LymeNet Home LymeNet Home Page LymeNet Flash Discussion LymeNet Support Group Database LymeNet Literature Library LymeNet Legal Resources LymeNet Medical & Scientific Abstract Database LymeNet Newsletter Home Page LymeNet Recommended Books LymeNet Tick Pictures Search The LymeNet Site LymeNet Links LymeNet Frequently Asked Questions About The Lyme Disease Network LymeNet Menu

LymeNet on Facebook

LymeNet on Twitter




The Lyme Disease Network receives a commission from Amazon.com for each purchase originating from this site.

When purchasing from Amazon.com, please
click here first.

Thank you.

LymeNet Flash Discussion
Dedicated to the Bachmann Family

LymeNet needs your help:
LymeNet 2020 fund drive


The Lyme Disease Network is a non-profit organization funded by individual donations.

LymeNet Flash Post New Topic  New Poll  Post A Reply
my profile | directory login | register | search | faq | forum home

  next oldest topic   next newest topic
» LymeNet Flash » Questions and Discussion » Medical Questions » Bell's Palsy of THE GUT- GI Manifestations of LD

 - UBBFriend: Email this page to someone!    
Author Topic: Bell's Palsy of THE GUT- GI Manifestations of LD
Tincup
Honored Contributor (10K+ posts)
Member # 5829

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Tincup         Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Another good one by our wonderful Dr. S.

Way to go!!!

[Big Grin]

It's MUCH easier reading if you go to the site directly.

`````````````````````````````````````````````


http://www.ilads.org/sherr7.html


"Bell's Palsy of the Gut" and other GI Manifestations of Lyme and Associated Diseases

Virginia T. Sherr, M.D.

PRACTICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY
April, 2006

SUMMARY

Bell's palsy signifies paralysis of facial muscles related to inflammation of the associated seventh Cranial Nerve. Physicians may not realize that this syndrome is caused by the spirochetal agent of Lyme disease until proven otherwise. Whether it is a full or hemi facial paralysis, Bell's palsy is cosmetically disfiguring when fully expressed. Sudden loss of normal facial expression terrifies patients who naturally fear they are having a stroke. When a smile is asked for, normal countenances warp into bizarre grimaces.

The amount of tooth area exposed in this attempt to smile helps doctors evaluate the degree of paralysis and its change over time. In every case of
Bell's, doctors need to carefully investigate by history, physical, and laboratory work every shred
of evidence that might suggest the presence of cryptic tertiary Lyme, a serious multisystem, gut
and neuro-brain infection even though about half of fully diagnosed patients have no evidence
whatsoever of having had a tick-bite.

Gastrointestinal Lyme disease may cause gut paralysis and a wide range of diverse GI
symptoms with the underlying etiology likewise missed by physicians. Borrelia burgdorferi, the
microbial agent often behind unexplained GI symptoms--along with numerous other pathogens
also contained in tick saliva--influences health and vitality of the gastrointestinal tract from oral
cavity to anus. Disruptions caused by GI borreliosis (Lyme) may include, amongst many others,
distortions of taste, failure of other neural functions that supply the entire GI tract--paralysis or
partial paralysis of the tongue, gag reflex, esophagus, stomach and nearby organs, small and/or
large intestines ("ileus"), bowel pseudo-obstruction, intestinal spasms, excitability of gut muscles,
inflammation of lumen lining tissues, spirochetal hepatitis, possibly cholecystitis, dysbiosis,
jejunal or ileal incompetence with resultant small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO),
megacolon, encopresis and rectal muscle cramping (proctalgia fugax).

In cerebral hypothalamic and pituitary centers, usual sites of borrelial disruptions of the brain's
normal hormonal cascades, there are strong influences on human attitudes, ideation, and
behavior relating to gastronomic issues. Newly discovered Lyme-endangered cerebral hormones
and renegade cytokines regulate brain-gut interactions thus initiating behavioral tendencies such
as anorexia or a failure of satiety with resultant obesity.

Ticks and other vectors of Lyme disease attract their own infections from many microbes, some
known and some unknown (viruses, amoebas, bacteria, and possibly parasitic filaria), which they
then also can pass on to humans. The GI tract is especially vulnerable to machinations of such
co-infections as bartonellosis, mycoplasmosis, human anaplasmosis (HA), and human monocytic
ehrlichiosis (HME). Syndromes exactly similar to Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Crohn's
Disease, and cholecystitis, for example, may not have readily suggested a borrelial etiology to
the diagnostician but Lyme increasingly is known to be a potential contributor to each.

All known Lyme-gut syndromes are treated by combining several effective antimicrobials
(including use of azole medications with specific antibiotics) with agents that boost gut lining
repairs and overall immunity enhancement. Azole medications are borreliacidal (against the
anti-Bb spirochetal cyst form) medications such as metronidazole (Flagyl). Needed GI healing
agents may include gut stimulants or relaxants, Ph agents, bile salts, nutriceuticals,
immunity-enhancers, neurotoxin absorbents, and sterilizers of gut-specific microbes.

Parallelism between Lyme borreliosis-caused paresis of facial muscles supplied by Cranial
Nerve VII and Lyme-caused gastrointestinal paralyses suggested a pseudonym to the
author--Bell's palsy of the Gut--despite the fact that these syndromes are related to different
types of neural fibers and only occasionally occur together. Since similar injury to all sites may
be etiologically related, however, otherwise unexplained gastrointestinal symptoms should be
considered as possibly related to Lyme borreliosis and/or its co-infections until proven otherwise.

Bell's Palsy of the Gut" and
Other GI Manifestations of
Lyme and Associated Diseases

PRACTICAL GASTROENTEROLOGY
April 2006
by Virginia T. Sherr, MD


Bell's palsy signifies paralysis of facial muscles related to inflammation of the associated
seventh Cranial Nerve. Physicians may not realize that this syndrome is caused by the
spirochetal agent of Lyme disease until proven otherwise. Whether it is a full or
hemifacial paralysis, Bell's palsy is cosmetically disfiguring when fully expressed.
Sudden loss of normal facial expression terrifies patients who naturally fear they are
having a stroke. When a smile is asked for, normal countenances warp into bizarre
grimaces. The amount of tooth area exposed in this attempt to smile helps doctors
evaluate the degree of paralysis and its change over time (Figure 1). In every case of
Bell's, doctors need to carefully investigate by history, physical, and laboratory work
every shred of evidence that might suggest the presence of cryptic tertiary Lyme, a
serious multisystem, gut and neuro-brain infection even though about half of fully
diagnosed patients have no evidence whatsoever of having had a tick-bite.
Gastrointestinal Lyme disease may cause gut paralysis and a wide range of diverse GI
symptoms with the underlying etiology likewise missed by physicians. Borrelia
burgdorferi, the microbial agent often behind unexplained GI symptoms--along with
numerous other pathogens also contained in tick saliva--influences health and vitality of
the gastrointestinal tract from oral cavity to anus. Disruptions caused by GI borreliosis
(Lyme) may include, amongst many others, distortions of taste, failure of other neural
functions that supply the entire GI tract--paralysis or partial paralysis of the tongue, gag
reflex, esophagus, stomach and nearby organs, small and/or large intestines ("ileus"),
bowel pseudo-obstruction, intestinal spasms, excitability of gut muscles, inflammation of
lumen lining tissues, spirochetal hepatitis, possibly cholecystitis, dysbiosis, jejunal or
ileal incompetence with resultant small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO),
megacolon, encopresis and rectal muscle cramping (proctalgia fugax).
In cerebral hypothalamic and pituitary centers, usual sites of borrelial disruptions of the
brain's normal hormonal cascades, there are strong influences on human attitudes,
ideation, and behavior relating to gastronomic issues. Newly discovered Lymeendangered
cerebral hormones and renegade cytokines regulate brain-gut interactions thus initiating
behavioral tendencies such as anorexia or a failure of satiety with resultant obesity.
Ticks and other vectors of Lyme disease attract their own infections from many
microbes, some known and some unknown (viruses, amoebas, bacteria, and possibly
parasitic filaria), which they then also can pass on to humans. The GI tract is especially
vulnerable to machinations of such co-infections as bartonellosis, mycoplasmosis, human
anaplasmosis (HA), and human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME). Syndromes exactly
similar to Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Crohn's Disease, and cholecystitis, for
example, may not have readily suggested a borrelial etiology to the diagnostician but
Lyme increasingly is known to be a potential contributor to each.
All known Lyme-gut syndromes are treated by combining several effective antimicrobials
(including use of azole medications with specific antibiotics) with agents that boost gut
lining repairs and overall immunity enhancement. Azole medications are borreliacidal
(against the anti-Bb spirochetal cyst form) medications such as metronidazole (Flagyl).
Needed GI healing agents may include gut stimulants or relaxants, Ph agents, bile salts,
nutriceuticals, immunity-enhancers, neurotoxin absorbents, and sterilizers of gut-specific
microbes.
Parallelism between Lyme borreliosis-caused paresis of facial muscles supplied by
Cranial Nerve VII and Lyme-caused gastrointestinal paralyses suggested a pseudonym to
the author--Bell's palsy of the Gut--despite the fact that these syndromes are related to
different types of neural fibers and only occasionally occur together. Since similar injury
to all sites may be etiologically related, however, otherwise unexplained gastrointestinal
symptoms should be considered as possibly related to Lyme borreliosis and/or its
co-infections until proven otherwise.
INTRODUCTION
Until proven otherwise, a patient's unexplained facial paralysis is caused by the
tick-borne spirochetes of Lyme disease (LYD) (1). The widely endemic bacteria are
easily capable of inducing distal
inflammation of the Seventh Cranial
(Facial) Nerve (2). "Considering the incidence of Bell's palsy in Lyme, it is improper to
treat it as viral in origin without a work-up for Lyme disease" (3). In an early study with
nearly 1000 LYD cases studied, Bell's palsy occurred in at least 10% of validated cases
(4). The frequency of Lyme's Bell's palsy etiology is unfamiliar to many physicians.
Likewise many physicians are unfamiliar with the spirochetal cause of paralyses of
muscles that facilitate normal gastrointestinal transit. Yet, these vital muscles also may
be greatly compromised by the same offending neurotropic spirochete, Borrelia
burgdorferi (Bb) in patients who are totally unaware of having Lyme disease. Their
physicians are often surprised to learn that persistent Lyme disease is outstandingly a
disease of the brain as well as involving one or all components and sub-systems of the
entire nervous system (5). It is not yet widely understood by clinicians that at least 40%
or more of Lyme-infected patients have major, handicapping, neurological manifestations
(6,7) with the likelihood that 100% have some brain involvement. It remains to be
clarified which Bb neuritides are involved in specific GI sequelae of the infection or if
inflamed nerves are, indeed uniformly at fault.
"The vagi (10th Cranial Nerves) are major suppliers of the gut's external nervous system
and being very long and complex, are vulnerable to neuropathies such as Lyme disease
or diabetes which can cause them serious damage." (Personal communication from
Neurologist, Richard Rhee, M.D., F.A.A.N., Neptune, NJ)
"Vagus nerve paralyses are more commonly diagnosed when caused by Herpes
(varicilla) zoster or Herpes simplex viruses wherein most patients I have seen are
nauseated and have no appetite. I have not observed paralytic ileus in these cases.
Should vagal paralysis occur in a Lyme patient, I think the patient would complain of
hoarseness and dysphagia." (Personal communication from Dr. Hidecki Nakagawa,
Japan) Indeed, both of these problems are common symptoms of neuro-Lyme.
"The autonomic nervous system supplies the gut . . . sympathetic fibers inhibiting
peristalsis and secretion and parasympathetic fibers increasing them . . . Functions of the
sympathetic nerves include vasomotor, motor to the sphincters, inhibition of peristalsis,
and transport of sensory fibers from all of the abdominal viscera. . . . Functions of the
parasympathetic nerves comprise motor and secretomotor to the gut and glands" (8).
Borreliosis-caused, gastrointestinal tract paralysis and related abnormalities can occur
anywhere along the entire length of the tract (9,10)--involving, for example,
functionality of taste buds (11,12), muscular strength of the tongue, gag reflex, ability to
swallow, gastroparesis, peristaltic retardation (or excitation) related to small bowel
competency, dysbiosis, total arrest of peristalsis ("ileus"), pseudo-obstruction (sometimes
associated with Bell's palsy) (13), colon dysfunctions, encopresis, proctalgia fugax and
the final act of defecation. "In 5%-23% of patients with early Lyme borreliosis, there can
be gastrointestinal symptoms such as anorexia, nausea, vomiting, severe abdominal pain,
hepatitis, hepatomegaly and splenomegaly. Diarrhea occurs but is seen in only 2% of
cases" (14). Regardless of the site, spirochetes' disturbing symptoms may come and go
spontaneously, often temporarily resolving in a matter of hours to days, although
resolution does not imply cure. As with Bell's palsy of the face, these gastrointestinal
conditions may endure or only partially remit (15).
Similarities between Bb-caused paralyses of muscles supplied by the Facial Nerve and
Lyme-caused GI neurogenic paralyses suggested a pseudonym to this writer--Bell's palsy
of the gut--despite the fact that the two manifestations of the infection may not be
synchronous. Yet, they are etiologically related, which suggests need for a high index of
suspicion regarding presence of borrelial disease in all perplexing gastrointestinal
syndromes.
LYME AND ITS POTENT MICROBIAL CO-INFECTIONS AS
RELATED TO GEOGRAPHIC FACTORS
Endemic areas for tick-borne diseases
include the entire Eastern and Western coasts of North America with their internally
contiguous states as well as Midwestern states that support migratory bird North-South
flyways (16). Infected deer ticks (Ixodes scapularis and similar hard-bodied ticks),
vectors of many diseases including the ones discussed below, are thus most widely
distributed by birds, geographically. There are few places in the United States that are
totally safe from the risk of microbes thus ferried. In 2002, the CDC estimated the
existence of nearly one-quarter million new cases in USA's rapidly expanding LYD
epidemic.
Very common co-infections from infected Ixodes sp. ticks (Figure 2) include the
ehrlichioses--Human Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis, which recently was renamed Human
Anaplasmosis (HA) and Human Monocytic Ehrlichiosis (HME). Human babesiosis, a
tick-borne, one-celled parasite of erythrocytes, is widely misdiagnosed in its endemic,
chronic form (17,18). A Bartonella-like bacteria, mycoplasma spp, and other viral and
opportunistic infectors are now known to be tick-borne (19), existing in the full territorial
range of I. scapularis and other ticks (20-22). Resultant illnesses include two that have
been found to be the most common tick-borne invaders of children's gastrointestinal
tracts--the combination of bartonellosis and Lyme borreliosis gut infections (23).
As with the spirochetes of Lyme, Bartonella
is an increasingly common (perhaps the most common) tick infector (21). "PCR analysis
of Ixodes scapularis ticks collected in New Jersey identified infections with Borrelia
burgdorferi (33.6%), Babesia microti (8.4%), Anaplasma phagocytophila (1.9%), and
Bartonella spp. (34.5%). The I. Scapularis tick (Figure 3) is a potential pathogen vector
that can cause coinfection and contribute to the variety of clinical responses noted in
some tick-borne disease patients" (24). As more experience has been gained with
Bartonella henselae and its related species, bartonellosis has been found capable of
causing severe gastrointestinal pain and malfunction as well as specific skin eruptions.
Both of these sites involve vasculopathy-- enteric and dermal as well. Scar-like stripes
on the patient's torso are telltale "stretch marks" or "scratch marks" of the disease, easily
notable. This external and visible sign (the seemingly mysterious but diagnostically
pathognomonic striae) may make the GI bartonellosis diagnosis less complicated for
gastroenterologists and other specialists (25).
Quite surprising to many physicians, bartonellosis can cause major central nervous
system damage, similar in some aspects to the aforementioned Lyme neuroborreliosis.
Lyme and bartonellosis symptoms may include encephalitis signified by headaches,
major memory loss, rages, seizures, and coma, as well as inflammation of the heart,
abdominal pain, bone lesions, and loss of vision. Until recent years, Bartonella, at onset
of infection an endothelial and subsequent red blood cells infector, was considered to
cause a relatively benign and common disease otherwise known as cat scratch disease
(26-28). Now that ticks have become significant transmitters of Bartonella infections
into humans, this vectoring appears to amplify victims' general Lyme symptoms (26), and
quite likely amplifies GI tract lining symptoms as well.
OFTEN UNSUSPECTED PRESENTATIONS OF GI TRACT
LYME--DIAGNOSTIC USEFULNESS OF PCR TESTS ON
SPECIMENS HARVESTED FROM ENDOSCOPY/COLONOSCOPY
BIOPSIES (WITH ILLUSTRATIVE CASES)
One of the blessings of modern medical investigation is a positive PCR (A direct
test--polymerase chain reaction-- capable of pinpointing an offending microbe's DNA).
This test can be performed on specimens from the patient's blood, serum, plasma, CSF,
urine, mothers' milk, and all biopsy tissues. PCRs can play a vital role in diagnosing
tick-borne diseases especially those affecting any organs or associated tissues. "Lyme
disease is usually diagnosed and treated based on clinical manifestations. However,
laboratory testing is useful for patients with confusing presentations and for validation of
disease in clinical studies" (29).
DNA tests are especially handy because they can be utilized by way of biopsies harvested
from inside the gut during otherwise routine colonoscopies and endoscopies in cases
where the diagnosis is uncertain. PCR's are highly specific although they are less than
ideally sensitive so that a positive test is a reliable indicator of Bb infection while a
negative test simply does not exclude Lyme and does not indicate a lack of infection (30).
An illustrative case history is that of "Mr. F," a mature man thought to have been
mentally retarded most of his life. His father had ascribed his youth's sudden headaches,
stiff neck, and cognitive losses to the will of God. No further evaluation or treatment was
allowed. They lived in endemic tick territory at the time. Decades later the patient
realized that his symptoms back then followed a series of bites by minute ticks). Now an
adult, the patient's chronic "ulcerative colitis" and depression kept him from his job as a
school janitor. (Antidepressant medication had mostly just helped his anxiety) When a
colonoscopy was needed, a generous gastroenterologist biopsied Mr. F's luminal tissues,
which the referring doctor then sent for testing to a reference lab specializing in
tick-borne diseases. Specimen analysis returned as PCR positive for etiologies of 3
diseases that infected his colon: Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease), Mycoplasma
fermentans (suspected of causing GI injury via proinflammatory cytokines) (25), and B.
henselae (bartonel bartonellosis). Each disease required its own unique treatment, all of
which were successful and the patient's GI symptoms resolved. Mr. F's depression also
cleared and in its place there was a kind of chronic good cheer, off and on resembling
mild hypomania.
The case of "Mrs. M" illustrates another important method of detecting the presence of
an active Lyme infection as well as uncovering a possible contributing cause of
cholecystitis. Gall bladder (GB) tissue was tested for Bb spirochetal DNA following a
cholecystectomy on this seronegative patient: A middle-aged woman with a known
diagnosis of pre-existing, asymptomatic gallstones, experienced episodes of allergies,
severe headaches and extreme chronic fatigue. She was treated for 2 tick-borne
diseases--- LYD and babesiosis, having had symptoms of both and a positive PCR blood
test for babesiosis. The LYD was treated with oral antibiotics and then 3 months of IV
ceftriaxone (Rocephin) following which she showed improvement.
About a year later, Mrs. M, again fatigued, developed right shoulder blade pain and
afebrile nausea after eating greasy foods. Surgery to remove her diseased gallbladder was
scheduled. Treatment (doxycycline) for suspected but unproven persistent Lyme was
begun. The family physician asked that biopsy specimens of the removed gall bladder be
tested in a reference laboratory specializing in tick-borne diseases (31). The resultant
PCR test on her gall bladder tissue was positive for DNA of the causative Bb spirochete
of Lyme disease. This PCR biopsy confirmation of a seronegative patient's Lyme
diagnosis illustrates that, while Western Blot and PCR blood sample testing, especially
for active late stage LYD, may not show a positive antibody response, a tissue PCR
analysis may confirm the diagnosis, even when the patient has previously been treated.
PCR's done on blood are less satisfactory since Bb prefers an in-tissue environment.
Treatment of Lyme disease by IV Rocephin can lead to gall bladder sludging. In this case
the GB stones were considered to have predated the IV treatment. Of interest, a similar
spirochetal disease (leptospirosis) has been reported as simulating symptoms of
cholecystitis (32). This may be the first confirmation of a diagnosis of Lyme disease
performed on GB tissue to be published--its write-up has been submitted for publication.
(Case and personal correspondence from Sabra Bellovin, M.D., Portsmouth, VA)
In another instance, "Mrs. E" was evaluated in a psychiatrist's office for severe
depression, anxiety, and fatigue some months following successful removal of a colonic
polyp. She mentioned that she had been experiencing chronic, depleting, diarrhea and
severe insomnia. Biopsy tissue was then obtained from a repeat colonoscopy by a
cooperating gastroenterologist. The specimen was PCR positive for an unspecified
Mycoplasma. M. Pneumoniae is a known gut epithelial lining pathogen (33) and M.
fermentans has been found in inflamed gastro-enteric linings (19). Both potentially
pathogenic mycoplasmas have been documented as carried by ticks. In addition, Mrs. E's
blood tests revealed the presence of high antibody titers for ehrlichiosis (Human
Anaplasmosis--HA) as well as positive Western Blot (WB) tests for Lyme disease,
indicating active cases of both when tested in a related specialty laboratory (34).
Interestingly, Mrs. E's family physician in Pennsylvania was willing to treat the
ehrlichiosis but unlike some more southerly PCP's (35) she thought Lyme was confined
to New England and was unwilling to treat her patient's borreliosis.
Treatment of active Lyme disease is often denied to very sick patients with or without the
presence of positive test findings. Serologic testing for Lyme disease as routinely
performed by local laboratories is well known for insensitivity. The CDC surveillance
case definition excludes, for example, as many as 78% for IgG of known positive cases
(36,37). More modern guidelines are currently available for diagnosis and treatment of
tick-borne diseases (38,39).
Because the recommended first-use enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test
tends to miss at least 50 % of authentically positive Lyme cases, it is less likely to be
relied on (29,40). ELISA tests were not performed in any of the cases presented here.
LYME-ASSOCIATED MOTILITY VARIATIONS AND OTHER BB
RELATED GUT PROBLEMS
A suddenly spastic or immobile esophagus or similar paralysis of the stomach muscles
may represent esophageal and/or gastric paresis or spasm from Lyme neuropathies (5).
Infection influencing the vagus nerves has been documented to cause paralysis in other
diseases (8). Additional Bb-related symptoms may manifest as gastroesophageal reflux
disease (GERD), early or absent satiety, GI bloating, nausea, vomiting, and atypical
colitis wherein the pANCA test may be helpful. If Crohn's and colitis are considerations,
a Prometheus first step may help to support this diagnosis; however tissue biopsy is
necessary to confirm the diagnosis. (Personal communication from Martin D. Fried, MD,
FAAP, Colt's Neck, NJ)
As noted, neuropathies can result from the immune (cytokine) system over-activation
often seen in chronic Lyme cases. This may lead to prolonged inflammation with
resultant damage to the enteric nervous system and/or the autonomic nervous system
supplying the gut (5). In addition, possible spirochetal paralysis of the vagal nerve(s) may
cause temporary or long-lasting disruption of normal small intestinal mobility, and that,
in turn, may lead to Small Bowel (or Intestinal) Bacterial Overgrowth (SBBO or SIBO)
(41). SIBO can be a serious and difficult-to-eradicate infection. The colon microbes
involved usually have migrated backwards to small bowel areas from their original site of
benign bacterial growth following loss of competent peristaltic rhythm in a now partially
compromised small bowel. This overgrowth of upwardly mobile but misplaced bacteria
may greatly interfere with the normal absorption of nutrients from the small intestines
causing dysbiosis and various forms of malnutrition among other mischief. Bacterial
overgrowth in the small gut can result in remarkable, intermittent, immense, abdominal
bloating/distention with or without eructation or flatulence (42). Such disruption may
occur despite the fact that small bowel muscles have their own enteric enervation and
could function independently to some degree. In many cases, the diagnosis of SIBO is
verifiable by the Hydrogen-Lactulose Breath test, which can reveal excess hydrogen
production from the relocated colon bacteria. Related test kits are offered to outpatients
upon physicians' requisitions by Genova (aka Great Smokies) (43) and Doctor's Data (44)
Laboratories, thus allowing the unassisted patient to complete the test at home and mail it
back to the lab.
Another borrelial cause of massive increases in abdominal girth associated with "gasless"
bloating may cause diagnostic confusion. Unrelated to gut symptoms from Lyme's
disruption of the body's internal "wiring," Bb-inflicted polyradiculopathies of T7- 12
(nerve root inflammations) may result in paralysis of external abdominal muscles such as
the rectus abdominus. This in turn can also lead to the appearance, not the reality, of
extensive bloating. No exercise "crunches" will alleviate this distention even for a
previously well-toned individual. Antibiotic treatment for borreliosis may resolve this
symptom (45, 46).
A diagnostic tip-off to the presence of LYD (and/or bartonellosis) may be a concomitant
hypersensitivity of the chest or waist area skin in combination with distended belly from
weakened abdominal wall muscles (47). One may hear from a child with unrecognized
tick-borne disease, "I can't stand anything touching the front of me." Or, "My clothes
have to be real tight" or "I will wear only these (very loose) clothes." Parents of children
with Lyme disease are often bewildered by apparent compulsions such children may
develop while trying to get dressed in the morning. Catching the school bus on time can
result in chaos as the harried parent attempts to ready a child when the child is not known
to be Lyme- or bartonellacompromised.
Adynamic or paralytic ileus, a non-obstructive motility failure (suddenly "silent"
intestines), may occur as a result of neuroborreliosis on an intermittent basis, with
resultant abdominal distention. As mentioned, these functional lapses and
pseudo-obstructions from faulty gut motility may be due to direct spirochetal or other
microbial invasion with resultant tissue inflammation, or to noxious influences of
cytokine (immune system) reactions, or to microbeproduced neurotoxins that can affect
Central, Somatic, Autonomic (parasympathetic or sympathetic), and Enteric nervous
systems that supply the GI tract.
In children and in adults who unknowingly have been inoculated with Bb spirochetes,
etc. from ticks or from bites of other less common Lyme disease vectors such as
horseflies, deer flies, or even mosquitoes (48), the resultant altered gastrointestinal
motility symptoms may be mild to life-threatening. (Ehrlichiosis has a 5% mortality rate
in children.) Students are frequently reported to the office as having persistent stomach
pain ("belly aches") (49), failure to thrive, reluctance to go to school (their behavior often
incorrectly labeled psychosomatic, attention-getting or amotivational), or as adults,
patients may be fearful of going out to eat or to work due to an apparent "Irritable Bowel
Syndrome." These latter borreliosis symptoms are a result of visceral hypermotility
instead of paralysis. In addition, the patient may have bloody diarrhea reminiscent of
Crohn's disease, or of colitis (50). As in the case of H. pylori's discovery as a cause of
gastric ulcers, suspicion amongst researchers is growing in regard to "stress" as the cause
of IBS. And, Crohn's Disease is now considered etiologically related to a pre-existing
(unspecified) gastroenteritis (51). Constipation of an unusual type can occur in a LYD
patient who is not prone to having sluggish bowel movements. The stool can suddenly
become puttylike, unresponsive to usual laxative treatments. Even massive efforts to
relieve this obstipation using all vigorous conventional methods may not suffice. In
addition, many patients with gastrointestinal Lyme disease develop symptoms
reminiscent of Sprue/celiac disease and/or lactose intolerance all of which may improve
somewhat when treatment for the underlying infection( s) is successfully concluded.
THE MOLECULAR BRAIN AS A GUT-INFLUENCING ORGAN
Another site of Bb spirochete-caused neuron damage that likely affects the GI tract is the
human brain--especially its Lyme-injured hypothalamic and brain stem melanocortin
circuits. "Melanocortins are small protein molecules that carry messages between nerve
cells in the brain. They are involved in regulating a variety of complex behaviors,
including social interactions, stress responses and--most importantly in this
context--food intake. So it is easy to see how interference with them could cause
anorexia and bulimia . . . Anorexia and bulimia may be autoimmune diseases--and so
may several other psychiatric illnesses" (52). This passage refers to the work of scientists
from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, who have been looking at possible
connections between different gut bacteria and autoantibodies against melanocortins to
see if they can determine which bacteria might be responsible for a variety of eating
disorders. They are finding that the level of autoantibodies to melanocortins is positively
correlated with anorexia, but inversely correlated with bulimia (53). When melanocortins
are pathologically over or under-activated, either stimulation of hunger or of food
avoidance may result. The former leads to hyperalimentation and obesity (54). The latter
leads in some cases to anorexia nervosa and other health problems. Brian Fallon, MD,
and other psychiatrists have long noted that when their neuro-Lyme patients are treated
with antibiotics for the underlying chronic Bb infection, there is significant improvement
in eating disorder symptoms (55). Bell's 7th and the vagus' (10th) Cranial Nerve
pathologies, brain molecular distortions, gastrointestinal disruptions, and human
behavioral idiosyncrasies are all perceived of as interrelated.
ADDITIONAL DIAGNOSTIC HINTS
Patients with a Lyme disease-related facial paralysis may not have positive antibody
laboratory tests for borreliosis as is often also true of those with gastrointestinal
neuroborreliosis. Despite those facts, it is imperative that the multi-organ infecting
microbes associated with such dysfunctions be suspected and treated if they are likely to
be present--but the prescription of immunitylessening steroids should never be used
routinely to decrease symptoms (56). Neuro-Lyme is mid-or-latestage (tertiary) Lyme
disease, which may account for the lack of positives on many antibody tests (antibodies
having been depleted by Bb, an ace immune system disabler.) Commonly, active tertiary
Lyme shows a diagnostic positive IgM response that is conventionally but mistakenly
thought to be a marker accurate only in relatively early infection (57). Persistence of a
positive IgG WB test is most often seen in those with predominantly arthritic forms of
Lyme disease (58).
Although the tests should be run, attempts to check for positive DNA is time consuming
with results rarely coming back inside of several weeks. Yet, the patient needs immediate
treatment. That same dilemma confronts both the patient with Seventh Cranial Nerve
palsy as well as the enterically compromised patient. If paresis or spasm occurs and the
esophagus stops functioning, a patient may choke on recently swallowed food or fluid. If
it occurs in the stomach, it may cause nausea and gnawing abdominal pain. If even a
partial paralysis occurs in the small intestines, SIBO (SBBO) with bloating of immense
proportions may ensue. Paresis of the colon may result in mega colon with severe
constipation and/or encopresis even in very young children in Lyme-endemic regions.
Diarrhea resembling an IBS-like syndrome can occur if there is Bb-sponsored gut
hypermotility. Similarly, GI spasms may also result in a plethora of symptoms, including
spastic colon and seeming occlusions. A trial on antimicrobials is helpful for those
suspected of having tick-borne diseases despite negative tests. The "symptom
intensification syndrome" known as a Herxheimer reaction needs to be anticipated by
both doctor and patient as potentially distressingly difficult but is to be expected when
immune systems over-respond to a spirochetal die-off. This reaction should not be
confused with an allergic reaction to the antibiotic.
Most helpful diagnostic tests for Lyme disease are the direct or photographed
observations of a "Bulls Eye's" circular or oval skin rash. Unfortunately, it is only present
in roughly 50% of known cases. If the lesion slowly expands (due to spirochetes
multiplying in the outer edge, which fact allows easier biopsy and culture) it is perfectly
diagnostic of Lyme disease or its associated "STARI" (Master's disease--a form of Lyme
disease.) In endemic areas, patients should be coached to photograph any suspect rashes
and to keep the living tick for a doctor's observation or Bb DNA testing. Western Blots
(WBs) are best done in a reference lab specializing in tick-borne diseases with the
doctor's insistence that all antibody bands be counted and reported. The tests should
employ the correct strains of Borrelia and also not depend on spirochetes that have lost
DNA due to multiple passes through a series of hosts.
Acceptable tests have both high specificity and sensitivity. For example, the C6
Peptide/Lyme test has excellent specificity so that those tests that come back positive are
valid and are confirmatory of Lyme's presence. However, negative results from the C6
test merely show that the test was done--they do not show that Bb was absent. The
negative test does not prove that the patient is free of Lyme disease.
Useful tests include a urine Bb antigen test with positive findings backed up by the highly
accurate Southern Blot test. As noted, PCR tests on all appropriate tissues/fluids,
especially serum, whole blood, urine, tears, mother's milk and CSF are valuable
diagnostically.
Choices of tests for several Bb's co-infections are enhanced by awareness of the prevalent
strain/species of the infection that is extant in the area where the patient was
tick-inoculated. Tandem IFA and PCR tests are usually performed for co-infections. In
addition, florescent microscopic views of stained slides can show babesiosis ring forms
inside RBC and other tests can show cystic forms of Bb under black light. Bartonellosis
can be tested for by PCR (blood and tissues) and its positive WBs are considered
diagnostic when combined with history and physical evidence. As is true of Bb, however,
bartonella patients may be seronegative and without PCR-DNA captured.
A BRIEF OVERVIEW OF SOME APPROACHES TO THE
TREATMENT OF TICK-BORNE DISEASES AFFECTING THE
GUT
Sensations of total, dire, overwhelming, unending, weakness or fatigue in most seriously
ill Lyme patients lead many Lyme patients to consider suicide. Treatment begins with
educating them about the treatable, underlying diseases and about realistic expectations
in order to inspire hopefulness for recovery. The physician's listening skills and
willingness to give anxious patients extra time can be life-saving.
Prescription of skillfully combined oral antibiotics in an attempt to avoid IV treatment
for all but those seriously afflicted with advanced neuro-Lyme (patients that manifest
MS-like or ALS-type symptoms) is the next challenge (59). In addition to the usual
antibiotics advised for Lyme disease, telithromycin (Ketec) used cautiously or
azithromycin (Zithromax) may successfully accomplish blood-brain tissue barrier
penetration that is needed. Such patients have to be monitored closely for liver, etc. side
effects. In recent years, Lyme expertise has included the combining of antibiotic(s) with
those in the azole family of drugs (such as metronidazole/Flagyl) that penetrate cell
wall-less cyst forms of Bb, forcing spirochetes out of cover as it were to their demise
from the antibiotics. Regularly spaced "safety blood work" must be regularly ordered for
all patients who require long-term use of any antibiotics. For those with
Lyme-sluggishness of the gut with resultant SIBO, non-absorbable, intestinal
"antimicrobials" likely will be needed (60). Current usage of rifaximin may include
carefully monitored long term prescriptions.
Doxycycline has the advantage of being able to arrest both Lyme and the ehrlichioses in
those who are multiply infected with each.
Bartonella (the tick-borne variant) usually responds, albeit slowly, to aggressive
treatment by one of the quinolone family of antibiotics such as levofloxacin (Levaquin)
or by rifampin (Rifampicin).
Mycoplasmas may respond best to tetracycline, rifampin, and erythromycin.
Babesia, the red blood cell parasite, requires different approaches for acute and chronic
disease stages. In chronic babesiosis, the form incidentally seen by gastroenterologists, a
combination of artemisinin, atovaquone (Mepron) or Malarone, a combination of
atovaquone and proguanil hydrochloride, and azithromycin are still drugs of choice (61).
NUTRICEUTICALS AND ANTIMICROBIALS TO RESTORE THE
IMMUNE SYSTEM AND THE GI TRACT
Restoration of gastrointestinal systems damaged by tick-borne diseases can be a
formidable task depending on the presentation and severity of symptoms, antimicrobial
or other treatments involved, and any side effects thus incurred. The goals are to enhance
gut motility or reduce spasticity, remove toxins, improve patients' general and gut-lining
immunity while killing off invaders such as tick-borne microbes, fungi, and other gut
opportunists (62,63).
Painful rectal area muscle spasms in Lyme patients usually respond to alprazolam
(Xanax) 0.25 mg (1?2 to one tablet) best chewed for quick relief and Natural Calm, a
formulary of instant release, water-soluble magnesium. Rectal cramps probably can be
prevented most of the time by using the highest tolerated doses of daily
magnesium--slow release is the recommended approach but many patients also need the
quick-acting powder at bedtime to prevent all kinds of Lyme-caused muscle cramping or
spasms.
Dietary intake of all sugars and non-complex carbohydrates should be totally avoided
while patients take antibiotics. Probiotics--high quality lactobacillus (2 enteric-coated
pearls) once or twice daily or more as needed and bifidus (at least one cap) once daily are
essential for gut protection during and following antibiotic treatment. Immunity and
energy enhancers such as extract from reishi mushrooms, Cordyceps sinensis (at least
one 740 mg capsule daily), Co-Enzyme Q10 (100 mg twice daily), green tea, acetyl
L-Carnitine (500 mg at least twice daily), Vitamin B Complex-50 to 100, folate,
sublingual B12, magnesium (slow release tablets) taken to tolerance daily, gamma
linolenic acid (GLA) as refrigerated Oil of Evening Primrose (1?2 tsp. daily) or borage
oil (one 1,000 mg soft gel daily), Omega 3 EFA fish oil (one soft gel 3-4 times per day),
selenium (200 mcg one cap daily), alpha lipoic acid (100 mg daily) and a comprehensive
multivitamin (59)--all can be of great benefit.
Healing agents will be needed to repair the gut lining and restore functions damaged by
Lyme-Bartonella- Mycoplasma infections. That list may include oral preparations of
liquid Aloe Vera, Oil of Clove drops, Uncaria spp., anti-fungal tannins, garlic, chewable
licorice tabs, betaine, Enteric-coated Oil of Peppermint, Conjugated linoleic acid CLA)
(1000 mg twice daily), a-lipoic acid (100 mg one daily), Slippery Elm demulcent
capsules (325 mg 1-8 three times daily), and ursodiol bile acid tablets (64). Additionally,
in the treatment of SIBO, complete stool analysis with culture and sensitivity of
opportunistic bowel pathogens may elucidate the choice of antibiotic. Alternatively, a
trial may be undertaken with rifaximin (Xifaxan) 200 mg three times a day until
symptoms have cleared (60). Cholestyramine (Questran) may be useful in reducing the
recycling neurotoxins produced by tick-borne diseases.
As tick-borne-diseased GI systems and their owners heal, relief will be palpable.
Physicians will partner in that gratification as well when previously grimfaced patients
move to the healthy side of a bellshaped curve--a graph that would measure the degree
to which both gastrointestinal tracts and lives have been restored to functional capacities.
These satisfactions satisfactions will be re-experienced when wisely diagnosed and
treated Lyme-sick patients will be able to smile broadly at last, knowing in their guts that
zesty appetites for life really will be possible again.
References
Duray PH, Steere AC. Clinical pathologic correlations of Lyme disease by stage.
Annals NY Academy of Sciences, 1988; 539:65-79.
Eiffert H, Karsten A, Schlott T, et al. Acute peripheral facial palsy in Lyme
disease--a distal neuritis as the infection site. Neuropediatrrics, 2004;
35(5):267-273.
Bleiweiss JD. When to suspect Lyme disease, 1994. [3-23-2006].
Clark JR, et al. Bells palsy. Laryngoscope, 1985; 95:1341-1345.
Nichols TW, Pearce LA. Lyme gastroparesis suggestive of inflammatory neuropathy.
Abstract presentations--14th Meeting of the American Motility Society and
UICM (9-22 to 25-2005, Santa Monica CA and Lyme & Other Tick- Borne
Diseases: Emerging Tick- Borne Diseases, sponsored by Columbia University
College of Physicians & Surgeons and The Lyme Disease Association. 10-28-05.
Fallon B. WebMD. Neurologic Lyme disease. 1999. [3-23-06].
Barbour AG. [See "Faculty" + "Barbour" 3-23-06].
Nakagawa H, Satoh M, Kusuyama T, et al. Isolated vagus nerve paralysis caused by
varicella zoster virus reactivation. Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, 2005;
133(3):460-461.
Steere AC, Bartenhagen NH, Craft JE, et al. The early clinical manifestations of
Lyme disease. Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983; 99(1):76-82.
De Koning J, Duray PH. In Aspects of Lyme borreliosis. Histopathology of Human
Lyme borreliosis. ed. Klaus Weber, M.D., Willy Burgdorfer, Ph.D., M.D. Berlin
Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag: 1993; 93-104.
Fallon BA, Nields JA, Liegner K, et al. The neuropsychiatric manifestations of Lyme
borreliosis. Psychiatric Quarterly, 1992; 63(1):95-117.
Reik L, Steere AC, Bartenhagen NH, et al. Neurologic abnormalities of Lyme
disease. Medicine, 1979; 58(4):281-294.
Chatila R, Kapadia CR. Intestinal pseudoobstruction in acute Lyme disease: a case
report. Am J Gastroenterol, 1998; 93(7):1179-1180.
Reisinger EC,; Fritzsche C, Krause R, et al. Diarrhea caused by primarily
non-gastrointestinal infections. Nat Clin Pract Gastroenterol Hepatol, 2005;
2(5):216-222. emil.reisinger@ medizin.uni-rostock.de
Bagger-Sjoback D, Remahl S, Ericsson M. Long-term outcome of facial palsy in
neuroborreliosis. Otol Neurotol, 2005; 26(4):790-795.
Gardner T. Lyme disease. Infectious Diseases of the Fetus and Newborn Infant, ed.
Remington JS, Klein JO. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders Co. 2001; 519-641.
Allred DR. Babesiosis: persistence in the face of adversity. Trends Parasitol, 2003;
19:51-55.
Tick-borne Diseases of Humans. Goodman JT, Dennis DT, Sonenshine DE. Ed. ASM
Press, Washington, DC. [ISBN: 1-55581-23-4] 2005.
Eskow E, Adelson ME, Rao RV, Mordechai E. Evidence for disseminated
Mycoplasma fermentans in New Jersey residents with antecedent tick attachment
and subsequent musculoskeletal symptoms. J Clin Rheumat, 2003; 9(2):77-87.
Stricker RB, Gaito A, Harris N, Burrascano J. Coinfection in patients with Lyme
disease: how big a risk? Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2003; 37:1277-1278.
Eskow E, Rao RV, Mordechai E. Concurrent infection of the central nervous system
by Borrelia burgdorferi and Bartonella henselae: evidence for a novel tick-borne
disease complex. Arch Neurol, 2001; 58:1357-1363.
Los Angeles County West Vector & Vector Borne Disease Control District.
Bartonella. [3-20-2006]
Fried MD, Schairer J, Madigan G, et al. Bartonella henselae is associated with
heartburn, abdominal pain, skin rash, mesenteric adenitis, gastritis and duodenitis.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr, 2002; 35:3. [Abstract #158.]
Adelson ME, Rao RV, Tilton RC. Prevalence of Borrelia burgdorferi, Bartonella spp.,
Babesia microti, and Anaplasma phagocytophila in Ixodes scapularis ticks
collected in Northern New Jersey. J Clin Microbiol, 2004; 42(6):2799-2801.
Fried MD, Adelson ME, Mordechai E. Simultaneous gastrointestinal infections in
children and adolescents. J Practical Gastroenterology, 2004; 78-81. Bartonella
rashes:
Stricker RB, Brewer JH, Burrascano JJ, et al. "Cat-scratch disease"-associated
arthropathy: don't forget ticks. Arthritis Rheum, In press.
Seah ABH, Azran MS, Rucker JC. Magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities in
cat-scratch disease encephalopathy. Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology, 2003;
3(1):16-21.
Fleisher AS. Case 14: Headache and unilateral visual changes. Clinical Cases from
Johns Hopkins Neurology. Medscape Neurology & Neurosurgery. 2002; 4(2).
Coulter P, Lema C, Flayhart D, et al. Two-year evaluation of Borrelia burgdorferi
culture and supplemental tests for definitive diagnosis of Lyme disease. J Clin
Microbiol, 2005; 43(10):5080-5084.
Picha D, Moravcova L, Zdarsky E, et al. PCR in Lyme neuroborreliosis: a prospective
study. Acta Neurol Scand, 2005; 112(5): 287-92. [Czech Republic].
Medical Diagnostic Laboratories, L.L.C, 2439 Kuser Road, Hamilton, NJ 08690
USA. )
Guarner J, Shieh WJ, Morgan J, et al. Leptospirosis mimicking acute cholecystitis
among athletes participating in a triathlon. Hum Pathol, 2001; 32(7):750-752.
Chen W, Li D, Paulus B, et al. High prevalence of Mycoplasma pneumoniae in
intestinal mucosal biopsies from patients with inflammatory bowel disease and
controls. Dig Dis Sci, 2001; 46(11):2529-2535.
IGeneX, Inc. 795 San Antonio Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94303

Boltri JM, Hash RB, Vogel RL. Patterns of Lyme disease diagnosis and treatment by
family physicians in a southeastern state. J Community Health, 2002; 27:395-402.
Association of State and Territorial Public Health Lab Directors (ASTPHLD).
Proceedings of the second national conf. on the serological diagnosis of Lyme
disease. Dearborn, Michigan USA. 1994; 27-29.
Aguero-Rosenfeld ME, Nowakowski J, McKenna DF, et al. "Evolution of the
serologic response to Borrelia burgdorferi in treated patients with
culture-confirmed erythema migrans." J Clin Microbiol, 1996; 34:1-9.
Cameron D, Gaito A, Harris N, et al. Evidence-based Guidelines for the management
of Lyme disease. Expert Rev Anti-infect Ther, 2004; 2(1):1-13.
Summary: Evidence-based Guidelines for the management of Lyme disease. Expert
Rev Anti-infect Ther, 2004; 2(1):1-13.

Honegr K, Hul�nsk� D, Dost�l V. Persistence of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato in
patients with Lyme borreliosis. Epidemiol Mikrobiol Imunol, 2001; 50(1):10-6.
Lin HC. Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth: a framework for understanding
irritable bowel syndrome. JAMA, 2004; 292(7):852- 858.
Singh V, Toskes P. Small bowel bacterial overgrowth: presentation, diagnosis, and
treatment. Curr Gastroenterol Rep, 2003; 5(5):365-372.
Genova (Great Smokies) Laboratory:
Doctors' Data Laboratory
Mormont E, Esselinckx W, De Ronde T, et al. Abdominal wall weakness and
lumboabdominal pain revealing neuroborreliosis: a report of three cases) Clin
Rheumatol, 2001; 20(6):447-450.
Krishnamurthy KB, Liu GT, Logigian EL. Acute Lyme neuropathy presenting with
polyradicular pain, abdominal protrusion, and cranial neuropathy. Muscle Nerve,
1993; 16(11):1261-1264.
Daffner KR, Saver JL, Biber MP. Lyme polyradiculoneuropathy presenting as
increasing abdominal girth. Neurology, 1990; 40:373-375.
Pokorny P. Incidence of the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi in arthropods
(Arthropoda) and antibodies in vertebrates (Vertebrata). Cesk Epidemiol
Mikrobiol Imunol, 1989; 38(1):52-60.
Savely GR. The Belly Acher: My Most Unusual Patient. Beyond the Textbook, in
Clinician News, 2005; 9(9):14-15.
Fried MD, Abel M, Pietrucha D, et al. The spectrum of gastrointestinal
manifestations in children and adolescents with Lyme disease. JSTBD, 1999
Fall/Winter; 6.
Rodr�guez LA, Gonzales PA, Johansson S. Centro Espa�ol de Investigaci�n
Farmacoepidemiol�gica (CEIFE) Aliment Pharmacol Ther, 2005; 22(4):309-315.
�2005 Blackwell Publishing, M�lndal, Sweden.
Molecular self-loathing. The Economist, 2005.
Fetissov SO, Harro J, Jannisk M, et al. Autoantibodies against neuropeptides are
associated with psychological traits in eating disorders. PNAS, 2005;
102:14865-14870.
Cone RD. Anatomy and regulation of the central melanocortin system). Nat Neurosci,
2005; 8(5):571-578.
Fallon BA, Nields JA. Lyme disease: a neuropsychiatric illness, Am J Psychiatry,
1994; 151(ll):1571-1583.
Dattwyler RJ, Halperin JJ, Volkman DJ, et al. Treatment of late Lyme
borreliosis--randomised comparison of ceftriaxone and penicillin. Lancet, 1988;
1(8596):1191-1194.
Craft JE, Fischer DK, Shimamoto GT, Steere AC. Antigens of Borrelia burgdorferi
recognized during Lyme disease. Appearance of a new immunoglobulin M
response and expansion of the immunoglobulin G response late in the illness. J
Clin Invest, 1986; 78(4):934-939.
Kalish RA, McHugh G, Granquist J, et al. Persistence of immunoglobulin M or
immunoglobulin G antibody responses to Borrelia burgdorferi 10-20 years after
active Lyme disease. Clin Infect Dis, 2001; 33(6):780-85. [email protected]
Burrascano JJ. Diagnostic hints and treatment guidelines for Lyme and other tick
borne illnesses. 2005. www.ilads.org [See "Articles and presentations"].
Lauritano EC, Gabrielli M, Lupascu A, et al. Rifaximin dose-finding study for the
treatment of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth. Aliment Pharmacol Ther,
2005; 22(1): 31-35.
Sherr VT. Human babesiosis--an unrecorded reality. Absence of formal registry
undermines its detection, diagnosis and treatment, suggesting need for immediate
mandatory reporting. Med Hypotheses, 2004; 63(4):609-615.
Zaidel O, Lin HC. Uninvited guests: the impact of small intestinal bacterial
overgrowth on nutritional status. Practical Gastroenterology, 2003; 27(7):27.
Parrish CR (Ed), Yoshida CM. Nutrition intervention for the patient with
gastroparesis: an update. Pract Gastroenterol--Nutrition issues in
gastroenterology. 2005; 29(8):29.
Nichols TW, Faass N. Optimal Digestive Health: A Complete Guide. 2005. Healing
Arts Press, Rochester, VT.

--------------------
www.TreatTheBite.com
www.DrJonesKids.org
www.MarylandLyme.org
www.LymeDoc.org

Posts: 20353 | From The Moon | Registered: Jun 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Lymetoo
Moderator
Member # 743

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Lymetoo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Good gosh, Tinny! I just got through printing this out from her site and here I find you posted it! ESP??? [Eek!]

--------------------
--Lymetutu--
Opinions, not medical advice!

Posts: 96222 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Tincup
Honored Contributor (10K+ posts)
Member # 5829

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Tincup         Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
And you... dear droopy drawers.. were one of the folks I was posting it for. So it's good to know it was something you might use... and you were!

Excellent info.

[Big Grin]

--------------------
www.TreatTheBite.com
www.DrJonesKids.org
www.MarylandLyme.org
www.LymeDoc.org

Posts: 20353 | From The Moon | Registered: Jun 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Lymetoo
Moderator
Member # 743

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Lymetoo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Thanks! I had heard mention of it a week or so ago and didn't get a chance to check it out.
[hi]

--------------------
--Lymetutu--
Opinions, not medical advice!

Posts: 96222 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
lymie tony z
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 5130

Icon 1 posted      Profile for lymie tony z     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
This is old news...comeon you two get with it! LOL

I learned about it from ANN OH about a month ago.

I took the printout to my gastroenterologist...

I told him I had severe gastritis symptoms...and lyme...

I handed him the printout cuz he never heard of this...

SOOOOO after about three tests....he told me the news...
I have severe gastritis.....no known particular cause...probably h-pylori...
BROTHER......

I also TRIED to get these tests done after 4pm...because they WAX then due to our (MS LIKE), sundowner affect.

Course, he could'nt get his head wrapped around that either...
He said look "if you have gastric issues, you should have them all day long..."

The operative words were "if" and "should" I told the duck.......

These don't always apply to we lymies...

Well you know how far I got with that...

The good thing that came out of it(if you can call it good) is that I found out I have had adult onset typeII diabetes for about three months...

WHOPPIIEE!!!

OF COURSE...now my ducks explain away my symptoms due to diabetesII or the elusive "PRE-DIABETES"...
And ALL MY symptoms will VANISH once I get my glucose and insulin stuff balanced and under control...

I only wish they were RIGHT.....

OH WELL.....Onward and upward.....I GUESS......

I thought you guys already knew about this...otherwise I would have posted it when ANN told me about same.

sorry........zman

--------------------
I am not a doctor...opinions expressed are from personal experiences only and should never be viewed as coming from a healthcare provider. zman

Posts: 2527 | From safety harbor florida(origin Cleve., Ohio | Registered: Jan 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Lymetoo
Moderator
Member # 743

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Lymetoo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
As I said above, I DID see it, but didn't have time to read it. When it was mentioned again, I went looking for the article.

Tinny saw the other discussion yesterday and found the article...bringing it here.

ARe you accusing either one of us of being OLD, or just decrepit?? [Wink]

--------------------
--Lymetutu--
Opinions, not medical advice!

Posts: 96222 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
pq
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 6886

Icon 1 posted      Profile for pq     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Scherr's paper probably explains that "package" i got in my "mail box," 3-4 times, and once while driving on the highway. [Big Grin] [lol]

i actually felt it slide down teh left side of my abdomen(descending colon(?) into the "south atrium," and twice, "half way out teh door."

one is NOT supposed to sense "the package" in "transit".

[ 23. July 2006, 06:42 PM: Message edited by: pq ]

Posts: 2708 | Registered: Feb 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
lymemomtooo
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 5396

Icon 1 posted      Profile for lymemomtooo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
ARe you accusing either one of us of being OLD, or just decrepit?? Posted by dear Tutu..

Hey can others vote????????

Posts: 2360 | From SE PA | Registered: Mar 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Lymetoo
Moderator
Member # 743

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Lymetoo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by lymemomtooo:


Hey can others vote????????

You can if you vote NO!! [lol]

--------------------
--Lymetutu--
Opinions, not medical advice!

Posts: 96222 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
lymesux
LymeNet Contributor
Member # 6248

Icon 1 posted      Profile for lymesux     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Thanks TC - this is excellent information - when aaron was seeing Dr. S. she mentioned alot of this, but I hadn't seen this, I'm definitely going to print it out.

Thanks!
LS

Posts: 799 | From home | Registered: Sep 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
lymie tony z
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 5130

Icon 1 posted      Profile for lymie tony z     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Hey now I would NEVER accuse anyone of being old and decrepid...

Heck, I'm only 56 and I get out done by 80 year old folks around here...

SOOOOO....

Naw...I was just giving you girls a little teasing....

zman

--------------------
I am not a doctor...opinions expressed are from personal experiences only and should never be viewed as coming from a healthcare provider. zman

Posts: 2527 | From safety harbor florida(origin Cleve., Ohio | Registered: Jan 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Tincup
Honored Contributor (10K+ posts)
Member # 5829

Icon 7 posted      Profile for Tincup         Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
"ARe you accusing either one of us of being OLD, or just decrepit??"

```````````````````````````````````````````````

Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm??????

What do ya say tutu? Them sound like fighting words to me.

I say we show him! We'll hold him down and smack him with our canes! That will show that young whipper-snapper a thing or two!

[Big Grin]

--------------------
www.TreatTheBite.com
www.DrJonesKids.org
www.MarylandLyme.org
www.LymeDoc.org

Posts: 20353 | From The Moon | Registered: Jun 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
lymemomtooo
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 5396

Icon 1 posted      Profile for lymemomtooo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Wow, that was a close one..Thanks for diverting attention away from me Tony..HAAAAAA!! I am saved to misbehave again..Well Tutu caught me..

Tin must have been scrolling fast..Yeah!!

Anyway, I am so glad that "V" is still cranking out the great info..Wish she could be cloaned..One smart DR..lymemomtooo

Posts: 2360 | From SE PA | Registered: Mar 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Tincup
Honored Contributor (10K+ posts)
Member # 5829

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Tincup         Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
Up for new member...

[Big Grin]

--------------------
www.TreatTheBite.com
www.DrJonesKids.org
www.MarylandLyme.org
www.LymeDoc.org

Posts: 20353 | From The Moon | Registered: Jun 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Lymetoo
Moderator
Member # 743

Icon 1 posted      Profile for Lymetoo     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post   Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Tincup:
I say we show him! We'll hold him down and smack him with our canes! That will show that young whipper-snapper a thing or two!

[Big Grin]

Hey, I don't know about YOU, TC, but TonyZ is older than ME! Can you imagine??!! [Eek!] Older than ME!

I still like the idea of the canes though!!!!!

--------------------
--Lymetutu--
Opinions, not medical advice!

Posts: 96222 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

Quick Reply
Message:

HTML is not enabled.
UBB Code� is enabled.

Instant Graemlins
   


Post New Topic  New Poll  Post A Reply Close Topic   Feature Topic   Move Topic   Delete Topic next oldest topic   next newest topic
 - Printer-friendly view of this topic
Hop To:


Contact Us | LymeNet home page | Privacy Statement

Powered by UBB.classic™ 6.7.3


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, NJ 08534 USA


| Flash Discussion | Support Groups | On-Line Library
Legal Resources | Medical Abstracts | Newsletter | Books
Pictures | Site Search | Links | Help/Questions
About LymeNet | Contact Us

© 1993-2020 The Lyme Disease Network of New Jersey, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
Use of the LymeNet Site is subject to Terms and Conditions.