posted
I have self-diagnosed LD last year through deligent experimentation, and scientific observation through microscopy. I have been researching and studying for a total of 4 years. My initial findings showed unusual elevations of protozoa. I have finally narrowed down one location of the B. Burdorferi spirochettes, and cysts. They were found in specialized macrophages within prostatic fluid. I have documented the bacteria unraveling from cyst in dying cell. There are numerous anomalies and mutations, and contamination amoung commensal organisms. I have also concluded there is a plant\other hybrid. I am carefully documenting this. It explains the incessant scalp itch, and unusual matter in stool{in some people}. I am trying to place together the reasons why parasitic infestations cannot be immunologically controlled with efficiency in some patients.
-------------------- microw Posts: 129 | From Toronto, ON Canada | Registered: Feb 2008
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adamm
Unregistered
posted
First, welcome to the board.
Second, are you a microbiological researcher by profession,
because it would sure be great to have a few who are around here?
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Michelle M
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 7200
posted
I hope you're treating, in addition to studying?
Have you photographed your findings?
Do share!!
Michelle
Posts: 3193 | From Northern California | Registered: Apr 2005
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posted
What do you know about neurotoxins? and how good does your microscope need to be to see this stuff? I'd be more than a little curious to look at this stuff myself.
Posts: 102 | From ny | Registered: Feb 2008
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Dave6002
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 9064
posted
Neurotoxins are molecules you can not see with a microscope unless they are labeled with florescence using antibodies against neurotoxins. However, I am sure there is no antibody available yet. So without antibody you cannot see or detect neurotoxins.
Posts: 1078 | From Fairland | Registered: Apr 2006
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posted
Hi again, and thank you for the welcome. I'll try and answer everyones questions here. I am not a certified microbiologist, but my personal study disciplines have enabled me to gain a handle on many of the fundamentals. I am compiling many micrographs of relevant Lyme-related phenomenon esp. where it applies to my self. I am looking at other cases where people come to me with chronic symptoms. I will do some basic analytical work, including live blood scans. My website is www.mmicrographic.com You can see the beginning stages of my attempt to make my work public.
Neurotoxins. These are very important, but the body's own elimination of the toxins is what needs to be addressed. I have analyzed some toxins through chemical methods, and will be using more advanced methods sometime this year. Those methods include: electrophoresis, chemical regeants, chemiluminescence techniques and spectrometry. It is very important to investigate any strange proteins which may be circulating in blood. I believe there are neuropeptides which cause re-routing and interference with hormonal functions, and general physiological operations. This brings me to the immunological issue. I think, that with the right combinations of presently available drugs, there may be a way to reverse this condition. However, some of these drugs may be difficult to justify, or obtain. Microw
-------------------- microw Posts: 129 | From Toronto, ON Canada | Registered: Feb 2008
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treepatrol
Honored Contributor (10K+ posts)
Member # 4117
posted
quote:Originally posted by microw: Hi again, and thank you for the welcome. I'll try and answer everyones questions here. I am not a certified microbiologist, but my personal study disciplines have enabled me to gain a handle on many of the fundamentals. I am compiling many micrographs of relevant Lyme-related phenomenon esp. where it applies to my self. I am looking at other cases where people come to me with chronic symptoms. I will do some basic analytical work, including live blood scans. My website is www.mmicrographic.com You can see the beginning stages of my attempt to make my work public.
Neurotoxins. These are very important, but the body's own elimination of the toxins is what needs to be addressed. I have analyzed some toxins through chemical methods, and will be using more advanced methods sometime this year. Those methods include: electrophoresis, chemical regeants, chemiluminescence techniques and spectrometry. It is very important to investigate any strange proteins which may be circulating in blood. I believe there are neuropeptides which cause re-routing and interference with hormonal functions, and general physiological operations. This brings me to the immunological issue. I think, that with the right combinations of presently available drugs, there may be a way to reverse this condition. However, some of these drugs may be difficult to justify, or obtain. Microw
-------------------- Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Remember Iam not a Doctor Just someone struggling like you with Tick Borne Diseases.
Michelle M
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 7200
posted
quote:Originally posted by microw: [QB] I am looking at other cases where people come to me with chronic symptoms. I will do some basic analytical work, including live blood scans.
Are you a doctor, then?
quote:My website is www.mmicrographic.com You can see the beginning stages of my attempt to make my work public.
I get a "page not found" ... is your site down?
Michelle
Posts: 3193 | From Northern California | Registered: Apr 2005
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quote:Originally posted by microw: Hi again, and thank you for the welcome. I'll try and answer all questions here. I am not a certified microbiologist, but my personal study disciplines have enabled me to gain a handle on many of the fundamentals. I am compiling micrographs of relevant Lyme-related phenomenon esp. where it applies to myself. I am looking at other cases where people come to me, with chronic symptoms. I am doing basic analytical work, including live blood scans. My website is www.ummicrographic.com it is here, where you can see the beginning stages in my attempt to make my work public.
Neurotoxins. Very important subject, but the body's own elimination of the toxins is what needs to be addressed. I have analyzed some toxins through chemical methods, and will be using more advanced methods sometime this year. Those methods include: electrophoresis, chemical regeants, chemiluminescence techniques and spectrometry. I want to investigate strange proteins which may be circulating in blood. I believe there are neuropeptides which cause re-routing and interference with cell-signaling, hormonal functions, and general physiological operations. This brings me to the immunological issue. Certain affected cells esp. macrophages, may provide clues to how we can deal with the re-activation of immunity functions, and trace the migration patterns of mycoplasma, BB etc. Another problem I wish to focus on, is the contamination of host commensal bacteria, and dysbiosis. These bacteria are very important for toxin elimination and regulation of essential enzymes. I think, that with the right combination of presently available drugs, there may be a way to reverse Lyme. However, some of these drugs may be difficult to justify, or obtain. Microw
posted
What drugs do you feel may be approprate to reverse lyme disease ? And again welcome,and thanks for your input. Doc (nickname)
Posts: 95 | From nys | Registered: Jan 2008
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posted
Big question, and it requires speculation on my part. So...in my opinion, I think, a cocktail of antibiotics, GABA drugs, aMSH, and complex custom probiotic mix including B. Infantis and e-cloi strains are what I would like to experiment with.
There are other ideas I have as well. Using hapten molecules to stimulate certain leukocytes, or even the use of leukocyte stimulating factors or designed cytokines. And what about a vaccine?
This disease has to be looked at like HIV or even cancer.
One thing I can assure everyone, is we must depend on our own immune-system to finish the job that any drug will start.
All of these ideas are just that. I have no institutionally endorsed medical background, or certification. I am a hobbist, and a committed independent researcher. microw
-------------------- microw Posts: 129 | From Toronto, ON Canada | Registered: Feb 2008
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adamm
Unregistered
posted
Would that be Durland Fish?
So, anyway, microw--is it then your contention that there
is no pharmaceutical means of curing Lyme?
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posted
It depends on the individual and HLA\blood type. If aggressive antibiotic treatment is administered immediately after infection, there is hope for sure. It also depends on the strain of infective agent.
If mycoplasma is involve {such as in my case} there could be complications.
Has anyone had mono in the past? It could be connected to Lyme.
-------------------- microw Posts: 129 | From Toronto, ON Canada | Registered: Feb 2008
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adamm
Unregistered
posted
Wait, which blood types render individuals the most susceptible?
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Next was the year I had mono, got it bad 106 fever, hallucinations, missed 3 months of college. Never felt completely betterbetter lymph nodes stayed visibly swollen permanently
Knee swelled up like a lemon, by the time I went to the doctor it was the other knee- must be from cycling
tennis elbow, carpul tunnel, arthritis everywhere
Started sleeping 15 hours a night when ever I had the chance, 4-6 hour naps if I didn't.
Doctors tested for lupus lyme and rheumatoid. when they all came back negative they referred me to a psychiatrist. I ddidn't go.
Skin started to hurt all the time
Started getting lost, going to thewrong places. Using the wrong words. Forgetting people I'd met over and over again
Panic attacks
Pain all over felt like zaps of electricity
exhaustion much worse
intestinal distress -i thought that was lactose intolerance
fog brain
Saw a new doctor. When he said he would test for lyme i got mad and said I'd already done that test. All tests showed a strong positive. Started abx
Stuttering
Got lost daily on my way home from work
Once got lost in my backyard for 4 hours
irritability
Started having a hard time distinguishing between sight and sound. If I saw too many things moving in a room it was too loud to hear anything else.
Neuro symptoms cleared up after 3 months IV ceftriaxone. The other symptoms backed off in severity but never stopped
Lyme came back after a year. Full blown neuro symptoms with the addition of tremors, dizzyness, vertigo, facial numbness
Can't spell
Can't read single spaced
Speak like a drunk some days.
At some point during all this my average blood pressure dropped to no higher than 90/60
Body temp averages about 95-97F
I hope this helps you.
Look up TGF-beta 1. I think that is the allele that's off for people who tend to get chronic. Or its something completely random that I wrote down for some reason or another.
Have you already checked yourself for celiac disease? Some other things that exascerbate lyme are heavy metals, toxic mold exposure,etc
I wrote down on my little list of things to ask my doctor about HLADR hepotype c3a c4a. I don't remember what is though.
Once again good luck.
Posts: 102 | From ny | Registered: Feb 2008
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The TGF-Beta and Alpha are proteins designated for cellular self-destruction duties. Important in cancer cell control. It has other bioactive properties as well.
HLA DR c3 and c4 are markers which show up in people with chronic biotoxin associated illness. Microcystic algea[?] blooms have been implicated in connection to susceptible patients.
I have TMJ as well, and constant 'clicking' of jaw. I think this has to do with parasitic infection.
P.S. I am not sure which cell types are involved with Lyme and other chronic ailments. I would say b17 is one.
-------------------- microw Posts: 129 | From Toronto, ON Canada | Registered: Feb 2008
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