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» LymeNet Flash » Questions and Discussion » General Support » SEEKING ALL info on LYME CAUSAL-SYMPTOM RELATIONSHIPS , Actual Research & other

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Author Topic: SEEKING ALL info on LYME CAUSAL-SYMPTOM RELATIONSHIPS , Actual Research & other
Cindy166
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LYME-SYMPTOMS-CAUSES-TREATMENTS
Email Address: [email protected]


Hi, Data is needed for a new website, specifically dealing with LYME-SYMPTOMS-CAUSES-TREATMENTS.

The data needs to be accredited or supported by the scientific community,.. i.e., Research, Pathology, Physicians compiled Assessments or Accounts, etc. (PLEASE SEND WEB PAGE LINKS ONLY, UNLESS IT IS NOT ACCESSIBLE, then please send actual data w/author.)

ALSO NEEDED: Any references to any person or professionals or organizations that might be helpful in any manner with this project. Please include as much information as possible about the reference. Name, Contact, Email, (Phone if available.), Affiliations, Area/'s they may be helpful in, etc.

Please let me know if you or you know of anyone that has compiled this data already, specific to the CAUSAL-SYMPTOM RELATIONSHIPS OCCURRING WITH LYME.

Thanks, Cynthia
[email protected]

added:

To start, until volunteers and resources are found to help make this become accredited. I have a New ID on here:

LYME101
Email Address: [email protected]
Website Opened (New): http://www.geocities.com/lyme101


I have thought of this for some time now, and thought it was something that was meant for me to accomplish once I am well. For some reason it is presenting itself to me now .. I believe all things in life to have reason, even if hard to conceive. But if we look we can see our own growth and how it can be helpful to many .. as is I believe our intended purpose on earth. So, I set out starting to seek assistance in completing this Site Mission and keeping it up to date.

This will be do-able!! But, only with the assistance of volunteers in all the areas needed. Efforts of the minority for the majority. ...Please see the end of this post for specific volunteer info...

ROUGH MISSION STATEMENT:

2 MAIN OBJECTIVES FOR THIS NEW WEBSITE IS TO:

FIRST, TO BE HELPFUL TO THE LYME INDIVIDUAL SEEKING KNOWLEDGE OF THE ACTUAL CAUSE OF THEIR SYMPTOMS AND HOW TO TREAT THESE SYMPTOMS WHILE UNDER GOING TREATMENT FOR THE LYME OR NOT. IT WILL SPECIFICALLY ADDRESS THE SYMPTOMS CAUSED & TREATMENTS!!

SECONDLY, TO BE CREDIBLE ENOUGH FOR PHYSICIANS TO USE AS REFERENCE IN ORDER TO TREAT THEIR PATIENTS. DIRECTLY ACCESSED BY THE PHYSICIAN OR INFORMATION PROVIDED ON THIS SITE GIVEN TO THE PHYSICIAN BY THE PATIENT.

IT SHOULD ALSO BE CREDIBLE IN ORDER TO SUPPORT LYME PATIENTS OBTAIN NEEDED ASSISTANCE SERVICES THEY SEEK. IN HELPING THE ASSISTANCE PROVIDERS OF ALL KINDS WITH THE ACTUAL UNDERSTANDING OF THE UNDERLYING ILLNESS'S THAT HAVE BECOME DIAGNOSED ILLNESS'S IN THEMSELVES CREATED BY LYME DISEASE IN TERMS THEY CAN UNDERSTAND OR RELATE TO IN MEDICAL TERMS OR CODES AND IN TODAY'S SOCIETAL MISCONCEPTIONS.

THIS SITE, AT THIS TIME WILL NOT ADDRESS THE TREATMENT OF KILLING THE ACTUAL LYME BACTERIA OR CO-INFECTIONS. BUT, WILL MAINTAIN LINKS TO OTHER SITES WITH THIS INFORMATION. IT WILL ALSO MAINTAIN SURVEYS TO BE DETERMINED IN THE FUTURE. AND ANY RELEVANT AGENDA THAT MAY BE NEEDED.

This is so needed, everyone including each individual doctor has only so much knowledge. And, even if we are lucky this knowledge typically is limited to treatments to Kill Lyme, with very little knowledge on the systems effected by Lyme directly, indirectly, temporary or permanent. This site when complete will keep everyone from roaming around in the dark.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: Non-Professional & Professional

1. Website Building & Maintaining knowledge.
2. Legal knowledge pertaining to this WebPage Site and issues it address's.
3. Research Assistance

This is a basic overview .. Please see updated information on Progress & needed support/Volunteers on the LYME101 website: http://www.geocities.com/lyme101

[This message has been edited by Cindy166 (edited 25 June 2005).]


Posts: 26 | From Houston, TX | Registered: Apr 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
laserred
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Cindy, Try this site,...

For scientific documentation on Lyme symptoms, go to:
www.lymeinfo.net/lymefiles.html

It's all peer-reviewed literature, categorized by body part, plenty there to show how disabling this disease can be.
Quotes from studies are included as well as citations for each symptom.


Posts: 493 | From MidWest NorthWoods | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
laserred
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Here's another good article...

The psychological effects of Lyme disease

Can a tick bite drive you crazy?

Doctors warn that Lyme disease may cause personality changes

By Valerie Andrews
January 2004


A walk in the woods nearly cost Mike M. his sanity. After receiving multiple tick bites, Mike broke out in an angry rash and his joints began to ache. In the next few months, his behavior grew increasingly bizarre. He was no longer able to read or concentrate, and became so anxious he couldn't leave the house. Eventually, Mike was treated for chronic Lyme disease, an illness that can play havoc with the mind.

Since its discovery in 1975, Lyme disease has reached epidemic proportion in the United States. While the Centers for Disease Control reports 19,000 cases of this tick-borne illness in 2002, the agency estimates that the actual number may be tenfold higher: 190,000--that's four times the rate of new HIV infections.

``Lyme disease is a major problem yet, tragically, many people fail to receive the proper treatment,'' says Bernard Raxlen, MD, a Greenwich, CT, psychiatrist and secretary of the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS), a medical organization dedicated to ongoing research and increasing public awareness of this devastating illness.

Lyme often begins with flu-like symptoms, headaches, fatigue, swelling of the joints, muscle pain and gastrointestinal distress. Most physicians have been taught to look for evidence of a tick bite and a red bull's-eye rash, yet fewer than half of all Lyme patients recall being bitten or develop tell-tale skin eruptions. As a result many are misdiagnosed with other disabling illnesses such as chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, or MS.

As Lyme disease progresses, it can attack the nervous system, producing learning disabilities, mood swings, anxiety and depression, panic attacks, obsessive behavior, sudden rages and other psychiatric diagnoses. Says Raxlen, ``When this happens, we're looking at a completely different syndrome and one that is harder to cure.''

A recent European study shows that psychiatric in-patients are nearly twice as likely as the average population to test positive for Lyme, and the National Institutes of Health are currently sponsoring a major study of neuropsychiatric Lyme disease in an effort to illuminate specific changes in the brain.

Psychiatric Lyme has been linked with virtually every psychiatric diagnosis and can affect people of all ages and from every walk of life. A former honor roll student is diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder and pegged as a ``problem kid'' because he can't sit still in class. A lawyer has to close her practice because she can't concentrate and suffers from anxiety attacks. A young mother is so sensitive to noise that she can no longer tolerate her baby's cry and is afraid that she will harm her child. A retired salesman develops a compulsive habit of writing all over everything--he covers everything from the tablecloth to matchbooks with meaningless scribbles.

Family members are baffled by these transformations; counselors and physicians are consulted, often to no avail. While these individuals may also have migrating muscles pain, headaches and problems with their joints--common signs of Lyme--these symptoms are rarely picked up in a mental health evaluation. And when traditional psychiatric medication fails to produce a cure, the patient grows more desperate.

The Search for a Diagnosis

``Most people come to see me because they've got something wrong that nobody else can figure out,'' says Debra Solomon, MD, a psychiatrist who practices in North Kingston, RI. Fifteen years ago Solomon was confronted with a medical mystery. More and more patients were coming in with the same group of symptoms--fatigue, headaches, migrating joint and muscle pain, accompanied by anxiety, depression, and memory problems. When one of her patients turned out to have Lyme disease, she tested the others, and found that nearly all were positive.

Recent studies show that certain areas of Rhode Island have the highest tick population in the world. Today many of Solomon's patients come from the island Jamestown, a small farming community where ticks are abundant. Among her cases are:

A college student in her early twenties who started hearing voices. ``She came from a good family and had no previous emotional problems,'' says Solomon.
A businesswoman who suddenly became manic-depressive. ``In periods of high energy, she wouldn't sleep and felt all-powerful. She'd start a new business and begin spending lots of money, then she'd crash.''
A high school athlete had to drop basketball because he didn't have the stamina and couldn't get through his classes without falling sleep. ``The teachers accused him of not paying attention, but he didn't have the concentration to do the work.''
A 40-year-old book editor who was gaining weight and getting lame in her left leg. ``She couldn't think or process information, and was worried about her job.''
``Lyme affects nearly every person on this island,'' says Solomon, ``yet each person responds to it in very different ways.''

How can a physician tell the difference between true mental illness and symptoms linked to Lyme disease? With Lyme disease, a patient's psychiatric symptoms don't quite fit the textbook definition. There is usually no previous history of psychiatric illness. Symptoms often come in cycles. Patients usually do not respond well to psychiatric medication. And they often describe their problems in very physical terms.

Lyme patients often say, ``There's a wall in my brain and I can't seem to move my thoughts from the back to the front.'' ``This arises from encephalopathy, an inflammation in the brain that affects cognitive function,'' Solomon explains.

Symptoms often worsen as the Lyme bacteria grow active and begin to reproduce. At the same time, a patient may experience physical symptoms, such as fatigue, muscle pain or headaches. Flare-ups are often triggered by stress, as in the case of Bob C. who ran a shipping department for a manufacturing company. Bob had dozens of people answering to him, but Lyme disease made him anxious and unable to concentrate. Because he couldn't think, he lost his job, and his symptoms grew more intense.

Family problems, economic changes, job loss, surgery, an auto accident, or a bad case of the flu, can send Lyme patients into a sudden tailspin. Along with antibiotics, these people need to rest--and do anything they can to lessen their emotional load.

The catch-22 is that chronic Lyme disease makes it hard to think and perform one's daily tasks. This inevitably causes financial hardship and puts a strain on family relationships.

Effects of Lyme Disease on Marriages

``My patients come in to talk about their marital problems and are surprised to learn that they are linked to an organic illness,'' says Virginia Sherr, MD, a psychiatrist who practices in eastern Pennsylvania, another region known for its high rate of tick-borne infections. Ninety percent of Sherr's patients test positive for Lyme disease. She then has the job of describing to them just how this condition can affect the mind and the emotions.

Lyme disease can cause increasing irritability and dramatic flares of anger, says Sherr.

``Suddenly you hear bone-cutting verbal assaults from people who are usually more measured and benign. They may have been harboring some small grievance for years, then that hot spot comes to life and they spew out all this venom. Such outbursts cause lasting wounds.''

While some Lyme patients become verbally abusive, others lose confidence and withdraw from social situations. Mary L. tried to explain to her husband that she no longer had the stamina for dinner parties and that she dreaded going out. The husband felt that she was faking it. ``Mary's husband and her internist, who knew little about Lyme disease, ganged up on her,'' Sherr reports. ``The doctor said, `You used to be so full of life, but you've less yourself go completely. You're not even trying!'''

``Physicians who don't know that Lyme causes personality changes may be dismissive or sharply critical of the patient. Our goal should be to educate couples and help them cope.''

Sherr cites one devoted couple who are both infected with Lyme disease. ``The man has major cognitive problems and the wife helps him with his memory. She has bouts of extreme impatience, yet he gently guides her through them.'' They have begun to weather the storm together--with the help of antibiotics and marriage counseling.

Lyme Disease and Domestic Violence

``Lyme disease often strikes an entire families and the result is a higher incidence of divorce, family dysfunction, and domestic violence,'' says Robert Bransfield, MD, a psychiatrist in Red Bank, New Jersey. ``Tempers flare and you see increasing conflict.''

``Lyme disease is like an injury of the brain,'' says Bransfield. ``Patient are less able to think things through, and tend to act impulsively. A mother may suddenly lash out at her child and a husband may lose control and abuse his wife. ``We underestimate the role of infectious disease in domestic violence,'' he adds.

AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION

Lyme disease is a hazard for anyone who spends time outdoors: avid hikers, gardeners, campers, cycles, runner, fishermen and hunters. Yet house-bound people can also pick up Lyme disease from the family pet. Lyme disease has been reported in every state in the nation, and can easily be picked up by those vacationers, especially those traveling to endemic areas along the East coast, Texas, certain portions of the Midwest, and Northern California.

In the spring, the biggest danger comes from nymphal ticks the size of a poppyseed and which are hard to detect on skin or clothing. By summer the ticks have grown to the size of a sesame seed. It's best to wear long sleeves and tuck pants into your socks or high top footwear. Avoid high grasses and heavily wooded areas. Spray exposed arms and legs with DEET. Inspect yourself and your family for ticks. Use a tick comb on cats and dogs.

If you are bitten by a tick, see a physician knowledgeable about Lyme disease and get tested immediately. ILADS recommends using a laboratory that specialize in Lyme disease, such as IGeneX, in Palo Alto, California or IDL in Mt. Laurel, New Jersey.

To learn more about Lyme disease and to find a physician in your area, go to the ILADS' website at www.ilads.org. Other helpful sources include the Lyme Disease Association (www.lymediseaseassociation.org) and the Lyme Disease Network (www.Lymenet.org)

An aggressive response is more likely if, in addition to Lyme disease, a patient has another tick-borne infection called Babesia. More than one infection can be transmitted by the same tick, and when Babesia is added to Lyme, this may make the patient more aggressive. ``It's like putting a match to gasoline,'' Bransfield says.

Bransfield has testified in court on behalf of such patients who have been accused of everything from assault to murder. (In one instance, a patient killed his partner, killed the family pet, then killed himself.)

People with Lyme disease alone usually don't go to these extremes. However, they may be irritable and prone to sudden rages. Bransfield says young people are the most likely to act out. ``I've seen so many straight-A kids whose grades suddenly start to slip. Then they rebel against the family and start fighting with their peers.'' They can also turn their rage against themselves. ``I'm often on the phone with a teen in a state of crisis,'' says Bransfield, ``Feeling suicidal comes in waves and these reactions are very hard to predict. However, these kids generally improve after being treated with antibiotics.''

Schools are becoming more enlightened about the problems caused by tick-borne diseases, Raxlen notes. In Newtown, CT, for example, teachers are asked to report any sudden dips in grades or unusual behavior that may be linked to Lyme disease. And many make special arrangements for at-home tutoring while the student convalesces.

Losing Control of Life

When Lyme disease goes undiagnosed--or isn't treated long enough--it can bankrupt businesses and destroy whole careers.

A CEO of an insurance company was diagnosed with Lyme disease and given antibiotics--but he didn't take them long enough. Months later, his symptoms returned with a vengeance. He had ghoulish nightmares and woke up drenched. At work, he felt anxious and couldn't concentrate. Eventually he forgot everything he'd learned about insurance. When he neglected to send in a disability payment on his own policy, the company denied his claim. ``This man lost tens of thousands of dollars that would have helped him through his illness,'' say Raxlen. ``In the end, he had to sell his building and disband his business.''

People with Lyme disease often have trouble keeping up with ordinary tasks--one Connecticut housewife walked into the library, dumped her dry cleaning on the counter, and waited with increasing irritation for an attendant to help her. Finally a friend walked up and asked, ``Don't you know where you are?''

Lyme disease can also affect the part of the brain that deals with signs and symbols--making it hard to read maps or drive from place to place. A real estate agent with Lyme disease stopped at a traffic light. When the signal turned green she didn't move. An angry motorist yelled, ``What's the matter with you. Why can't you go on the green?'' The woman replied, ``I've forgotten what green means.''

``Lyme produces a microedema, or swelling in the brain,'' says Raxlen. ``This affects your ability to process information. It's like finding out that there's LSD in the punch, and you're not sure what's going to happen next or if you're going to be in control of your own thoughts.''

ILADS physicians say these symptoms can be alleviated or reversed with antibiotics, but stress that Lyme disease must be diagnosed early and treated right away.

Treating Lyme Disease

Most doctors prescribe three to four weeks of antibiotics for initial cases of Lyme disease. Yet according to the ILADS, this is not enough. The Lyme bacteria has a ``cloaking device'' that enables it to hide in the cells and body tissues. If it's not completely eradicated, symptoms will recur and with great intensity. To avoid relapses, ILADS recommended six to eight weeks of antibiotics.

When Lyme disease moves into a chronic stage, it's more likely to lead to neurological or psychiatric conditions. Chronic Lyme patients are harder to cure and may need to take antibiotics--orally or intravenously--for months as a time. In this case, ILADS recommends continuing treatment for at least six to eight weeks after all symptoms are resolved.

``Lyme disease is often misdiagnosed and it's costing our healthcare system untold millions of dollars,'' says Raxlen. ``No one is spared, neither young nor old and each individual can display a puzzling array of symptoms. This illness can have a wide-ranging affects on marriages, families


Posts: 493 | From MidWest NorthWoods | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
laserred
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This one is from the IgeneX Lab site...hope these are some of what you are looking for...

What You Should Know About Lyme Disease
WHAT IS LYME DISEASE?

Lyme disease is a world-wide infectious disease caused by microscopic bacteria carried by tiny ticks.

B. burgdorferi, a spiral bacteria that causes Lyme Disease, seen through a microscope.

HOW IS LYME TRANSMITTED?

There are several species of deer ticks across the US that become infected with the spiral bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi. Unsuspecting humans and animals walking through woodlands and brushy areas may be bitten by a tick and never know it. The tiny ticks, some the size of poppy seeds, may stay on your body for hours to days. The tick engorges itself with blood. If infected, the spirochete is transmitted to the bloodstream of the person or animal during the bite.

WHAT IF I SUSPECT EXPOSURE?

Early recognition is important. If you find a tiny tick attached to your skin, if you were in a known tick-infested area, or if you have symptoms described herein, see your physician.

WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS?

A characteristic red bulls-eye rash (EM) at the site of the bite is present in less than 40% of patients. The rash may appear within days to weeks after the bite, but could be hidden in hairline or underarms.

EM RASH -- Rashes from other bacteria in the tick may show up immediately. Typically the rash from Lyme bacteria appears days or weeks after the bite.

Some patients report flu-like symptoms, fever, aches, fatigue, neck stiffness, jaw discomfort, muscle pain and stiffness, swollen glands, and red eyes. Symptoms may appear, disappear and reappear at various times.

Nervous system abnormalities include memory loss and partial facial paralysis (Bell's palsy). Migratory joint pains, and pains in the tendons, muscles and bones may occur later in the disease. Arthritic symptoms, if present, usually affect the large joints like the knees.

HOW IS LYME DISEASE DIAGN0SED?

Lyme disease is a clinical diagnosis, This means that the physician makes the diagnosis using your clinical history and symptoms. If a physician observes an EM rash, a diagnosis of Lyme disease will be made. If a rash is not seen by a physician, laboratory tests are often needed to help with the diagnosis.

CAN TICKS BE TESTED?

Not all ticks are infected with the spiral bacterium B. burgdorferi. If the tick was saved, it can be identified and tested. Our laboratory tests ticks for the presence of the Lyme bacteria using a test called PCR. We can also test ticks for Babesia microti and Babesia WA-1, Ehrlichia, and Bartonella henselae. These diseases are also carried by ticks.

From left to right: Larvae, Nymph, Female, Male Tick
Tick in Nymph stage is the size of a poppy seed.

ARE THERE OTHER TICK-BORNE DISEASES?

The same tick that carries the bacteria that causes Lyme Disease, can also transmit other illnesses. The most common are Babesiosis, Ehrlichiosis, and Bartonella henselae. It is estimated that up to 20% of the ticks with Lyme disease may have one of these other diseases. Babesiosis is like malaria, with the symptoms of acute disease being fever, chills, vomiting and fatigue. It is usually self-limiting, except in patients who have undergone splenectomy. There are two forms of Ehrlichiosis: HGE (Human Granulocytic Ehrlichiosis) and HME (Human Monocytic Ehrlichiosis). HGE is primarily on the East coast, upper Midwest and California. HME is primarily in the Southeast, lower Midwest and Southwest. These acute diseases may have symptoms of fever, chills, vomiting and fatigue and require prompt antibiotics. Subclinical forms of these diseases may be present in patients with Lyme disease.

WHAT TESTS ARE AVAILABLE?

A variety of tests is available. Many doctors who are unfamiliar with Lyme disease may just use the Lyme test available in their local laboratory. In many cases this is the Lyme ELISA or IFA, often called "Titer Test.'' These tests measure a patient's antibody, IgM and/or IgG, in response to exposure to the Lyme bacteria. By today's standards, these tests are not very sensitive. IGeneX, Inc. will only perform the ELISA test when Western Blots are ordered in conjunction.

The Western Blot tests (IgG and/or IgM) are much more sensitive and specific than the above ELISA tests. With the Western blot, the laboratory can visualize the exact antibodies you are making to the Lyme bacteria. In some cases the laboratory may be able to say that your ``picture of Lyme antibodies'' is consistent with early disease or with persistent/ recurrent disease. Not all patients have antibodies at all times when tested. Antibodies are more commonly detected within the first year after infection, although re-infection may cause a significant rebirth of antibodies. At most, only 70% of patients have antibodies early, and the presence of antibodies alone does not make a disease diagnosis.

The Lyme Dot Blot Assay (LDA) looks for the presence of pieces of the Lyme bacteria in urine. The LDA has been useful in some patients with clinical symptoms and clinical history consistent with Lyme disease, who consistently test negative with antibody tests for Lyme disease.

The PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) test detects the presence of the DNA of the Lyme bacteria. PCR tests have more sensitivity early in the disease before patients have received antibiotics. The best specimen to test has not been defined. The test is usually performed on whole blood, serum, urine, CSF, or miscellaneous fluids/tissues.

WHICH TEST IS BEST?

Lyme Disease is very complicated to diagnose because:

Lyme bacteria are not always detectable in the whole blood, even in active disease. The bacteria like to hide.
Every patient responds differently to an infection.
Antibodies may only be present for a short time.
For patients with clinical symptoms of Lyme Disease who test negative by the IgG or IgM Western Blot, the Whole Blood PCR or the LDA/Multiplex PCR Panel on urine may be appropriate. There are physician-developed antibiotic protocols to enhance the sensitivity of the LDA. In addition, there seems to be increased sensitivity of this test during the start of menses.

Lyme Disease Tests

IgG/IgM and IgM Antibody Serology
IgG Western Blot and IgM Western Blot
Lyme Dot Blot Assay (LDA)
Reverse Western Blot (Confirmation test for LDA)
Multiplex PCR for urine, whole blood, serum, CSF, miscellaneous (ex: Skin biopsy, breast milk, semen)

In addition to Lyme Disease, a co-infection may be suspected for Babesiosis, Ehrlichiosis, or Bartonella. We offer tests for these other tick-borne illnesses. The tests are IFA (fluorescent antibody) or direct tests by PCR. In the case of Babesia, FISH (fluorescent in situ hybridization) is also available. The FISH test detects the ribosomal RNA of the Babesia parasites directly on air-dried blood smears. This test is highly specific for Babesia, unlike the standard test, the geimsa stain smear, which cannot differentiate between malaria parasites and Babesia.

Babesiosis Tests

B. Microti and/or WA-1 IgG/IgM Antibody
Babesia and/or Babesia WA-1 PCR
Babesia FISH (RNA)

Ehrlichiosis Tests

Human Granulocytic Ehrlichia IgG/IgM Antibody
Human Granulocytic Ehrlichia PCR
Human Monocytic Ehrlichia IgG/IgM AntibodyHuman Monocytic Ehrlichia PCR

Bartonella Tests

Bartonella henselae PCR with Whole Blood

TICK TESTING IS ALSO AVAILABLE FOR

Lyme, Babesia microti, Babesia WA-1, Ehrlichia, and Bartonella henselea by PCR.

Patients with neurological symptoms of Lyme disease may need to have a spinal tap in order to study ``the blood of the brain,'' the CSF (cerebral spinal fluid). These patients may have negative blood and urine tests and show positive results with CSF. The Western blot, LDA, and PCR can be performed on CSF.

WHAT IS THE TREATMENT?

It is reported that Lyme disease can be treated success fully with antibiotics if caught early in the infection. Prevention is the best cure for re-infection. Patients whose disease is caught later often need to be on antibiotics for longer periods of time. There is controversy between physicians as to how long and what is the best mode of treatment. Ehrlichiosis is often treated with many of the same antibiotics used for Lyme disease. The best treatment for Babesia is still being explored. Many physicians believe that they need to treat the Babesiosis before treating Lyme disease to achieve clinical success.

CAN LYME DISEASE BE PREVENTED?

Wear long sleeve shirts and long pants when going into tick country. Light colors are best -- ticks can be seen easier. Tuck pants into socks and spray the clothes with a known tick repellent. After being in a tick area, check skin and all hair areas completely. Promptly remove all ticks after being in an area known to harbor Lyme ticks. Check pets carefully: they are a source of entry for ticks into the house. Deer hunters need to spend extra time checking their gear before bringing it into autos and home.

HOW DO YOU REMOVE A TICK?

Use tweezers or forceps.
Grasp the tick mouthparts close to the skin.
Avoid squeezing the tick which may spread infected body fluids.
Pull the tick straight out. Do not twist. Do not attempt to burn the tick.
Save the tick (you may want to have it tested for B. burgdorferi or other infectious agents)
Wash your hands with soap and water.
Apply antiseptic to bite site.
JULY 2002

IGeneX, Inc.
797 San Antonio Rd., Palo Alto, CA 94303 USA
Tel. 650.424.1191 / 800.832.3200 Fax. 650.424.1196



Posts: 493 | From MidWest NorthWoods | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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