All Posts Tagged With: "Bartonella"

Bartonella in Cats

Linda’s comments:  How many times over your lifetime have you been scratched by your cats?  Cat fleas transmit Bartonella…..We must all learn to be very very careful….

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=20933137&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:

 Bartonella infection is common among domestic cats, but the role
of Bartonella species as feline pathogens requires further study.
Most Bartonella species that infect cats are zoonotic. Cats are
the mammalian reservoir and vector for Bartonella henselae, an
important zoonotic agent. Cat fleas transmit Bartonella among
cats, and cats with fleas are an important source of human B
henselae infections. 

Bartonella survival mechanisms

Linda’s comments:  This makes me wonder how many of our military personnel have become infected with Bartonella?

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=20548954&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:

 In conclusion, we
show that the laterally acquired Trw T4SS diversified in the
Bartonella lineage to facilitate host-restricted adhesion to
erythrocytes in a wide range of mammals.

Wormser comments innaccurate

Linda’s comments:  This comment by Wormser  raises my blood pressure ::::“It is so new in our area, it has flown under the radar,” says Moore’s physician Gary P. Wormser, M.D., the chief of infectious diseases at Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College and head of a team researching tick diseases. “A lot of patients haven’t heard of it, and a lot of doctors don’t know about it.”::::

Link: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41973641/ns/health-infectious_diseases/

Excerpt:

Wild raspberries lured Jacqueline Moore over the wall of her new garden in Westchester County, New York. It was July 2008, and Moore, her husband and their two small kids had just moved up from Manhattan. She was painting the kitchen, up on a ladder, when she glanced out the window and spotted the flash of red. She was thrilled: This was what they had left the city for. She called the kids, and they hopped over the wall. They picked raspberries every day for two weeks. 

About the time the berries ran out, Moore—who was 34 then, a personal trainer and marathoner—started feeling an achein her neck and shoulder. She thought painting the ceiling was to blame; or maybe it was the borrowed mattress she and her husband were sleeping on. Then she noticed herself getting irritable. Family were visiting to see the new house, and “I was having trouble taking care of the guests,” she recalls. “Every day, I would be twice as tired as I had been the day before.” …..

“It is so new in our area, it has flown under the radar,” says Moore’s physician Gary P. Wormser, M.D., the chief of infectious diseases at Westchester Medical Center and New York Medical College and head of a team researching tick diseases. “A lot of patients haven’t heard of it, and a lot of doctors don’t know about it.”

Combining culture techniques for Bartonella

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=21289156&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:

In this study we compared some common Bartonella culturing methodologies
using four diverse species causing human illnesses. Based on a review of the
literature, we focused on three major inconsistencies between protocols:
base media, cell co-culture and temperature. Our data showed that B. tamiae
demonstrated temperature-dependent growth limitations between common
culturing conditions only 2 degrees C apart. Additionally, growth of B.
quintana was significantly enhanced by the presence of mammalian cell
co-culture within mammalian culture conditions, however when the media was
modified to incorporate insect culture-based media, co-culturing with
mammalian cells was no longer needed. In this study, we were able to
overcome these temperature and cell dependent limitations and accommodate
all of the strains tested by combining mammalian culture-based media with
insect culture-based media.

Bartonella infection: treatment and drug resistance

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=21133691&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:


Bartonella species, which belong to the alpha-2 subgroup of Proteobacteria,
are fastidious Gram-negative bacteria that are highly adapted to their
mammalian host reservoirs. Bartonella species are responsible for different
clinical conditions affecting humans, including Carrion’s disease, cat
scratch disease, trench fever, bacillary angiomatosis, endocarditis and
peliosis hepatis. While some of these diseases can resolve spontaneously
without treatment, in other cases, the disease is fatal without antibiotic
treatment. In this article, we discuss the antibiotic susceptibility
patterns of Bartonella species, detected using several methods. We also
provide an overview of Bartonella infection in humans and animals and
discuss the antibiotic treatment recommendations for the different
infections, treatment failure and the molecular mechanism of antibiotic
resistance in these bacteria.

Cats and immunosuppressive disease

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=21079313&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:

Bacillary angiomatosis is a recently described infectious disease that
usually affects immunosupressed hosts with a previous history of contact
with cats. We report a rare case of bacillary angiomatosis in an
immunocompetent 59-year-old woman with no history of previous exposure to
cats, and atypical clinical features (fever and subcutaneous nodules with
ulceration on the left ankle).
Histopathology of the lesion showed extensive ulceration and reactive
tumor-like vascular proliferation of the blood vessels with swollen
endothelial cells and an inflammatory infiltrate including neutrophils and
lymphocytes in the dermis and subcutis. Staining with the Warthin-Starry
method demonstrated the presence of clustered bacilli located in the
extracellular matrix adjacent to the proliferating endothelial cells.
Diagnosis was confirmed with the detection of Bartonella spp. DNA in the
affected skin and in bone marrow using polymerase chain reaction.

Spotted Fever in Poland

Link: http://eutils.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&id=21083370&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks

Excerpt:

Abstract The presence of antibodies toOccurrence of Spotted Fever Rickettsiosessera of 129 forest
workers from northeastern and southern Poland was assayed by indirect
immunofluorescence. Previous environmental studies revealed presence of
spotted fever group (SFG) rickettsiae in ticks collected from these areas.
Additionally, the workers were examinated for the presence of antibodies
specific to other tick-borne bacteria: Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Bartonella
spp., and B.
burgdorferi. 
The results of the studies have shown the presence of specific SFG
rickettsiae antibodies in 14.7% of tested forest workers, among them 78.9%
had species-specific antibodies to R. massiliae. Contrary to previous
detection R.
helvetica and R. slovaca in ticks collected in the environment of the
examined area, no species-specific antibodies to these species were detected
in studied workers. Antibodies to B. burgdorferi (44%) were found in forest
workers more often than antibodies to other tested pathogens. B. burgdorferi
was also the main component of coinfections. The most frequent confirmed
serologically coinfections were simultaneous infections with B. burgdorferi
and Bartonella spp. found in 10% of tested individuals. So far, SFG
rickettsiae infections have not been diagnosed in Poland; however, the
presence of the bacteria in ticks and presence of specific antibodies in
humans exposed to arthropods show the need for monitoring the situation. The
list of tick-borne pathogens is increasing, but knowledge about the
possibility of humans acquiring multipathogens infections after tick bite
still needs evaluation.

ILADS 2010 Conference Takeaways from Scott Forsgren

Full article: http://betterhealthguy.com/joomla/blog/216-ilads-2010-conference-takeaways

Excerpt:

In October 2010, I attended the ILADS 2010 Annual event.  The event was packed.  Almost 400 people attended in person and over 1,000 people watched on the live webcast.  It is exciting to see so many people taking an interest in this controversial area of medicine.  The event was full of great information and people working hard to help us all find answers.

In this blog entry, I will share a few of the key takeaways that I learned at the event.  The slides from the event are available for purchase here for a very reasonable $40.  The DVDs (Friday’s sessions) and CDs of the presentations can be obtained from ZenWorks Productions.  Thus, I am not going to attempt to repeat information that is available elsewhere, but I will focus on some of the key things that caught my attention.

  • The 2011 ILADS event will be in Toronto, Canada – October 28-30, 2011
  • Dr. Richard Horowitz proposed that Chronic Lyme is really MCIDS  MultipleChronic Infectious Disease Syndrome
  • Biofilm treatment may be with EDTA or a Banderol/Samento combination.  There may be a strong antigen release with biofilm treatment which may make it a good candidate for pulsed therapy
  • Dr. Steve Harris mentioned that yeast may cannibalize dying Borrelia and that yeast is not always the result of antibiotic therapy alone.  He suggested up to 100 billion probiotic organisms daily.  In terms of diet, he said, “If it’s white, it ain’t right”
  • Minocycline may have longer toxic effects than doxycycline but has better CNS penetration.  Mino also has less sun sensitivity than doxy.  That said, Dr. Joe Burrascano commented that the effectiveness of minocycline may be regional as he never observed it working well in his patients

Bartonella quintana in body lice and head lice from homeless persons

Full article: http://ecdc.europa.eu/en/activities/sciadvice/Lists/ECDC%20Reviews/ECDC_DispForm.aspx?List=512ff74f%2D77d4%2D4ad8%2Db6d6%2Dbf0f23083f30&ID=882&RootFolder=%2Fen%2Factivities%2Fsciadvice%2FLists%2FECDC%20Reviews

Excerpt:

Bartonella quintana is a bacterium that causes trench fever in humans. Past reports have  shown Bartonella spp. infections in homeless populations in San Francisco, California,  USA. The California Department of Public Health in collaboration with San Francisco  Project Homeless Connect initiated a program in 2007 to collect lice from the homeless to  test for B. quintana and to educate the homeless and their caregivers on prevention and  control of louse-borne disease. During 2007–2008, 33.3% of body lice–infested persons  and 25% of head lice–infested persons had lice pools infected with B. quintana strain  Fuller. Further work is needed to examine how homeless persons acquire lice and  determine the risk for illness to persons infested with B. quintana–infected lice. 

The pain of Bartonella

 

Linda’s comments: Amazing how animals get better research and treatments than humans!!??  God Bless Dr Breitschwerft for his research …… He found “first time documented evidence that the pathogen may have been passed between family members.”  What Lida Mattman said all alone.  Then they say ,”At least 26 strains of Bartonella have been named worldwide, and the list is growing.”…..  AGAIN, a VET finds out with his continued research how deadly Bartonella can be.  This statement/quote ” Dr. Michael Kosoy, who heads the Bartonella laboratory for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Fort Collins, Colo., said scientists are only beginning to build evidence that Bartonella infections may be more common than previously thought.” WHAT, NOW the CDC is admitting that Bartonella exists??  WOW….unbelievable….Perhaps all the pressure the Lymies are putting on research, IDSA and doctors is working….

At any rate, THANK GOD this is coming to the public….there is hope folks…..we just can’t give up the FIGHT….which brings me to the Dr Garry Gordon FIGHT protocol…..I have been on it for 1 1/2 years and IT WORKS….Lyme and the co-infections do NOT have a chance if you are on the FIGHT protocol….getting control and cleaning out the total body burden of pathogens and toxins in our bodies only helps to speed along our wellness journeys…..
Excerpt:
Staff Writer

A bacterial infection typically spread by fleas, lice and biting flies could be more prevalent than many think, and may have been transmitted from a mother to her children at birth, scientists from N.C. State University say.

Dr. Edward Breitschwerdt, an infectious disease veterinarian and one of the world’s leading researchers of bacteria called Bartonella, has for the first time documented evidence that the pathogen may have been passed between family members.

Although more studies are needed to back up his findings, Breitschwerdt and colleagues describe the case of a mother and father who began battling chronic aches, fatigues and other symptoms soon after they were married. When their twins were born in 1998, the daughter died after nine days from a heart defect, and the son developed chronic health problems.

Using tissue from the daughter’s autopsy and blood from the surviving family members, Breitschwerdt’s team discovered that the entire family was infected with the same species of Bartonella bacteria, despite having no shared exposures to flea or lice infestations. Bartonella is known to causes such illnesses as trench fever and cat scratch disease, and it is increasingly suspected of triggering a variety of aches and inflammations that doctors have been unable to diagnose.

“I think we have stumbled across something that is of monumental medical importance,” said Breitschwerdt, whose findings were published recently in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology.

Proving the mother-child transmission could be difficult, however. Little funding is available for such research because the bacteria are still not considered a major source of human disease.

Dr. Michael Kosoy, who heads the Bartonella laboratory for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Fort Collins, Colo., said scientists are only beginning to build evidence that Bartonella infections may be more common than previously thought.