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Thank you Hudson Valley News Network for recognizing the importance of both the Mayday Project Protest at the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Headquarters and the ongoing development of the promising Ceres Nanosciences Nanotrap® based Lyme Antigen Test. With a high level of sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy, the Ceres Nanotrap® test may well be the key to helping both acute and chronic Lyme patients get access to timely diagnosis and effective treatment.
I am serious when I say that this test may be the one that changes everything.
On the same day the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) continued to deny the existence of chronic Lyme disease and dismissed the Mayday Project vigil, an exciting breakthrough technology in testing for Lyme disease receives a funding boost from the Commonwealth of Virginia. Both stories are presented here. The first comes from the Mayday Project via Webwire; the second is from George Mason University and Ceres Nanosciences. The stories demonstrate the small victories among the huge challenges faced by the community of Lyme disease sufferers. . . .
I posted about it a year or so ago after I saw a presentation at a lyme conference. Unfortunatly I never got answers to a couple of questions I had about the testing at that time.
Will try to find my old post to link here.
Bea Seibert
Posts: 7306 | From Martinsville,VA,USA | Registered: Oct 2004
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