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» LymeNet Flash » Questions and Discussion » Medical Questions » Virtual Book Burning & LLMD Crucifixion....

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Author Topic: Virtual Book Burning & LLMD Crucifixion....
Lymeblue
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Virtual book burning and the Lyme Disease "Federation"

An opinion piece by PJ Langhoff (c) 2007

"If they give you ruled paper, write the other way."[1]
One method utilized by the German Nazi party during the early part of this
century to control civilian thought processes was through literary
censorship.

In April 1933, the german students association's press and
propaganda office declared a nationwide action which included a literary
purge or cleansing by fire. The SA (Sturmabteilung, german for "storm
department" or "stormtroopers") "brown shirts,"so named for their SA
uniform, participated in very public book burnings such as those in Munich
and Berlin that year.


More than a hundred years earlier, the poet Heinrich
Heine said, "Where books are burned, human beings are destined to be burned
too."


Seventy-five years later (as we enter 2008), we again witness what appears
to be a deliberate censorship declaration designed to control the thought
processes of the masses, this time in the arena of the Lyme
disease-afflicted.

But the "books" burned aren't necessarily made of paper,
they are also the virtual books, articles, and opinion pieces located in
cyberspace, the "new frontier" of medical politics.

This includes
peer-reviewed articles, published articles in trade journals, newspapers,
research data; all the way down to the opinions of advocates, patients and
also physician organizations.

The end result is the attempted purging of an
entire line of thinking about a complex, endemic illness which has been
declared off-limits by this "Federation" to the masses; in favor of a
minimized, slow-played, non-endemic, less serious version, (with devastating
consequences to thousands).


Enter a small group of powerful Infectious Disease academicians and their
supportive, grant-funding government agencies, and medical board associates,
whom I will collectively dub here (a pretend) Lyme denialist, stormtrooper
posse called the "Federation." Please do not misquote or misunderstand.

I am
merely poking fun here and not remotely suggesting anyone referenced are
Nazis, SA members, extremists, or are of any particular nationality.

But I
am making a point that in the media, we see a similar kind of censorship
being played out in a very political arena, at the hands of a select group
of Infectious Disease academicians (some of my pretend "Federation.")


Some Federation members seem to trumpet their position that Lyme patients
and their doctors are attention-seeking hypochondriacs who are imagining an
illness which doesn't exist. Others are attempting to promote restrictive
guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of an illness that at best, is
poorly understood.

Meanwhile, the earlier research and materials published
by members of this imaginery Federation seems to now conflict with their
most recently widely published "denials" that the illness exists in its most
serious, chronic form.


And despite very ill patients and their doctors' attempts to illustrate what
the Federation already knows (that Lyme disease is a debilitating illness
with a chronic form when improperly treated), the Federation appears to be
working diligently in the background to silence anyone who does not agree
with its current modus operandi.


This includes but is not limited to the
upcoming meeting December 18, 2007 at the Hartford, CT Legislative Office
building from 10 a.m to noon. In what can only be described as another
strategic effort on the Federation's part, IDSA member Durland Fish will
speak at a forum on Lyme disease "prevention." Incidentally, no Lyme
advocacy representatives have been invited to attend, though it is
admittedly a public event.


At the same location on the same date, but at 1:30 p.m., renowned pediatric
Lyme physician Dr. Charles Ray Jones will be present for his legislative
hearing regarding his licensure and accusations by the CT medical board of
"unprofessional conduct."

Some accusations included his failure to examine
two children before prescribing medications - something that most physicians
across the country in all forms of medicine, routinely do.


Those who know
Dr. Jones and who are familiar with his case, will tell you that is not what
happened.

And it is no surprise that his hearing would be strategically targeted by
the Federation either. Patients and advocates see it as another attempt by
the Federation to silence anyone with an anti-Federation viewpoint.

Perhaps
since they cannot burn books, they might as well burn reputations.

From the
viewpoint of this imaginery Federation, perhaps obliterating a beloved Lyme
physician who did nothing wrong, by offering their physical presence to go
hand-in-hand with false accusations and trumped up charges resulting in
"discipline" is a convenient way to "teach" other physicians not to go
against the Federation's views.

How convenient that a Federation forum will
be held at the exact location, and just an hour and a half before the very
public crucifixion of a physician servant who has dedicated his life to
treating thousands of ill children - someone who is perhaps the most beloved
and important Pediatric Lyme specialist in the country.


And the persistence of the ideology of the Federation "members," whom in
part drafted and promote restrictive guidelines which seem to define chronic
Lyme disease out of existence, and for which they previously acknowledged
existed, is mind-boggling. At present, the IDSA Lyme disease guidelines are
under investigation by the CT Attorney General's office for possible
anti-trust violations.

This has to do with the unilateral formation of the
guidelines excluding important peer-reviewed research, and the possibility
that their structure and edict will impose restrictions on insurance company
benefits and patient treatment options.
And patients and their physicians witness tit-for-tat publications in
intermedia arguments defending both sides of the Lyme debate - a staunch
Federation position with attempts at censorship, and a re-teaching that Lyme
disease is "hard to catch" and "easy to treat"; and the "other side,"which
includes ill patients and their physicians left with debilitating illness
barely acknowledged by the Federation, government, insurance, and many
doctors. How has this censorship come about?
Around 1975, academician, Infectious Disease Society of America member and
Rheumatologist Dr. Allen Steere and his Yale university associates dubbed a
strange illness "Lyme Disease," so named after the town in which the first
cluster cases were identified, thanks in part to the persistence of a
housewife named Polly Murray.

Over the course of a few years, Lyme disease
was defined as an illness with various stages, including a chronic form.
In 1980, Steere and associate Malawista wrote that some patients (even when
treated soon after an EM rash), developed later manifestations, and some
patients with these manifestations never experienced a rash.[2] In 1983,
Steere's associate Barbour (et al.) wrote an article describing Lyme as a
"multisystem" disorder.[3] In 1984, Steere and Barbour wrote an article
revealing knowledge in 1955 that an EM rash could be passed from human to
human.[4]

The following year Steere and associate Pachner wrote an article
about a triad of neurological symptoms of Lyme disease.[5] The authors
discussed the duration of the acute phase of the illness lasting up to 18
months in those not receiving antibiotic therapy. (Those studied were not
followed for a more extended time.)


In 1988, Steere associate Pachner wrote an article about Bb in the nervous
system calling it the "new great imitator."[6] He outlined similarities
between Bb and syphilis, with the ability of both organisms to "stay alive
in human tissue for years." He also outlined the stages of LD, including
early skin disease and later disease in the brain.

He warned "the effective
clinician must take special care to consider Lyme disease primarily because
of the excellent response to antibiotics early in its course in relationship
to some of the diseases it mimics." He labeled lyme meningitis the second
stage of the disease, (including the EM rash). He suggested that most
patients have very mild symptoms, and called it "likely that a large
percentage of patients go undiagnosed and untreated." He further elaborated
that "the frequency of progression to third-stage disease is unknown but may
be quite high", inferring this from a large number of patients manifesting
Lyme arthritis, many whom bear no other symptoms.

Pachner considers serology
an important tool, but recognizes the test limitations: "...while the tests
are understandably unreliable for identification of patients with ECM..." he
explains that antibodies in some patients are not as high as in others,
associating a higher prevalence of antibodies in those with more symptoms.


He also states that those with only CNS disease, sometimes do not have high
titers.[7] This underscores the theory that some Lyme patients can be
seronegative but still have Lyme.
In an Italian paper from the same year, the topic of maternal/fetal
transmission of Lyme disease was discussed. From the abstract, we learn that
Lyme borreliosis acquired during pregnancy may be associated with stillbirth
and fetal malformations.[8]


By 1989 the understanding of Lyme disease is growing, and more scientists
are realizing the complexity of Lyme's vast neurological symptoms.
In a
Scottish article from the same year we read about a "triad" of neurological
symptoms of Lyme. "...meningoencephalitis, cranial neuritis and peripheral
neuritis is unique to the disease..." But the list doesn't stop there. The
author describes the following manifestations: "...pseudotumour cerebri,
hemiparesis, demyelinating disorders, optic atrophy, recurrent laryngeal
nerve palsy and meningitis so that Lyme disease must now be considered in
the differential diagnosis of a wide range of neurological disorders."[9]


Two studies from 1993 examined the relationship between adverse pregnancy
outcomes and maternal exposure to Lyme disease. One study of 5,000 mothers
with infants who participated in a cord blood serosurvey showed that cardiac
manifestations in the exposed infants were significantly higher within the
endemic group.[10]


The other study (Westchester County, NY) involved
questionnaires to 2,000 women and showed that "tick bites within 3 years
preceeding conception were significantly associated with congenital
malformations."[11]


In a 1994 letter to the editor of the Journal of Clinical Microbiology
regarding an article by Dr. Kenneth B. Liegner, we find a patient treated
for 5 days with oral doxycycline following tick removal. Three months later
the patient presented with fatigue and other symptoms.

He ignored these
until he progressive muscle hypotrophy, neurologic, gastrointestinal,
genitourinary and cardiorespiratory symptoms occurred. 27 months after tick
bite, he was initially diagnosed with a psychiatric disorder. 41 months
following the bite, he was diagnosed by a Neurologist as having "probable
encephalomyelitis due to Bb."

This case was included in the profile of
patients with circulating immune complexes to Bb and poor response to
"standard" treatment for Lyme disease. The letter points out the
"unreliability of available laboratory tests" and stresses the importance of
clinical impressions when patients are seronegative. The letter also
describes a proactive approach to prophylactic and therapeutic treatments,
as in such cases like the patient above which "could have been prevented."
The author's reply stated that European literature describing "progressive"
borrelial encephalomyelitis may be progressive because it was inadequately
treated. He further states that the lack of appreciation for the chronic
form of Lyme disease results in an "overreliance on treatment protocols
developed before a clear understanding of the pathobiology of the infecting
agent was possible.

Now, with a clearer picture of pathogenesis, physicians
may offer prolonged treatment."[12,13]


In a continuing education videotape from 1997 issued by the NCME, our
pretend Federation's (IDSA member) Benjamin Luft (co-author of the
controversial IDSA Diagnostic and Treatment Guidelines) goes on film to
iterate the 1997 current IDSA beliefs about LD which include the following,
important statements:


1. Lyme disease is a multi-systemic disease.
2. It is often difficult to diagnose.
3. Diagnoses are based on clinical findings, and not solely on lab tests.
4. The presence or absence of infection should not be based solely on a
positive (+) or negative (-) test result.
5. Consideration should be given to the limitations of tests.
6. Lyme disseminates very quickly - within 2-4 weeks.
7. If left untreated, Lyme has a period of latency which can be a period
lasting years, only to become reexacerbated later in life.
8. In 46 children followed by Steere et al. (NEJM 1991;325:159-163), none
received treatment for at least 4 years after tick bite. 39 patients were
followed for 10-13 years, and most had symptoms including arthralgias and
neurological symptoms.
9. Testing in the early stages of LD may lead to false negatives.
10. Immune response varies.
11. Antibiotics given early may reduce antibody production.
12. Serology may initially be negative, and if so, a second serum sample
should be performed, 4-6 weeks later where seroconversion may be seen.
13. More sensitive and specific testing is needed.*
14. For severe cases of LD, the duration of treatment should be based on
severity of infection and the patient's response to treatment.
15. The causes of Lyme treatment failure were noted as (in part) poor
absorption to antibiotics, advanced illness (CNS Lyme), and concomitant
tick-borne illnesses.[14]


*This information was taught to physicians during a time period AFTER the
1994 Dearborn, MI criteria-establishing conference which included IDSA
members Steere, Barbour and associates - criteria which are said to have
been designed to facilitate the emergence of the LYMErix vaccine
(subsequently pulled from market); criteria which are called "flawed" by
Lyme-literate physicians, patients and advocates because they are said to
miss the majority of Lyme patients; and criteria which are heavily promoted
by the CDC and the IDSA (and its guidelines), today.


We hold these (patent) truths to be self-evident
In (1988) U.S. patent #7,045,134 we read: "Current technology enables
correct diagnosis of certain infectious diseases only after the disease has
progressed to a certain maturity. By that time, however, treatment is more
difficult..."[15]

Patent #4,721,617, says: "The etiological agent of this disease is the
spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, which is primarily transmitted by Ixodes
ticks...The spirochete has also been found in deerflies, horseflies and
mosquitos..." It goes on to describe: ".As many as two-thirds of the people
that become infected by this spirochete are unaware of the tick bite because
of the painless bite and the small size (several mm) of the nymphal
stage.The early phase of the illness often consists of the ECM, headache,
fatigue, muscle and joint aches, stiff neck and chills and fever. This phase
of the disease may be followed by neurologic, joint or cardiac
abnormalities."


And we learn about the chronic form of LD and other issues from this same
patent: ".The chronic forms of the disease such as arthritis (joint
involvement), acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans (skin involvement), and
Bannwart's syndrome (neurological involvement) may last for months to years
and are associated with the persistence of the spirochete."
And more alarming: ".A case of maternal-fetal transmission of B. burgdorferi
resulting in neonatal death has been reported..For every symptomatic
infection, there is at least one asymptomatic infection. Lyme disease is
presently the most commonly reported tick-borne disease in the United
States."
Last, we learn about the effectiveness of treatment: "...The infection may
be treated at any time with antibiotics such as penicillin, erythromycin,
tetracycline, and ceftriaxone.Once infection has occurred, however, the
drugs may not purge the host of the spirochete but may only act to control
the chronic forms of the disease. Complications such as arthritis and
fatigue may continue for several years after diagnosis and treatment."[16]
So how is it that so much was known (and there are thousands of examples
over the few mentioned here), about Borrelia beginning decades ago, but
those facts have now become a "hot potato" of contention between scientists,
medical boards, government entities, treating physicians, patients, and
insurance companies? Why are the Infectious Disease "stormtroopers" using
the media to eradicate any mention of the truth about Lyme disease which has
been known for 3 decades, to re-spin it in favor of minimalism?


Enter an era of self-interests, profit margins, pharmaceutical interests,
government-funded research, spin-off company ownership and patent royalties
held by the Federation members.

This information at the very least, is
likely to come to light when the CT AG investigation is completed. At best,
time, publications and clinical studies will reveal the truth around Lyme
disease regarding its prevalence and persistence.

We find these
relationships particularly interesting when we explore Federation "members"
like (IDSA member) Durland Fish's involvement in patents, research, and
government-sponsored epidemiological studies using satellite technologies to
map vector-transmission, among other things.

The Federation of course would
benefit from the censorship of the civilian mindset regarding Lyme disease -
because therein an epidemic can be controlled and slow-played for maximum
research dollars, profits for insurance companies and pharmaceutical and
diagnostic test manufacturers. And many of the Federation members are paid
spokespersons for these entities, not to mention that they are
patent-holders on the technologies which are used for diagnostics and
vaccines.


But they won't necessarily tell you that, because disclosures and
conflicts of interest might bring their motivations under careful scrutiny -
something the CT AG may currently be pursuing.
Unfortunately for my imaginery Federation, the patients, advocates, and
their physicians who call themselves "Lyme-literate," are not going to go
away.

They are going to continue to trumpet loudly that Lyme disease in a
chronic form exists, and that it must be acknowledged, and allowed
open-ended, individualized treatment. Although a few pioneering physicians
may be reprimanded for real or imagined "disobedience," the number of
Lyme-literate physicians opting off the managed care merry-go-round will
continue to increase as they answer the call of their ill patients.

These
brave physicians will continue to train in tick-borne illness diagnosis and
treatment; which won't necessarily include the ideology of the IDSA's
impractical guidelines - because for these physicians, patient care comes
first over profits.


The number of academic, peer-reviewed articles proving the existence of a
persistent form of LD will also increase, as will the number of patient
cases with disability. Advocacy groups will not be silenced by a handful of
ID stormtroopers attempting to censor civilian mindset. Unfortunately for
the Federation, just as in Nazi Germany, their "regime" may indeed be
falling. We see evidence in the loud, defensive protestation of subpoenas
issued by the CT AG office; their "astonishment" of an investigation of
their guidelines; and their increasing fears being revealed in their own
publications.

We witness their desire to remain highly visible within the
media in staunch defense of self-serving guidelines and ideology; and most
recently, their strategic presence when a beloved Lyme physician is under
fire, and we see can see a transparent house of cards beginning to tumble.


Federation aside, in the end, within the world of Lyme disease, because of
the controversy, patients are not being treated, illness is going
unacknowledged, and the media is driven to distraction while innocent people
are suffering. We suggest as patients and advocates, that the Federation go
back to page 1, re-read their own previous research and publications, and
leave the book burning, virtual or not, to history.

References
1. Quote from Juan Ramon Jimenez, from Bradbury R. Fahrenheit 451. Del Rey
1953.
2. Steere AC, Malawista SE, et al. Antibiotic Therapy in Lyme Disease.
Annals of Inter Med 1980:93(part 1):1-8.
3. Barbour AG, et al. Lyme Disease Spirochetes and Ixodid Tick Spirochetes
Share a Common Surface Antigenic Determinant Defined by a Monoclonal
Antibody. Infec and Immun. 1983 Aug;41(2):795-804.
4. Schmid GP, Steigerwalt AG, Johnson SE, Barbour AG, Steere AC, et al. DNA
Characterization of the Spirochete that causes Lyme disease. J Clin
Microbiol. 1984 Aug;20(2):155-158.
5. Pachner AR, Steere AC. The triad of neurologic manifestations of Lyme
disease: meningitis, cranial neuritis, and radiculoneuritis. Neurology, 1985
Jan;35(1):47-53.
6. Pachner AR. Neurologic manifestations of Lyme disease, the new "great
imitator". Rev Infect Dis. 1989 Sep-Oct;11 Suppl 6:S1482-6. [abstract]
7. Pachner AR. Borrelia burgdorferi in the nervous system: the new "great
imitator". Annals of the NY Acad Sci. 1988;539(1):56-64. At:
www.annalsnyas.org/cgi/content/abstract/539/1/56. Accessed 2007 Jun 19.
8. Carlomagno G, et al. Lyme Borrelia positive serology associated with
spontaneous abortion in an endemic Italian area. Acta Eur Fertil. 1988
Sep-Oct;19(5):279-81.
9. Bourke SJ. Lyme disease. Biomed Pharmacother. 1989;43(6):397-400. Glasgow
Royal Infirmary, Scotland, UK. At: www.pubmed.gov. Accessed 2007 Jun 16.
10. Williams CL, et al. Maternal Lyme disease and congenital malformations:
a cord blood serosurvey in endemic and control areas. Paediatr Perinat
Epidemiol. 1995 Jul;9(3):320-30.
11. Strobino BA, et al. Lyme disease and pregnancy outcome: a prospective
study of two thousand prenatal patients. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1993 Aug;169(2
Pt 1):367-74.
12. Lopez-Andreu, JA. Ferris J, et al. Treatment of Late Lyme Disease: A
Challenge to Accept. J Clin Microbiol. 1994. [Letters to Editor] Vol
32:1415-1416.
13. Liegner KB. Lyme disease: the sensible pursuit of answers. J. Clin
Microbiol. 1993;31:1961-1963.
14. Lyme Disease and Concomitant Tick-Borne Illnesses, NCME Continuing
Education Videotape, featuring Benjamin Luft. 60 min. 1997 June 27.
15. USPTO. US Patent 7,045,134. Qiu, et al. 1996 May 6.
http://patft.uspto.gov. Accessed 2007 Apr 7.
16. USPTO. US Patent 4,721,617. Johnson. 1988 Jan 26.
http://patft.uspto.gov. Accessed 2007 Apr 6.

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Lymeblue
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Nori
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This is a nice summary of the history of what happened.

Thanks

--------------------
Nori

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Greatcod
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Great article --thanks..
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adamm
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Wait..transmission via skin contact????!!!

Can this hapen even if there's no EM rash? I mean, we still have

'keets in our skin...

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