posted
Hi everyone. New here so please bear with me. Last week I was bitten by a deer tick. I saved the tick and the docs sent it off to Albany to be tested for Lyme. The test result showed negative for Lyme disease. When I saw urgent care doc for bite she put me on 7 day course of Doxycycline Hyclate which I will finish tomorrow. My primary care doc says finish up the Doxy and I will be fine. I'm skeptical. Is there reason to worry or should I just be happy all.is well. Thanks in advance
Posts: 4 | From New York | Registered: Dec 2016
| IP: Logged |
posted
Opinions are fine. I need all the guidance I can get. I have no spleen either so that also makes me a bit immune compromised and along with my Rheumatoid Arthritis i am really at a loss.
Posts: 4 | From New York | Registered: Dec 2016
| IP: Logged |
For more info on Lyme, Babesiosis and other tick borne diseases you can check this page. It is written in simple enough language for the general public and even doctors can understand it. ~smile~
posted
Thanks for all the responses. I appreciate them all. I have downloaded the suggested documents and will talk to my doc next week. I would rather make an informed logical choice on treatment instead of relying solely on the experience of one person. I do have a good relationship with my doc and I want to maintain that if I can. You've all been quite welcoming.😃
Posts: 4 | From New York | Registered: Dec 2016
| IP: Logged |
posted
Wanted to add one more thing. I did develop a bulls eye rash around the bite but that has greatly diminished since administration of Doxy.
Posts: 4 | From New York | Registered: Dec 2016
| IP: Logged |
TF
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 14183
posted
If you got a bulls eye rash, then you have lyme.
You need a lot more treatment.
Have you read the Burrascano lyme treatment guidelines?
"ERYTHEMA MIGRANS Erythema migrans (EM) is diagnostic of Bb infection, but is present in fewer than half. Even if present, it may go unnoticed by the patient. It is an erythematous, centrifugally expanding lesion that is raised and may be warm. Rarely there is mild stinging or pruritus. The EM rash will begin four days to several weeks after the bite, and may be associated with constitutional symptoms. Multiple lesions are present less than 10% of the time, but do represent disseminated disease. Some lesions have an atypical appearance and skin biopsy specimens may be helpful. When an ulcerated or vesicular center is seen, this may represent a mixed infection, involving other organisms besides B. burgdorferi. After a tick bite, serologic tests (ELISA. IFA, western blots, etc.) are not expected to become positive until several weeks have passed. Therefore, if EM is present, treatment must begin immediately, and one should not wait for results of Borrelia tests. You should not miss the chance to treat early disease, for this is when the success rate is the highest. Indeed, many knowledgeable clinicians will not even order a Borrelia test in this circumstance." (page 7)
You need to get to a lyme specialist to avoid this becoming chronic lyme. Time is of the essence. If you get treated properly now, you have the best chance of getting rid of lyme disease.
A bulls eye rash is about 3 inches across. It can last for weeks, even with treatment. The red dot in the center (where the tick was attached) can last for months.
So, if this is what you have, you HAVE lyme disease!
Testing of the tick is not 100% accurate. We have at least one person here on LymeNet that found that out the hard way when her tick was found to be negative for lyme.
You need to take a picture of that bulls eye rash. Take a few pictures. This is very important. Any lyme specialist you go to will want to see those pictures. Save them. In at least one picture, put a ruler next to the rash to show its size.
Posts: 9931 | From Maryland | Registered: Dec 2007
| IP: Logged |
You have been given excellent advice by many seasoned Lyme patients. Please follow it.
The bull's-eye rash is definitive for Lyme and seven days of antibiotics is nowhere near enough treatment for Lyme. People end up getting sicker from being under-treated.
Here is a link for you to read about "Two Standards of Care":
You need to be evaluated and treated by a Lyme-literate doctor (LLMD). Non LLMDs have no clue about this horrible disease or its complex treatment!
A LLMD is one who has treated Lyme disease and the co-infections which come with it for many years and has gotten patients well. A good one will follow Dr. B's Guidelines, the "gold standard" for Lyme treatment.
Btw - I know you are new to Lymenet, but please break up your posts into 2-3 sentence paragraphs, as there are people on Lymenet who cannot read large blocks of text due to neurological problems from Lyme.
To do this click the pencil/paper icon, make your changes, then click "Edit Post". Thanks.
Posts: 8981 | From Illinois | Registered: May 2006
| IP: Logged |
t9im
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 25489
posted
Hi Sherbear16, you are now entering the controversy of diagnosing and treating tick borne diseases, not just the Borrelia Burgdorferi (Lyme) infection.
Your MD, by prescribing 7 days of Doxy is better than most MD's.
Most MD's due to insurance and liability reasons follow the Infectious Disease Society of America "IDSA" standard of care, not the ILAD's guidelines.
Note with the rash, which is indicative of Lyme (I suggest taking a picture, the sooner the better, for reference) under the old IDSA guidelines the MD should prescribe 21 days of doxy, not 7. I'm not sure where 7 days comes from.
I say indicative as both sides of the controversy agree the rash is indicative of the borrelia infection.
Ticks carry more than just borrelia so good luck.
-------------------- Tim Posts: 1111 | From Glastonbury, CT | Registered: Apr 2010
| IP: Logged |
me
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 45475
posted
You have been given excellent advice. I would like to reiterate a few things:
Take pics of the rash. If possible, try to get your face in with the rash
Schedule an appointment with a Lyme literate doctor ASAP. You can write a separate post under the seeking doctor section.
7 days of antibiotics is not nearly enough--not at all. And people with Lyme need a combination of antibiotics, not just one.
Please educate yourself as much as possible. This is a very complex illness and there is a lot of controversy regarding it; it is important to be informed about your options and also to know if you are being misled by a doctor.
I am going to send you a private message with a recommendation of a LLMD who can get you in fairly quickly. The longer treatment is delayed, the more ill one becomes. So, please get treated promptly.
Welcome to lymenet. I'm glad you found us, but I'm sorry a tick bit you.
-------------------- Just sharing my experiences, opinions, and what I've read and learned. Not medical advice. Posts: 1431 | From USA | Registered: Mar 2015
| IP: Logged |
Lymedin2010
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 34322
posted
After the Doxy I would buy the Cowden Protocol, full set for about 4-6 months. The Banderol & Samento herbs on there were studied to be just as effective as doxy.
I know of a professional that got better & is now in submission from the Cowden Protocol. The Cowden worked to reduce symptoms for me & give me more energy when none of the abx would, but it did not cure me since it was too far advanced.
The price for a months treatment is $300, but heck well worth it if you think of the pain & hell you can go through for the rest of your life. I wish I had known about the Cowden earlier on during my infection.
You may also want to add Stevia & GSE (Grape Seed Extract) to the mix, as they both showed to kill Borrelia. There are research papers on this too & you can look them up.
posted
7 days of antibiotics is not enough. I took 3 weeks worth of 100mg doxy 2x daily and still ended up with Lyme.
I saved my tick too and had it tested. It came back negative for everything including coinfections. Based on my current symptoms, I would say that the tick test results were inaccurate for me. Good luck!
Posts: 49 | From CO | Registered: May 2016
| IP: Logged |
The Lyme Disease Network is a non-profit organization funded by individual donations. If you would like to support the Network and the LymeNet system of Web services, please send your donations to:
The
Lyme Disease Network of New Jersey 907 Pebble Creek Court,
Pennington,
NJ08534USA http://www.lymenet.org/