural and functional features of central nervous system lymphatic vessels

 * Antoine Louveau ,  * Igor Smirnov ,  * Timothy J. Keyes ,  * Jacob D. Eccles ,  * Sherin J. Rouhani ,  * J. David Peske ,  * Noel C. Derecki ,  * David Castle ,  * James W. Mandell ,  * Kevin S. Lee ,  * Tajie H. Harris  * & Jonathan Kipnis

Nature  (2015)  doi:10.1038/nature14432       Received: 30 October 2014        Accepted: 20 March 2015      Published online: 01 June 2015

One of the characteristics of the central nervous system is the lack of a classical lymphatic drainage system. Although it is now accepted that the central nervous system undergoes constant immune surveillance that takes place within the meningeal compartment1, 2, 3, the mechanisms governing the entrance and exit of immune cells from the central nervous system remain poorly understood4, 5, 6.

In searching for T-cell gateways into and out of the meninges, we discovered functional lymphatic vessels lining the dural sinuses.

These structures express all of the molecular hallmarks of lymphatic endothelial cells, are able to carry both fluid and immune cells from the cerebrospinal fluid, and are connected to the deep cervical lymph nodes. The unique location of these vessels may have impeded their discovery to date, thereby contributing to the long-held concept of the absence of lymphatic vasculature in the central nervous system.


  1. The discovery of the central nervous system lymphatic system may call for a reassessment of basic assumptions in neuroimmunology and sheds new light on the aetiology of neuroinflammatory and neurodegenerative diseases associated with immune system dysfunction. _________________________________________

Monday, February 16, 2015

The denial of this illness by doctors means that patients are suffering slow, horrific deaths

By Kristy Muir, 13th February 2015 :

  "The 37-year-old Bribie Island woman is in the fight of her life against a debilitating disease and consequential infections.

  In February 2013 Amara was diagnosed with Lyme disease (borrelia), bartonella, babesia and multiple other infections.

  Prior to that she suffered chronic fatigue syndrome, diagnosed when she was 23. Amara's condition means she suffers severe seizures daily, as well as photophobia (sensitivity to light), severe cramps and muscle spasms."

  ##########

  ""Amara is desperately unwell with late (stage) neurological Lyme disease," Ms Collingwood said.

  "What makes her illness different is that the medical profession do not recognise Lyme disease in Australia, despite the fact that thousands of Australians have tested positive to Lyme (via testing facilities in overseas labs) and the numbers are only continuing to increase.

  "The denial of this illness in Australia by the health fraternity means that there is very little to no treatment available here.

  "People are suffering slow, horrific deaths and it is completely unnecessary.""

Friday, November 15, 2013

The Independent: 10 best charity Christmas cards 2013, No 1. Invest in ME !!


The Independent, SALLY NEWALL Friday 15 November 2013:


It's almost time for the big festive mail-out - consider these charity cards. 100% of your money goes to the cause

1. Invest in ME
The charity ran a competition for ME patients and their carers to submit photos. We think this vibrant entry by Julie-Ann Gylaitis is a festive triumph.
£4.25 for 10
www.investinme.org

2. Artfelt
The arts programme at Sheffield Children's Hospital commissioned local artist Pete McKee to design their card this year. The result? A sweet but interesting little cartoon of McKee’s own dog Frank.  
£3.50 for 8

3. RNLI
The cartoonist Giles was a keen sailor and did lots of work for the RNLI. His designs are bestsellers for the charity.  

4. SPANA
Everyone’s favourite desert dweller has made it onto the front of the animal charity's card. Another design features some kissing tortoises. Pucker up.
£4 for 10  www.spana.org

5. Riders for Health
Ideal for motorbike fans but actually it’s just quite a cool design. The money goes to mobilising health workers in Africa, designed by one of the charity’s volunteers.

6. GOSH
This cute robin’s the work of Jacob, 6, a patient at Great Ormond Street.  
£4.50 for 10  www.shop.gosh.org

7. Child bereavement UK
Donated by artist Charlie Macksey, this dove design makes an elegant card.
£4.75 for 10 www.childbereavement.org

8. Sustrans
A nice cycling design from the charity that investing in helping people travel by foot, bike or public transport. Cyclists will like this one

9. Home Start
Kirstie Allsop commissioned this design for the charity. It’s by paper artist poppy chancellor and we think it makes a lovely snowflake.
£4.75 for 10, www.home-start.org.uk

10. Action medical research for children
Uninspired by many charity Christmas efforts, gallery owner Lynn Tait a gallery owner got card designers  to contribute a piece of their work exclusively to the medical research charity. This cycling Santa’s by Julie Hook.
£2.50 for six, www.action.org.uk

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Lyme Disease as a Cause of Supraspinatus tendinitis

Lyme Disease as an Underlying Cause of Supraspinatus Tendinopathy in an Overhead Athlete.

Coulon CL, Landin D., Phys Ther. 2012 Jan 12. [Epub ahead of print]:

Source C.L. Coulon, PT, Peak Performance Physical Therapy, 11320 Industriplex Blvd, Baton Rouge, LA 70809 (USA).

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: /b>Supraspinatus tendinopathy is a common cause of shoulder pain seen in overhead athletes, but to our knowledge no published cases present Lyme disease as the underlying cause of tendinopathy. Lyme disease is diagnosed primarily by clinical signs and symptoms and then supported by laboratory tests including western blot and enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA). This case demonstrates the importance of a physical therapist's input and clinical role in reaching the correct diagnosis in an athlete with Lyme disease, who presented with a diagnosis of rotator cuff impingement and tendinitis.

CASE DESCRIPTION: /b>A 34-year-old male tennis player presented to physical therapy with right shoulder impingement and tendinitis diagnosed by an orthopedic surgeon. He was unable to participate in sporting activities due to impairments in strength and pain. Initial examination revealed distal supraspinatus impingement and tendinopathy.

OUTCOMES: /b>The patient was not progressing with commonly accepted interventions and began to have "arthritis-like" shoulder pain in the uninvolved left shoulder. Suspicious of an underlying condition, the physical therapist informed the physician of the patient's updated status and referred to the physician to discuss the current symptoms in therapy. After testing, the patient was diagnosed with chronic Lyme disease and underwent antibiotic therapy.

DISCUSSION: /b>Many active patients spend time in the outdoors increasing their risk of exposure to a vector for Borrelia burgdorferi. Physical therapists spend a larger portion of time with patients than other health care professionals, and due to this extended contact and musculoskeletal knowledge are able to recognize atypical musculoskeletal disorders or musculoskeletal manifestations of unusual pathologies including Lyme disease.

PMID: 22247404 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

For years medics were baffled by her catalogue of problems

By SADIE WHITELOCKS Last updated at 6:27 PM on 17th January 2012:

A mother-of-three plagued by illness has told how her problems have been linked to an insect bite suffered 20 years ago.

Adelle Huckins, 31, has been blighted by a range of medical conditions including migraines, severe fatigue, sickness, hearing difficulties and a drooping left eye.

But it was only last year that she was able to understand the route of her failing health when medics diagnosed her with Lyme Disease, a bacterial infection carried by ticks.

She suddenly remembered a school trip to Germany in 1991 when she was 11-years-old, during which she was bitten on the leg by a tick.

Despite the bite causing a rash she thought nothing of it, but now she believes it is responsible for years of poor health, which have made her feel like she has the body of 'a 90-year-old'.

Mrs Huckins, of New Marske, Cleveland said: 'I was never the same after coming home from that trip. I couldn’t get better afterwards but they couldn’t find what was wrong with me.


For years medics were baffled by her catalogue of illnesses but it was only when she chanced upon Lyme Disease on the internet last year that she realised it could hold the key to her health problems.

A basic NHS test came back negative, so Mrs Huckins turned to the Nuffield Hospital in Newcastle upon Tyne where results, sent off to a U.S. specialist, proved positive.
Read more>>

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Persistence of Borrelia burgdorferi in Rhesus Macaques following Antibiotic Treatment of Disseminated Infection

Monica E. Embers1*, Stephen W. Barthold4, Juan T. Borda2, Lisa Bowers1, Lara Doyle3, Emir Hodzic4, Mary B. Jacobs1, Nicole R. Hasenkampf1, Dale S. Martin1, Sukanya Narasimhan5, Kathrine M. Phillippi-Falkenstein3, Jeanette E. Purcell3¤, Marion S. Ratterree3, Mario T. Philipp1*


1 Divisions of Bacteriology & Parasitology, Tulane National Primate Research Center, Tulane University Health Sciences Center, Covington, Louisiana, United States of America, 2 Comparative Pathology, Tulane National Primate Research Center, Tulane University Health Sciences Center, Covington, Louisiana, United States of America, 3 Veterinary Medicine, Tulane National Primate Research Center, Tulane University Health Sciences Center, Covington, Louisiana, United States of America, 4 Center for Comparative Medicine, Schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine, University of California Davis, Davis, California, United States of America, 5 Section of Rheumatology, Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America

Abstract Top

The persistence of symptoms in Lyme disease patients following antibiotic therapy, and their causes, continue to be a matter of intense controversy. The studies presented here explore antibiotic efficacy using nonhuman primates. Rhesus macaques were infected with B. burgdorferiand a portion received aggressive antibiotic therapy 4–6 months later. Multiple methods were utilized for detection of residual organisms, including the feeding of lab-reared ticks on monkeys (xenodiagnosis), culture, immunofluorescence and PCR. Antibody responses to the B. burgdorferi-specific C6 diagnostic peptide were measured longitudinally and declined in all treated animals. B. burgdorferi antigen, DNA and RNA were detected in the tissues of treated animals. Finally, small numbers of intact spirochetes were recovered by xenodiagnosis from treated monkeys. These results demonstrate that B. burgdorferi can withstand antibiotic treatment, administered post-dissemination, in a primate host. Though B. burgdorferi is not known to possess resistance mechanisms and is susceptible to the standard antibiotics (doxycycline, ceftriaxone) in vitro, it appears to become tolerant post-dissemination in the primate host. This finding raises important questions about the pathogenicity of antibiotic-tolerant persisters and whether or not they can contribute to symptoms post-treatment.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

BC Women’s Hospital new $2 million medical centre for Lyme, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and other complex diseases

Posted by: Pamela Fayerman, December 6, 2011: The BC government pledged $2 million eight months ago for a new clinic where those with lyme disease and other complex, chronic diseases could go for help in managing their many symptoms. Today the clinic has a home but no opening date. That’s because experts and other stakeholders – including patients themselves – are still being consulted on how to deliver the services.

It’s probably wise to tread carefully because in the highly emotional, frustrating and uncertain world that is the everyday reality for patients like these, such a clinic must be a welcoming place offering hope, help and shared decision making.

Lyme disease, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue and other complex diseases have  always been contentious, partly because of ambiguous symptoms and the difficulty with diagnostic tools. The announcement about the clinic came just days after I wrote this story about how doctors in BC are under-reporting lyme disease cases and not so great about diagnosing or treating the disease. This is not unique to Vancouver.

There are tens of thousands of patients across BC with debilitating chronic diseases in which the cause is unknown, but may have been triggered by an infectious agent. Fatigue, pain, stiffness and insomnia are often hallmark symptoms.  Gwen Barlee, a chronic lyme disease patient/advocate told me today she’s cautiously optimistic about the clinic.

“But the proof will be in the pudding. Who will run the clinic?   We need to get beyond the outdated way of treating, or not treating Lyme disease, so we need the clinic to be staffed with professionals who aren’t afraid of the politics surrounding lyme disease and are willing to treat based on symptoms, and not rely on a flawed blood testing model.

“The BC government has a chance to do this right. I hope they will seize the moment. They need to work closely with CanLyme and lyme disease patients instead of marginalizing people who are living with this disease. 

“I hope the BC clinic can lead the way in Canada with a proactive, open and inclusive approach to treating this illness. Of course the clinic is only one part of the equation – we need the BC government to implement the recommendations from the (Brian) Schmidt report - so far, I see no evidence that is happening, and that makes me concerned,” she said.

Here’s the press release about the new clinic:

“BC Women’s Hospital & Health Centre will be home to a new clinic that will address complex diseases such as Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Lyme disease and Fibromyalgia, which often lead to disability for British Columbians.

British Columbia is taking a leading role within Canada with the clinic and its associated research program.  The establishment of the clinic is made possible with the direct investment of $2 million from the BC Ministry of Health announced earlier this year.  The clinic will work with patients and family physicians from across the province to provide care for people in addition to learning more about these complex diseases.

The clinic and its research program are expected to support clinicians and researchers in their pursuit of the discovery of causes, diagnosis and potential treatments for these types of diseases. Read more>>

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Patients with chronic Lyme disease have antibodies that suggest they carried the infection for an unusually long time

Amy Maxmen, nature.com:
Some patients with Lyme disease still show symptoms long after their treatment has finished. Now proteins have been discovered that set these people apart from those who are easily cured.

People who experience the symptoms of Lyme disease, which include fatigue, soreness and memory or concentration loss, after treatment for the disorder are sometimes diagnosed as having chronic Lyme disease or post-Lyme disease syndrome. But these diagnoses are difficult to make, because the individuals no longer seem to harbour the bacteria that cause Lyme disease. And the symptoms could instead be indicative of chronic fatigue syndrome or depression.

Now Armin Alaedini at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York and his colleagues have found that ...

The European Laboratory of Nutrients (ELN)

The European Laboratory of Nutrients (ELN) is an advanced laboratory for testing the nutrient status of particularly humans.

The laboratory provides a worldwide service to MD’s, hospitals and institutions with interest in nutritional medicine.

In 1995 Vitamin Diagnostics joined our organization to provide better service both in U.S. and Europe. Read more>>

Sunday, October 2, 2011

New More Accurate Borrelia Culture Test


Researched Nutritionals:
September 5, 2011 Joe Burrascano, Jr., MD has announced a new lab test available for Lyme doctors to use in determining if Lyme is present.

There is no need to wait for antibodies to form since this is a culture-based test. This should provide much faster and more accurate detection, and allow Lyme patients to receive treatment as soon as possible. Please read below for Dr. Burrascano's description of the new test:

In my work as a consultant, I have been working with a private lab located near Philadelphia, Advanced Laboratories, Inc. They wanted to develop a unique and high value test, and, with my interest in Lyme, I naturally encouraged them to work on a better Lyme Disease test.

As a result of some very intensive work on the part of a group of some very brilliant scientists, they have succeeded in developing a reliable and rapid blood culture for Borrelia! See the attached press release.

They actually have rolled out two separate panels- a basic one and an advanced one. In the basic panel, the blood sample is cultured and the positives are identified by histology and growth characteristics, and confirmed by fluorescent immunostaining. Positive reports will include a picture of the Bb growing in that very culture. The advanced panel will do this, but will also do PCR using well characterized and published DNA primer sets, and then all positive PCRs will be confirmed by DNA sequencing.

Remarkably, turn-around time can be as brief as ten days for the basic test, and seven to ten more days for the advanced panel.

This test is being rolled out gradually, with no big public announcements yet. That is why I am e-mailing you, so you can be among the first to be able to order this testing, before the lab gets swamped. Apparently you have to contact the lab to have test kits sent to you. The blood must be sent out the same day it is collected, and the lab provides a prepaid return FedEx mailer. As the lab is not yet accepting specimens over weekends, please do not collect blood on Fridays.

The bad news- New York being New York, this culture will not be available to NY State practitioners for several months. The States of California and Florida may have a delayed availability- I am not sure, so please contact the lab to get this info. However, ...

Friday, September 30, 2011

Dr. Lynn Mielke finds link between Lyme Disease and autism



wtkr.com, September 29, 2011:

Nineteen-year old Mary Hendricks was diagnosed with severe autism when she was just a baby.

"She had a little bit of language and lost it. A little bit of eye contact and lost it," says her mother Tina.

And that was just the beginning. But the Hendricks' did the best they could and took Mary to doctor after doctor.

A specialist questioned Tina about her own health history and that flipped on the light switch.

"He said the key to diagnosing Mary, is diagnosing you," said Tina.

For years, even before Mary was born, Tina battled colitis, fibromyalgia and just couldn't seem to kick what she says seemed like the flu.

The specialist ordered a blood test for Lyme disease. She tested positive. She got the disease from 2 tick bites she had years before her pregnancy.

"If a child has autism from birth, many times it's because the child inherited an infection from the mother," says Dr. Lynn Mielke.

Dr. Mielke thinks that's exactly what happened to Mary; she calls it "Lyme induced autism.”

Days after Tina’s positive results, ...

Thursday, September 15, 2011

New Lyme Disease Culture Test Could be Game Changer

Lorraine Johnson, JD, MBA, CALDA's Chief Executive Officer, 12 September, 2011:


Advanced Laboratory Services Inc. (ALSI) has announced a new culture test for Lyme disease. It is commercially available in all states except California, New York and Florida, which have individual state licensing requirements that must be met before the test can be offered. 

Direct detection of bacteria through culture is considered the “gold standard” for diagnosis, but this method has not been commercially available for Lyme disease using previous culture methods. 

The new test is based on research conducted by Dr. Eva Sapi and colleagues, which CALDA helped fund. Results of the research published earlier this year demonstrated the improved culture method for Borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of Lyme disease, and the technique has recently been corroborated using human blood samples. Larger confirmatory studies of the test are now being pursued. 

Dr. Joseph Burrascano, a pioneer in the treatment of Lyme disease, consulted with ALSI to help make the test commercially available. A sensitive high-quality culture test would not only permit patients to be accurately diagnosed, but would lay to rest much of the controversy surrounding Lyme disease.


One of the primary causes of the Lyme controversy

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Thank you Vivint !!


Whittemore Peterson Institute has won $100,000 in the Vivint contest ! Thank you Vivint !!

Picture kindly supplied by Kate.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Benefit of extended intravenous antibiotic therapy in neurologic Lyme disease

Authors: Stricker RB, DeLong AK, Green CL, Savely VR, Chamallas SN, Johnson L:

Video abstract presented by Raphael Stricker

Published Date September 2011 Volume 2011:4     Pages 639 - 646
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/IJGM.S23829
Raphael B Stricker1,3, Allison K DeLong2, Christine L Green1,3, Virginia R Savely1,3, Stanley N Chamallas1,4, Lorraine Johnson1,3
1International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society, Bethesda, MD, USA; 2Center for Statistical Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA; 3California Lyme Disease Association, Marysville, CA, USA; 4QMedRx Inc, Maitland, FL, USA

Background: We have shown previously that extended intravenous antibiotic therapy is associated with low morbidity and no mortality in patients referred for treatment of neurologic Lyme disease. In this study, we evaluated the benefit of extended intravenous antibiotic therapy in patients with symptoms of neurologic Lyme disease.

Methods: Patients with significant neurologic symptoms and positive testing for Borrelia burgdorferi were treated with intravenous antibiotics, and biweekly evaluation of symptom severity was performed using a six-level ordinal scale. Four symptoms were selected a priori as primary outcome measures in the study, ie, fatigue, cognition, myalgias, and arthralgias. Patients were placed into five groups according to time on treatment (1–4, 5–8, 9–12, 13–24, and 25–52 weeks), and changes in the primary symptoms as a function of time on treatment were analyzed using a mixed-effects proportional odds model.

Results: Among 158 patients with more than one follow-up visit who were monitored for up to 1 year, there were on average 6.7 visits per person (median 5, range 2–24). The last follow-up day was on average 96 days after enrollment (median 69, range 7–354 days), corresponding to the length of antibiotic therapy. Each primary symptom was significantly improved at one or more time points during the study. For cognition, fatigue, and myalgias, the greatest improvement occurred in patients on the longest courses of treatment (25–52 weeks) with odds ratios (OR) for improvement of 1.97 (P = 0.02), 2.22 (P < 0.01), and 2.08 (P = 0.01), respectively. In contrast, arthralgias were only significantly improved during the initial 1–4 weeks of therapy (OR: 1.57, P = 0.04), and the beneficial effect of longer treatment did not reach statistical significance for this symptom.

Conclusion: Prolonged intravenous antibiotic therapy is associated with improved cognition, fatigue, and myalgias in patients referred for treatment of neurologic Lyme disease. Treatment for 25–52 weeks may be necessary to obtain symptomatic improvement in these patients.

Full ARTICLE .pdf

Saturday, August 20, 2011

For four years Doctors thought Christine was a depressed drug seeker, whose health complaints were all in her head

By Monica Wolfson, The Windsor Star August 18, 2011:

After suffering from near blindness in one eye, disorientation and heart palpitations and being disabled for the past year, Heffer was diagnosed in September 2010 with Lyme disease almost four years after her symptoms first appeared.

She now takes 54 pills a day to combat the disease that has taken root in her body.

"My experience has been unimaginable," she said. "This disease is hideous and horrific and our children are at the greatest risk." Heffer, who is from Corunna, a town outside of Sarnia, is on a mission to get the province to better fund testing for Lyme disease and educate public health officials.

On Wednesday, county council gave support to her petition that is being heralded by Progressive Conservative MPP Bob Bailey of Sarnia. The petition, which as been supported by 75 other Ontario municipalities, calls on the provincial government to get OHIP to pay for all current testing for Lyme disease, have modern treatment available and increase public awareness.

"We were unaware, especially on the medical side, that it was an issue," Tecumseh Mayor Gary McNamara said. "We'll work to create an awareness of the disease."

Last year, there were four cases of West Nile virus in Canada, while in Ontario there were 68 diagnosed cases of Lyme disease, Heffer said. Yet, OHIP will not pay for a more conclusive Lyme disease test called Western Blot until a patient tests positive first on an Elisa test, which Heffer said is less reliable.

"The tests Ontario uses are inaccurate," Heffer said. "We are missing cases due to faulty testing and a lack of knowledge." Heffer said few doctors can recognize Lyme disease. According to the Canadian Lyme Disease Foundation,

Friday, August 5, 2011

New Bacterium Found that Causes Tick-Borne Illness

ScienceDaily (Aug. 3, 2011) — A new tick-borne bacterium infecting humans with ehrlichiosis has been discovered in Wisconsin and Minnesota. It was identified as a new strain of bacteria through DNA testing conducted at Mayo Clinic. The findings appear in the Aug. 4 edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Doctors at Mayo Clinic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the University of Minnesota, the University of Wisconsin, and state and local health departments say the new species from the Ehrlichia genus can cause a feverish illness in humans. The new bacterium, not yet named, has been identified in more than 25 people and found in black-legged ticks, also known as deer ticks (Ixodes scapularis), in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Researchers used culture and genetic analyses.

"Before this report, human ehrlichiosis was thought to be very rare or absent in Minnesota and Wisconsin," says Bobbi Pritt, M.D., a Mayo Clinic microbiologist and director of the Clinical Parasitology and Virology Laboratories who helped coordinate the multi-agency team. "Therefore, physicians might not know to look for Ehrlichia infections at all."

Ehrlichia infect and kill white blood cells and may cause fever, body aches, headache and fatigue. More severe disease may involve multiple organs such as the lungs, kidneys and brain and require hospitalization. Ehrliochosis rarely results in death.

All four patients described in the New England Journal of Medicine article suffered fever and fatigue. One patient, who had already received a bilateral lung transplant, was hospitalized briefly for his illness. All four patients recovered following antibiotic treatment with doxycycline, the drug of choice for treating ehrlichiosis. Although more than 25 cases have been identified, many more have likely been missed or unreported, Dr. Pritt says. Read more>>

See also: Chronic Lyme Disease patients: 100% are XMRV positive

Monday, July 18, 2011

RIP Angela, who died of chronic Lyme Disease, which many doctors still say does not exist


Posted by knowlyme:

36 year-old Angela Quinn Hausman lost her 10-year battle to chronic Lyme Disease, which some (IDSA) doctors say does not exist, on Monday, Memorial Day- May 30, 2011.

If CLD didn’t exist, Angela would still be here, right now, caring for her husband and the 2 beautiful young children she left behind. She would still be spreading her bright light and caring soul in our Facebook Lyme community, cheering us up and on in our fights for our own lives…

We would be able to have the gift of time, getting to know her better, if she had gotten proper treatment for the long-term Borrelia infection that was raging through and devastating her precious body over the course of a decade.

She sought help in the medical community for this devastating disease, who still as a whole, deny how easy-to-get and hard-to-cure Lyme is! How many more of our desperately shining stars have to burn out from this persistent, rapidly-spreading, disabling and deadly disease before we are granted the basic American right to proper diagnosis and treatment?

This madness has to stop! With every Lyme death, the corruption in our medical system and government, becomes more and more transparent, like holding an x-ray up to the light.

Read more>>

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