Is someone suggesting that you will need to go on IV, or are you just noticing alot of talk about them and worried that is where this is heading? If so put yourself at ease.IV's are prescribed for different reasons.
Sometimes it is because someone is really sick with something and they need a very high dose of a med that can't be taken orally.
In other cases someone might just have too many stomach upset issues taking oral, and IV is another way to get the med into them.
Sometimes a particular med a Dr. wants to use is only available in IV form. No choice but IV if one wants that particular med.
Different Doctors have different treatment approaches for Lyme. Some seem to like IV's and large doses of really strong antibiotics. Others use gentler approaches to deal with the infection without doing as much harm to our bodies in the process.
The Dr. we are going to for instance does not even OFFER IV treatment. She uses mostly orals and tries to work on improving one's overall health so the body can fight some of its own battles again.
I personnally prefer that approach, but different people have different needs and preferences.
If your questions are about:
"If I have Lyme am I going to have to be on an IV? I don't want to be on an IV!"
... The answer is no, unless that is the ONLY treatment you respond to... OR you for some reason want to go the IV route.
I personally would only do IV's as a last resort. I'm actually having some good results with just some modest amounts of orals and an occasional IM injection or two.
Treatment does not have to be brutal to be effective.
[This message has been edited by James H (edited 27 February 2005).]