Bacterial Debris and Lyme Symptoms

bacteria lyme symptoms

Is the bacterial debris what is keeping you sick with lyme and lyme symptoms?

Posted July 31, 2012.  In today’s Wall Street Journal, see article entitled “After Lyme Disease Treatment, Bacterial Debris Lingers in Joints.”  This is true if your Lyme disease and Lyme symptoms are not being treated throughly, i.e. your LLMD is not dealing with cysts and biofilm.  Very important!  The reason I have recovered completely and am able to run marathons and compete in endurance sports is because my treatment included cysts busters and medication to deal with biofilm.  Talk to your doctor about this!

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444226904577559230752289156.html

Wall Street Journal:  Scientists discovered bacterial fragments in the joints of mice treated for Lyme disease that may be the underlying cause of persistent arthritis-like joint pain following Lyme infections, says a report in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.

Lyme disease is caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, a worm-shaped bacterium also called a spirochete that is transmitted by tick bites. There were more than 22,500 confirmed cases of Lyme disease and another 7,600 probable cases in the U.S. in 2010, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Infections usually start with a skin rash but can damage the heart, joints, and nervous system. Lingering joint pain affects up to 25% of people, despite effective treatment with antibiotics.

Yale University researchers induced Lyme infections in mice with impaired immune systems and control mice. Both groups received either antibiotic-treated drinking water sweetened with sugar or sweetened water only for 30 days. The antibiotics killed Lyme bacteria in control mice and all but one of the immune-compromised mice; Lyme bacteria persisted in untreated mice.

Researchers found remnants of Lyme spirochetes in the knee joints of all antibiotic-treated mice, indicating the antibiotics eliminated the bacteria but not the residual debris. Spirochetes were found adjacent to ear cartilage in most of the mice. These bacterial deposits were capable of triggering an inflammatory response but not a full-blown Lyme infection, the study showed.

Caveat: The research hasn’t been tested in humans.

If you have Lyme disease and Lyme symptoms, be sure you are treating the biofilm and the cyst forms so you don’t end up like these mice!

Posted in Uncategorized | 7,496 Comments

Chocolate! and Lyme Symptoms

Posted November 21, 2012.  Cacao beans are a super food!  Recipe coming soon for fudge using raw organic cacao beans and sweetened only with a couple of dates.  A good once in awhile compromise for the no refined sugar diet.  Stay true and you will know 100% Recovery!

 

Cacao beans are a super food

Raw organic cacao beans are a true super food. Enjoy them in your fight against lyme and lyme symptoms!

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 4,916 Comments

Lyme Symptoms: Explanation of Different Tests for Lyme

Posted July 22, 21012  An Introduction to the Tests Used for Lyme Disease Diagnosis
by Chris Hart Articles

Doctors use three primary tests to confirm a Lyme Disease diagnosis.

One of the reasons that it’s so difficult to get a Lyme Disease diagnosis, at least in the United States, is because most doctors require positive results from blood and serum tests in the absence of an erythema migrans (EM) rash — the single diagnostic symptom accepted by almost everyone.

There are three common tests for LD: ELISA, Western Blot, and PCR. All look for evidence of Borrelia spirochetes in the bloodstream, though the type of evidence varies from test to test. All three tests have their issues, which we’ll explore briefly in this article.

The ELISA Test

ELISA is an acronym for Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, which is more of a category than an individual test. Doctors also use ELISAs to identify HIV and other immunodeficiency ailments. The LD version is only a first-round check for infection, and it’s not a good idea to use it as the sole basis for diagnosis.

Basically, an ELISA test looks for antibodies that your system creates to fight the LD spirochetes. Unfortunately, this test tends to return a lot of false positives, and doesn’t always detect Borrelia antibodies even when they’re present. Also, the low levels of antibodies present early in the disease makes it less useful then.

A Western Blot test should follow any Lyme ELISA test, positive or negative, if the patient remains symptomatic. However, many doctors refuse to go forward with LD testing if an ELISA comes back negative, despite the well-known problems with the test.

The Western Blot Test

Like ELISA, the Western Blot searches for Borrelia-related antibodies; in this case, those antibodies are specific to certain proteins. Most doctors consider an individual who tests positive on the Western Blot as well as the ELISA to have full-fledged LD, and will treat accordingly.

This testing method produces a series of bands on a strip of paper, like the lines on a barcode, which correspond to specific antibody strains. As mentioned earlier, the Western Blot also has significant problems, partly based on the definition of which bands comprise a positive result.

The current standardized guidelines, signed off on by the Centers for Disease Control, are very controversial. They ignore some antibody bands altogether, while dismissing others as minor.

Indeed, the current guidelines often categorize people who lack the proper bands as uninfected, even if other symptoms prove otherwise. Some doctors will even ignore an obvious EM rash if the Western Blot comes back negative.

The PCR Test

PCR is short for “polymerase chain reaction.” This test actually finds pieces of spirochetal DNA, if they’re present, and makes enough copies to proper test them. A PCR test can work even with very low levels of infection, and often comes back positive even when ELISA and Western Blot are negative.

The problem here is that the PCR test works best with fluids drawn from an infected joint or spine; it doesn’t work well at all with blood or even urine. In other words, by the time you get a PCR test, the LD is usually well advanced and more difficult to treat.

And even the PCR test doesn’t work well when DNA levels are very low in joint or cerebrospinal fluids, which can occur when the spirochetes have either burrowed into hard tissues or have encysted themselves.

That said, the PCR method is currently the most accurate test for confirming a Lyme Disease diagnosis, at least within its limited purview.

Posted in Uncategorized | 7,278 Comments

Broccoli and Lyme Symptoms

 

broccoli and lyme symptoms

Eat broccoli to help with lyme symptoms!

lyme symptoms:  broccoli

 

Posted July 13, 2012 Broccoli: A Nutritional Powerhouse.  I eat it raw by the handful! Or I dip it in olive oil and balsamic vinegar.  Great!

Broccoli—this cruciferous veggie is a nutritional powerhouse.  For reasons to pile up on the broccoli, check out the nutrition facts below:

  • Calcium. With approximately 60 milligrams per cup, broccoli is a great plant source for calcium, but this is important for more than just strong bones. Some studies have found that calcium might play a part in controlling high blood pressure and may help prevent certain types of cancer.  Lyme and chronic disease sufferers need all the minerals they can get!
  • Vitamin C. Broccoli is loaded with Vitamin C.  Just one cup contains 135 percent of your daily requirement. In fact, broccoli has the highest concentration of Vitamin C of all the cruciferous vegetables. Vitamin C is SO important for healing and your immune system.  Also helps you absorb iron.
  • Protein. Broccoli has four grams of protein per cup. That probably doesn’t seem like much, but look at it this way: calorie for calorie, broccoli contains more protein than steak.  Best idea is to add a nice serving of broccoli to your grass fed, organic steak!  To your good health!

 

Posted in General Health | 6,795 Comments

Lyme Symptoms: Ticks in Alberta

Posted July 11, 2012 from Edmonton Journal.

EDMONTON – Despite its previously low profile in Alberta, a species of tick notorious for carrying Lyme disease may now be establishing its territory here, a University of Alberta researcher says.

In a study released Wednesday, graduate student Daniel Fitzgerald said he found that Ixodes scapularis, or the blacklegged tick, was the fifth most common species of tick found in the province. The blacklegged tick is particularly suited to carrying and transmitting a bacterium known as Borrelia burgdorferi, which can develop into Lyme disease.

The findings come as something of a revelation, since it was previously believed this species was not living in Alberta, but rather in Manitoba, Quebec, Ontario and the Maritimes. That might also surprise people who thought they could only get Lyme disease while travelling, Fitzgerald said.

“Generally the consensus, among vets, too, was you had to go elsewhere,” he said. “(But) the ticks are where we are. A lot of people think we have to go to the mountains or Elk Island. There are ticks there, don’t get me wrong, but there are also ticks in the cities.

“We had ticks from dogs who hadn’t left their backyards … They live where we live.”

Fitzgerald said the areas with the highest count of blacklegged tick included Edmonton and Calgary, as well as much of central Alberta.

The study was the first in 40 years to document the distribution of tick species across Alberta. Fitzgerald focused on finding out where different species live.

His research relied on data gathered between 2007 and 2010, when about 100 veterinary clinics across Alberta sent him samples of nearly 1,200 ticks plucked from about 800 animals.

Fitzgerald then narrowed the number of ticks for testing, sending about 108 to the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. Of the 108 ticks, 22 of them tested positive for the bacteria that causes Lyme disease.

The bacteria that cause the disease is normally carried by infected animals like mice, birds, squirrels, and household pets. When ticks bite them, they become infected and can pass the infection to humans.

The first sign a person has contracted Lyme disease is usually a small rash around the bite, but extreme symptoms can include recurring arthritis, and neurological symptoms like headaches, dizziness, numbness, and paralysis. In the past 22 years, there have been about 27 documented cases of Lyme disease in Alberta, but all of those were contracted outside the province.

Over the years, countless dogs may have brought blacklegged ticks home with them as vacation souvenirs. But Fitzgerald said ticks need warmth and moisture to be able to reproduce and establish a population. He added he wasn’t sure why these ticks are suddenly showing themselves, but one possible explanation is climate change in the province, with rising temperatures allowing the ticks to flourish.

A study done at the University of Montreal in March indicated that in 2010 about 18 per cent of inhabited areas in Eastern Canada had ticks. But by 2020, that could rise as high as 80 per cent.

Still, Fitzgerald hesitated to say if there would be an explosion in Alberta’s tick population. He would only say his findings warrant more research, possibly into the life cycles of the blacklegged tick or their actual numbers.

“Whether it means ticks are increasing in density … I can’t say,” he said. “But if the ticks are established and reproducing … it’s worth taking a closer look.”

Posted in Uncategorized | 7,356 Comments