posted
What antibiotics are you on? Some antibiotics can cause neuropathy I believe.
When I first started treatment I had NEW symptoms show up and yes symptoms show up throughout treatment.
I think it was tincup that told me to think of them as fireworks and celebrate because that means bacteria is dying... LOL
I didn't ever have a 100% positive lyme test either, but I'm treating for Lyme and have seen small improvements. I'm not too far into treatment either.
Posts: 798 | From Cincinnati, OH | Registered: Jul 2016
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Keep in mind that there is NO definitive test for MS. It is a diagnosis of exclusion.
Lyme is usually the cause of MS symptoms .. also look to viruses.
But the finger issue could be other things as well.
-------------------- --Lymetutu-- Opinions, not medical advice! Posts: 96222 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001
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TF
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 14183
posted
You herxed 2 days after starting lyme treatment, so you have lyme disease.
I doubt you also have MS.
By reading your old posts, it seems to me that you are just taking Bactrim. Is that correct?
When you ask questions about symptoms, it is always good to tell us what meds you are on because some symptoms can be side effects of meds.
Numbness is not a side effect of Bactrim, however. But, numbness IS a symptom of lyme. See p. 10 of Burrascano:
Tingling, numbness, burning or stabbing sensations, shooting pains, skin hypersensitivity
See this quote:
"It is clear that in the great majority of patients, chronic Lyme is a disease affecting predominantly the nervous system." (p. 4)
So, as lyme attacks the nerves, you get the various symptoms named such as numbness, burning, pins and needles, etc.
Posts: 9931 | From Maryland | Registered: Dec 2007
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posted
They tried to pin Lupus on me this time around. I'm just not taking that diagnosis, especially since I had the Lyme rash and classic Lyme symptoms. Last time - 11 years ago- I got Hashimoto's Thyroiditis, which was reversed with Lyme treatment.
Maybe I have Lupus, which is an autoimmune disease like Hashimoto's but I feel it can be reversed, since it was caused by Lyme. Lyme causes inflammation, inflammation causes autoimmunes.
Is MS an autoimmune?
Posts: 351 | From La Crosse, WI | Registered: Sep 2005
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Jordana
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 45305
posted
To get a diagnosis of MS, you go to the neurologist and they do some functional tests, and if anything seems abnormal then you can get an emg, where they push a lot of needles into your body and see the response of your nervous system. Then they'll do an MRI of your brain.
In my case, you wouldn't believe the things I've had happen since my Lyme became symptomatic. The most insane stuff has happened to me, 1000 times worse than this "numbness and tingling" stuff. And every test I've taken has been completely normal. Lyme causes spots on your brain -- I don't have any, but it can, and they can look like MS.
I know it drives you crazy to have no support or explanation for the stuff that happens except "lyme" and I wouldn't believe it myself if it wasn't happening to me.
Go through the testing if it will ease your mind but it really probably isn't MS.
Posts: 2057 | From Florida | Registered: Feb 2015
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posted
You can definitely get new symptoms during treatment. If you make the little bugs mad enough they can do all kinds of new things!
Also, when I started treatment, Bactrim was my only antibiotic too. It helped a lot, but many symptoms it never helped. Some symptoms just got worse on it, probably because I have a coinfection that Bactrim wasn't killing. Could be the same for you too.
It's way too early to tell if that's the case for you too, but If that happens, don't give up, just keep trying different antibiotics!
Posts: 748 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2015
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posted
I just saw one of your posts and I do have spots on my brain.
MS is autoimmune
-------------------- Jk Posts: 88 | From Nj | Registered: Dec 2016
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Jordana
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 45305
posted
Lots of people have spots on their brains. It's actually not diagnostic -- you have to have new symptoms and new spots to get diagnosed.
Most people in the Lyme world aren't convinced that MS really exists. There are no autoimmune markers for MS; just symptoms and an MRI. Mostly our crowd is pretty convinced that MS is Lyme.
Posts: 2057 | From Florida | Registered: Feb 2015
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Keebler
Honored Contributor (25K+ posts)
Member # 12673
Many links here about the Lyme-MS connection - and how "autoimmune" often really is not what it seems but the body trying to fight a tenacious stealth infection.
Also detail about other tick-borne infections, other stealth infections (such as Cpn) that can cause "MS" as well as environmental causes & complexities.
Key nutrient factors discussed, too. But good nutrients, alone, will not be enough to address the issue. -
Posts: 48021 | From Tree House | Registered: Jul 2007
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Keebler
Honored Contributor (25K+ posts)
Member # 12673
Topic: MAGNESIUM - Informational Links set -
Posts: 48021 | From Tree House | Registered: Jul 2007
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Jordana
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 45305
posted
Jenene -- you will get better. Of course. It's a matter of making one adjustment to your lifestyle after another and being extremely patient.
The craziest thing about this disease is that it changes over time. When I first suspected I had Lyme, I had twitches and facial paralysis and all kinds of GI misery, and so many visual disturbances I basically could not see.
Now my symptoms are totally different. I rarely twitch, now I feel like I'm walking/sitting on marshmallows all the time and turning my head a certain way makes me feel like I'm falling down an elevator shaft. I barely have anything left from my Lyme a year ago.
Am I better? Am I worse? Who knows?
Posts: 2057 | From Florida | Registered: Feb 2015
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-------------------- Blue Posts: 1539 | From southwest | Registered: Dec 2015
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Catgirl
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 31149
posted
MS is lyme and company. I wouldn't waste my time on the testing. TF is right, you wouldn't have herxed if you didn't have lyme.
Conventional medicine makes up new names for things they cannot explain (lyme gives them so much to work with). They just aren't familiar with lyme thanks to the idsa's bad identifying guidelines, test, etc.
-------------------- --Keep an open mind about everything. Also, remember to visit ACTIVISM (we can change things together). Posts: 5418 | From earth | Registered: Mar 2011
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Many of are misdiagnosed with MS, rheumatoid arthritis, Parkinson's, and the list goes on.
Please keep asking questions. You have a wonderful support group.
-------------------- Just sharing my experiences, opinions, and what I've read and learned. Not medical advice. Posts: 1431 | From USA | Registered: Mar 2015
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posted
I was diagnosed with MS, and am seeing and LLMD for treatment.
See my posts in the microscopy forum.
I do microscopy, actively searching for borrelia in blood and cultures.
I am convinced they are one and the same, but treatment is another story altogether. Is it a condition caused by Borrelia, but cannot be reversed even with eradication of the bacteria? Is it, as Dr. Alan MacDonald pointed out, a symbiotic infection of both the borrelia bacteria and an unidentified parasitic roundworm in the brain?
this is what I am actively pursuing now.
Posts: 163 | From USA | Registered: Oct 2015
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bluelyme
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 47170
posted
Hey dude ...how do you plan on treating the helminith part ?
-------------------- Blue Posts: 1539 | From southwest | Registered: Dec 2015
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My mom has M.S. and I have lyme and all co infections. She has tested positive for lyme too, and a few specifically new symptoms went away with treatment.
Her classic M.S. symptoms did not improve one bit.
I agree with you that there has to be something a bit different going on.
Keep up the good studying work! We need heroes like you!!!
Posts: 477 | From Pennsylvania | Registered: Nov 2015
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