deer – F.I.G.H.T for your health! http://lymebook.com/fight Linda Heming describes her Lyme disease healing journey Wed, 06 Nov 2013 05:54:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.25 Tick population explodes, raising Lyme disease concerns http://lymebook.com/fight/tick-population-explodes-raising-lyme-disease-concerns/ http://lymebook.com/fight/tick-population-explodes-raising-lyme-disease-concerns/#respond Wed, 28 Apr 2010 05:13:36 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=1018 Linda’s comments:  Tick population exploding isn’t just on the East coast, it is US wide.  More and more ER’s are reporting a BIG increase with tick bites.   More importantly, you don’t have to have a tick bite to get Lyme disease.  BEWARE and pay attention when in the great outdoors.

Full article: http://www.newburyportnews.com/punews/local_story_099222830.html

Excerpt:

NEWBURYPORT — Deer ticks have been appearing in huge numbers throughout the region, raising concerns about Lyme disease.

All along the East Coast, health experts have seen a sudden and dramatic increase in ticks.

“Just in the past week or two, we have seen an explosion in deer ticks,” said Dr. Heidi Bassler, medical director of the Veterinary Center of Greater Newburyport.

The unusually warm weather and record-setting rains have helped bolster the tick population. Hospitals, such as Addison-Gilbert in Gloucester, have experienced a surge in tick bite cases. Normally, the hospital sees one or two cases per day; now it is seeing eight or 10.

There are two different kinds of ticks that are predominant in the region. Dog ticks are about the size of a pencil eraser; deer ticks, the more dangerous species, are closer to the size of a pen point.

With a single bite, deer ticks can transmit Lyme disease, symptoms of which include a debilitating complex of fever, headache, fatigue and depression, and two other illnesses of similar symptoms.

Ticks are mostly found in woods and fields. High grass, including dune grass, is one of their favored habitats.

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The tick and the time bomb http://lymebook.com/fight/the-tick-and-the-time-bomb/ http://lymebook.com/fight/the-tick-and-the-time-bomb/#respond Thu, 26 Nov 2009 08:38:44 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=564 Linda’s comment:  Thanks to the Colorado Springs INDEPENDENT for presenting this article on Lyme disease.  It presents what is going on today worldwide.  We need more newspapers to come to the Lyme communities rescue and help us get the word out.  I work with thousands of Lymies doing research and helping to guide them to make better healthcare choices.  I personally have battled 2 Lyme infections and have been blessed to live in a state where alternative doctors are licensed to practice <OUTSIDE OF THE BOX>  The one thing I have come to realize is our bodies are so overloaded with pathogens and toxins, that without lifestyle changes, getting rid of the heavy metals, being gluten free, caffeine free, sugar free, alcohol free, fast food free and most importantly GMO FREE, you struggle reaching the level of wellness you desire.  Getting rid of all the above is difficult, since we have industry shoving it in our faces at every turn.  I’m so thankful that I found the FIGHT program that Dr Garry Gordon has developed.  I couldn’t believe how many pathogens and toxins I have dumped over the last year and a half.  I have a long way to go, but I can tell you, I thank God daily for the FIGHT program.

Regards,

Linda

January 15, 2009 News » Cover Story

http://www.csindy.com/colorado/the-tick-and-the-time-bomb/Content?oid=1146343

The tick and the time bomb

While patients wait in pain, a small group of doctors fights for chronic Lyme disease
by J. Adrian Stanley

click to enlarge
Casey Bradley Gent
Bill Rathbun sits in his back room, a storage space for memories from happier times. Even leaning slightly on his elbow causes him to wince.

The back room of Bill Rathbun’s house is dim and small. On this weekday evening, Rathbun is wedged between one side of the room that houses dozens of empty pill bottles, and the other side of the room inhabited by dusty remnants of a past life posters of the Cramps, the Adicts and Frank Zappa withered like bathroom wallpaper.

Rathbun looks strapping. But he can barely lift himself from a chair. At age 40, he sits in the back room, bookmarked between the two chapters of his life.

“It’s very hard to believe this is happening,” he says, cigarette trembling.

Three years ago, Rathbun got sick. His body’s strength and ease of movement was replaced by an incessant, horrific pain. He realized he was in a battle for his health, but didn’t then realize that he had also entered a war in the worldwide medical community. Even after Rathbun tested positive for Lyme disease, he says doctor after doctor looked him straight in the eye and told him he didn’t have it.

Lyme doesn’t exist in Colorado, they insisted. Maybe he had something else. Or maybe he was just crazy.

A cry for help

The scraggly doe appeared frequently on Rathbun’s Manitou Springs lawn. Like many of the town’s deer, she wasn’t skittish. So when Rathbun, moved by sympathy for her pathetic appearance, set out to tame her, he didn’t have too much trouble. Soon she was eating from his hand.

It was 1998, and Rathbun was healthy. He had always worked as a laborer, often putting in long days. But then came one blip in his otherwise stellar health: Around the time he befriended the doe, he broke out in a rash on his chest and came down with flu-like symptoms. After a few weeks, the rash disappeared. It returned a few months later, only to disappear again.

Eight years passed before Rathbun gave the rash any further thought. Hey, the Rathbun men were sturdy. Rathbun’s father and brother were loggers. Early this decade, Rathbun did some logging himself, for about a month in Montana. The rest of the time, he worked in Colorado, where he’d lived since he was 14. Save for a few days in Florida, he didn’t bother to leave the state for vacation.

Time passed peacefully until January 2006, when Rathbun blew a disc in his back lifting a 100-pound door at work. He was treated through workers’ compensation, but couldn’t shake the pain and other, bizarre symptoms that started cropping up. Worried, and finding little help from doctors, he began keeping a journal.

On Dec. 16, 2006, he wrote: “last night, L hand spasming below pinky, on side. Making pinky finger twitch sideways.”

A few months later, he wrote, “Yesterday, sharp pains L ear. On Tues. sharp pains R ear, alternating w/ sharp pain R side of head.”

Rathbun wondered if he had nerve damage. But there were other symptoms. He’d doze off at red lights. He’d get fluttering feelings in his heart, or chest pains so bad they doubled him over. He’d wake up and find that even lightly touching his head caused excruciating pain. He couldn’t sleep. His vision was blurry. His jaw ached and cracked. Sometimes he’d catch sight of something in his peripheral vision, only to turn and find nothing there.

“I thought I was dying,” he remembers. “I thought I was going crazy.”

In early 2007, at the suggestion of friends and his workers’ compensation doctors, Rathbun went to his own doctor to be tested for multiple sclerosis. His doctor sent him to a pain management specialist who ran a bunch of tests and then announced that Rathbun was slightly anemic, had carpel tunnel syndrome and was positive for Lyme disease.

Rathbun didn’t even know he’d been tested for Lyme. He didn’t know what it was. But he was overjoyed.

“I was so relieved,” he says. “I saw a light at the end of the tunnel.”

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Rathbun feeds a deer near his home in 1998.

Roaming the Internet, he stumbled upon a long list of symptoms for Lyme. It described his day-to-day life.

According to the Center for Disease Control (CDC), the Lyme bacteria can cause a red rash, sometimes with a central clearing, within 30 days of a tick bite. If left untreated, the bacteria will spread to other parts of the body, causing a variety of musculoskeletal, neurological and cardiac problems. Over years, it can lead to arthritis, nerve damage or brain damage.

Lyme disease was first noticed in the United States in 1975 when children in Lyme, Conn., began developing arthritis. Doctors later discovered the illness was caused by a tick-spread disease. In 1981, the disease was identified as a bacterial spirochete (a spiral-shaped bacteria similar to syphilis), which was then named Borrelia burgdorferi. The bacteria was found to be spread through the bite of a specific tick, often called a deer tick or a blacklegged tick.

Rathbun’s doctor told him that a routine course of antibiotics would cure him, and referred him to an infectious disease doctor. But the expert looked at Rathbun’s positive test and said it must have been inaccurate, saying there is no Lyme disease in Colorado.

This was the beginning of Rathbun’s nightmare. Suddenly, he was bouncing from doctor to doctor, trying to find one that would treat him for Lyme with long-term antibiotics since a short course of antibiotics given by one doctor was the only thing that made him feel any better. He met with a lot of rejection; even the doctor who originally diagnosed him deferred to the infectious disease doctor. When Rathbun tried to notify the El Paso County Department of Health and Environment of his disease, he was sent away. (Only doctors with patients meeting certain national requirements can report a Lyme case to the health department.)

Dr. David Martz, of Colorado Springs, says this type of scenario is common. Because guidelines for diagnosing Lyme are narrow, many doctors believe Lyme doesn’t exist in many areas, including Colorado.

“If Lyme disease is what the academicians say positive screening blood test, definite tick bite then Lyme disease, if it exists in Colorado, is very rare,” Martz says. “However, if that’s too narrow of a definition of Lyme and a more definitive blood test becomes available, then it may well be that there is lots of Lyme disease in Colorado.”

When local doctors wouldn’t treat him, Rathbun turned to the Internet. And he hit the jackpot.

Victims in the middle

You could spend days, even weeks, reading about Lyme online. There are studies, support groups, forums, medical societies, clinics, patient advocates. But you don’t have to do too much reading to realize Lyme attracts some of the most heated discussions in medicine today even with minimal attention from the media.

There is no disagreement that Lyme disease exists, or that it’s often painful. The debate is about how easily it’s cured, how long it can torment its host, and where and how it may be contracted. And boy, is it spirited, with doctors accusing each other of ignoring patients, or putting patients at risk, or setting up the world for an epidemic.

Most doctors say that treatment-wise, Lyme is barely more trouble than a sinus infection. You get it, you take some antibiotics, case closed. They say one kind of tick can transmit it, and that it’s a problem only in certain parts of the country, particularly the Northeast.

The most famous guidelines on treating Lyme, published by a panel of doctors for the Infectious Disease Society of America in 2006, say that in rare cases, patients can experience something called “Post-Lyme Disease Syndrome” symptoms that linger after the standard treatment. But IDSA doctors say the presence of symptoms in no way proves the bacteria is still alive in the patient’s body. It could be a psychological problem, or a misunderstanding of normal aches and pains, or something else entirely. But, they say, it’s definitely not Lyme.

Dr. Eugene Shapiro, one of the guidelines’ authors and a pediatric infectious disease doctor at the Yale University School of Medicine in Connecticut, says there’s “never been a shred of evidence” that Lyme can survive past the standard 10 to 28 days of antibiotics. If anything, he says, the guidelines probably prescribe more drugs than are needed.

“You don’t continue antibiotics just because someone is tired,” he says.

Shapiro believes doctors who treat Lyme patients with long-term antibiotics are selling their patients hope that they have something curable, or that their symptoms have a name. He also says they’re selling a lot of expensive intravenous antibiotics.

“One of the reasons [patients] get upset is when you say they don’t have chronic Lyme what they hear is ‘You’re full of it,'” he says. “Clearly these patients … are suffering … but there’s something called ‘medically unexplained symptoms.'”

In a 2007 article titled “A Critical Appraisal of ‘Chronic Lyme Disease,'” the New England Journal of Medicine said there is “substantial risk, with little or no benefit,” in prescribing additional antibiotic treatment for Lyme patients who have “long-standing subjective symptoms.”

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Courtesy underourskin.com
The bite of a tick can transfer Lyme bacteria (pictured below). Scientists are discovering that a single tick may transfer several types of bacteria, leading to a range of illnesses. Ticks can be as small as poppyseeds and often go unnoticed.

Then there’s the other camp.

A small, vocal group of doctors say Lyme can sicken patients for years, and even kill them. They say many doctors who are setting standards for Lyme are researchers working too far away from patients and too close to patents. In other words, the mainstream bigwigs are thinking with their pocketbooks, and leaving dissenters open to modern-day witch hunts by state medical boards.

Believers in chronic Lyme tend to be clinicians. They believe the disease is transmitted via several types of ticks, which are all over the country, and the world, for that matter. Left untreated, they say, Lyme bacteria will invade nearly every part of your body, from muscle tissue to the central nervous system to the insides of your cells. They believe the disease can hide in the body and can take months, even years, of antibiotic treatment to kill.

Or it can kill you.

From reading online, Rathbun quickly concluded he had chronic Lyme. He remembered the rash from 1998 and the close contact with the deer, an animal known to carry ticks. And though subsequent Lyme tests came up negative, Rathbun continued to believe the Lyme was there. Hiding in his body. Making him sick.

After searching the Web for support groups and networks of so-called “Lyme-literate” doctors, Rathbun found a doctor who agreed to put him on long-term antibiotic therapy. He’s been on the drugs for over a year. He’s still too symptomatic to return to work his sleep patterns are bizarre, and sometimes his pain is so intense he can barely move. When he’s feeling sick, his body shakes. His memory lapses. A strange red dot appears between his eyes.

Still, Rathbun says, it’s better than it was.

“Occasionally, I feel fairly normal,” he says.

Rathbun now spends his days at home. He tries to force himself to leave the house once a day, however briefly. He says he misses working, and hates that his wife has to support him. Often alone, he spends time surfing the Web. He’s met many friends there, including Tracie Schissel, his “patient advocate.”

“When I found Tracie, it was the biggest relief,” Rathbun says. “It was the first time I’d talked to someone that understood.”

Patients helping patients

Minnesota would curse Tracie Schissel and her family.

But she didn’t know that when she moved there in 1987, toting her 4-year-old son. She was in her early 20s, a vibrant young woman. She entered school to become a cop, got engaged and convinced her parents, brother and sister to join her in Minnesota.

She and her family spent long afternoons gardening. She went camping and hiking in the lake-spotted wilderness. And she pulled tick after tick off her body and that of her son.

In 1989, she started having gastrointestinal problems, chronic fatigue and depression. Then in 1992, she was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, which strikes the digestive system. It forced her to quit the police force in 1994, after only two years on the job. She suffered through six bowel obstructions.

“I’d be hospitalized for seven to 14 days, until my bowels would open up,” she remembers.

By 2005, Schissel had been working for a medical center for years, and was training to become a sleep lab technician. One day, she noticed what she thought was a spider bite. It was inches across and seeping, and antibiotics didn’t seem to help. Then she noticed a rash when she got out of the shower. Finally, her left knee began to swell.

Tests for Lyme came back positive, and Schissel was prescribed the normal short-term antibiotics. But she still felt sick when the pills were gone, and wanted more treatment. It took her months to get on long-term antibiotics.

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The actual Lyme bacteria is similar to that of syphilis.

She wanted to use her job to reach out to others, and help them recognize their symptoms, get tested and get treated. She started bringing literature to the doctors she worked with.

“Here I’ve got a PIC line in me [for Lyme antibiotics] that’s a catheter that goes all the way to your heart,” she says. “I’m somebody that works there. I would have doctors just look at me in the most arrogant and condescending way, and they would actually throw the information away while I was standing there. That’s when I knew we had a long road.”

A short time later, Schissel was on the phone with her sister, Leslie Wermers, describing the symptoms of her new diagnosis. Wermers had her own symptoms matching the Lyme profile she’d even had the characteristic rash in 1996. Back then, a doctor told her that he couldn’t diagnose her with Lyme because he couldn’t find a tick on her. (That, of course, was false.)

Remembering this, Wermers quickly had her records transferred to her sister’s doctor. Buried in her medical file was a positive test for Lyme disease. Wermers’ doctor had never told her about it.

“She never knew for 10 years that she had a positive,” Schissel says. “What if a patient came back positive for cancer, and they didn’t tell you?”

Wermers’ doctors had long suspected multiple sclerosis and had given Wermers an annual spinal tap for 10 years. By 2006, Wermers had lesions on her spine, brain, lungs and liver.

Schissel’s doctor tested Wermers for Lyme. She was positive. Now, both sisters were on long-term antibiotic therapy. And both sisters were mad as hell.

Together, they started the Minnesota Lymefighter’s Advocacy, with the intention of helping other Lyme patients in their state. But, through the Internet, they ended up helping patients from all over the world. They gave out information on chronic Lyme disease and connected patients with Lyme-literate doctors.

In the meantime, Schissel was slowly getting better. She began having normal bowel movements for the first time in about 17 years. Wermers came to stay with her sister for periods of time. Schissel would dutifully change Wermers’ positions at night to prevent her sister from getting bed sores.

“She would wake up and say, ‘I love you, Sis,'” Schissel remembers.

On Nov. 2, 2008, Wermers’ heart swelled while she slept. She never woke up. She was 41.

The doctor is in

In areas where Lyme is endemic, hunting chronic Lyme doctors seems to be an emerging sport for state medical boards.

Dr. Joseph Jemsek, a chronic Lyme physician who was taking an average of 80 new patients per month, was investigated by the North Carolina Medical Board and given a one-year “suspension with stay,” meaning he could continue to practice as long as he met stipulations.

Dr. Charles Ray Jones is in the midst of two legal battles with the Connecticut Medical Board. In chronic Lyme circles, he is considered the premier expert on treating children with the disease.

The situation has driven many doctors to hide their chronic Lyme practices from the public, according to patients, doctors and Web sites. Many clinics also don’t accept health insurance, fearing the companies will sue them to get their money back.

Martz, the Colorado Springs doctor, entered the fray several years ago when he stared at his own positive test for Lyme disease.

By most people’s judgment, Martz, now in his 60s, had lived a great life. He graduated from the University of Colorado at Denver’s medical school in 1965, followed by an internship and residency in St. Louis, and a year’s training at Stanford University. In 1970, he began practicing in the Springs, where he says he was consistently the early bird in discovering trends from HMOs to specialized cancer treatment. An internist, hematologist and oncologist, he once served as president of the El Paso County Medical Society, and he directed a local hospice program before retiring in 2003.

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Courtesy Ben Petrick
A few years ago, Ben Petrick played for the Colorado Rockies. Now he barely has the strength to care for his daughter.

In addition to a fulfilling career, Martz had a loving wife, Dee, two children and two stepchildren. But in April 2003, his luck changed.

“I suddenly got sick, and I’ve always been a healthy guy,” he says. “I was an 18-hour-a-day person, sometimes jokingly referred to as the Energizer Bunny of the senior citizens.”

Martz took every test his doctors could think of. But despite symptoms that sometimes left him crawling, they couldn’t diagnose him.

“Two months later, my neurologist said, ‘There’s no doubt that you have ALS. And, in fact, it’s moving pretty quickly. And chances are that within six months you’ll probably be in a wheelchair. And your life expectancy is probably just 2 1/2 years or so,'” Martz remembers.

Martz and his wife, practical people, weren’t interested in chasing a miracle cure. Martz worked on his relationships with family members. He went fishing in Canada. The couple traveled to Kenya for the trip of a lifetime.

But as he got sicker, Martz couldn’t shake a feeling of doubt. His arthritis, body pain and profound fatigue weren’t typical of ALS but they were of Lyme disease. So, even though he’d received a negative Lyme test, he sought “sensitive” testing for it at a controversial California lab called IGeneX.

The lab found him positive for Lyme. Martz started dosing himself with antibiotics.

“Within a month, my energy went from a half an hour of conversation to four or five hours being up around and able to go to Circuit City or something like that,” he says. “Within two months, for the first time, I could cross my legs without having to use my hands to pull them up. And within three months, for the first time in a year, I could get up out of a chair without having my wife pull me up.”

He’s never gotten back to 100 percent, and says there was likely some damage that will never heal. But by the end of the year of treatment, in early 2005, Martz says he was 60 percent of the man he had once been.

In February of that year, Martz opened Rocky Mountain Chronic Disease Specialists with a local friend and fellow retired doctor. The two foresaw a part-time gig, helping some Lyme and ALS patients and gathering information they could later transfer into research papers.

They were wrong. Martz found himself working full-time. His buddy went back into retirement, and Martz had to bring in other physicians, physician assistants and staff. He says he treated 850 to 900 patients from all over the nation, as well as Canada, England, Scotland, Norway and Spain. Much to his satisfaction, Martz noticed that 15 to 20 of his approximately 90 ALS patients were showing measurable improvement on antibiotics. Another 20 to 35 stopped declining.

But in August 2007, Martz closed the clinic.

“I could not stand the 50-hour workweek’s effect on my body,” he says. “In the course of four years, I had four heart attacks.”

Not to mention a bloodstream infection and clots in his lungs.

“It was a devastating decision for me,” he says. “Because there’s no other physician in the world that has been successfully treating ALS except our office.”

But now, Martz is planning four papers. Two concentrate on ALS patients. One describes in detail the symptoms and reactions to treatment of all of his patients, including chronic Lyme patients, and those with ALS, Parkinson’s disease and MS. One paper will focus solely on Lyme in rural Colorado Martz had about 45 patients with Lyme who lived in or around Yuma, on the eastern plains.

After treating so many patients, Martz has his theories about Lyme. Starting with this one: Lyme hides in the body, evading the immune system. As the body tries harder and harder to kill Lyme, that makes the carrier sick.

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Courtesy Tracie Schissel
Sisters Tracie Schissel (left) and Leslie Wermers were treated with long-term IV antibiotics. But for Wermers, the controversial care came too late.

He posits that since Lyme is closely related to syphilis, there’s reason to investigate how it could be spread. He says there’s plenty of clinical evidence that it can go from mother to child in the womb (the IDSA would disagree), but less investigation into whether it could spread sexually.

In short, Martz wants the medical community to take a second look.

“I am not a radical,” he says. “I’m not a zealot. I very strongly feel that this must be approached thoughtfully, and scientifically, and carefully, but I do think that there’s something there, and that we need to take more steps to sort out what it is. And those who don’t believe it and those who do believe it both need to set aside their prejudices and say, ‘Look, these are believable people with very disabling symptoms.'”

Dashed dreams

In 1999, when Ben Petrick was in his early 20s, it looked like he was going to make it. And he almost did. For four years, he was in and out of the major leagues, playing baseball for the Colorado Rockies.

But it didn’t last. His batting average began to drop, and then he fell off the baseball planet.

His dad, incidentally, fell with him. Both tested positive for Parkinson’s.

“We came down with it within seven months of each other,” Petrick says. “I was 22.”

Petrick played with his Parkinson’s pills in his back pocket. He didn’t tell his teammates. But when a fastball tipped off the edge of his catcher’s mitt, he realized he was losing his speed.

So Petrick now lives in Oregon with his wife and baby daughter. His wife teaches school, and he gives paid lessons for kids and lives off disability. He spends most of his day taking care of his little girl, and calls nearby relatives when his symptoms get so bad he can’t handle her.

Petrick should be waiting to die. But he’s holding on to hope, for one reason: Back in 2006, Martz diagnosed him with Lyme disease and put him on antibiotics.

“Within a week and a half, it was like, boom, I started feeling better,” Petrick says.

He cut back on his Parkinson’s meds until the antibiotics started to make him feel sick a common complaint from chronic Lyme patients, which some doctors blame on increased immune response or toxins from the die-off of the Lyme bacteria. So Petrick went off the antibiotics. But now, at 30, he says he’s ready to start them again.

Petrick’s wife, Kellie, believes the antibiotics will make him better.

“In my heart,” Ben says, “I do too.”

The green persuasion

In most cases, Lyme is easily treated with basic antibiotics like amoxicillin or doxycycline. No drugs have been formulated to treat it specifically.

The first vaccine was released in 1998. It flopped, and some patients sued the pharmaceutical company, saying it made them sick.

Tests developed for Lyme are inaccurate, say people on both sides of the argument. Shapiro, the Yale doctor, says they churn out many false positives. Chronic Lyme doctors say they often produce false negatives, because they don’t test for all Lyme antibodies.

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LAura Montgomery
Dr. David Martz stands in a historical medical exhibit at the Pioneers Museum. Medicine does evolve, he argues.

In 2006, as some companies tried to make a buck, the IDSA gathered experts to update its guidelines on treating Lyme guidelines that are still used by many insurance companies to set policy on what they’ll pay for.

It was 2006, and IDSA fielded a lineup of Ivy Leaguers. According to research by Kris Newby, senior producer for Under Our Skin (see “There’s a lot of money being made,” p. 22), nine of 14 of those doctors had received money from Lyme vaccine manufacturers. Four out of 14 had received money from manufacturers of test kits for Lyme or other tick-borne diseases. Three of the authors and three of their universities had patents on those test kits, including Yale University, Shapiro’s employer.

So chronic Lyme believers like to note that the 2006 guidelines recommend testing for patients if Lyme is suspected, even if the characteristic rash isn’t present despite the fact that the CDC says Lyme should be diagnosed based on a doctor’s judgment.

Asked if he felt he had a conflict of interest, Shapiro replies, “Definitely not. Why would I?”

When Yale’s patents are mentioned, he says, “I had nothing to do with it personally in any way, shape or form. I didn’t benefit from it at all.”

The IDSA is also quick to dismiss any allegations of wrongdoing.

“I really think that this is something that’s been brought up by this group of advocates with not a lot of evidence to back it up,” says spokesman Steve Baragona.

Baragona adds that the IDSA hired an individual in 2006 to oversee selection of panels and ensure there are no conflicts of interest. And the IDSA does have other professional societies backing its conclusions, like a panel with the American Academy of Neurology.

But the IDSA panel and the AAN panel shared several members, and were working on the guidelines at the same time.

It was enough to disturb Connecticut Attorney Gen. Richard Blumenthal, whose state is still ground zero for Lyme disease. An investigation he headed produced an out-of-court agreement in May, with the IDSA agreeing to form a new panel to review Lyme guidelines. An ombudsman whose main responsibility is to root out conflicts of interest will oversee the whole process. The IDSA says it’s close to announcing the new panel’s members.

Meanwhile, several states have passed or tried to pass laws protecting chronic Lyme doctors and/or ensuring that insurance companies pay for chronic Lyme treatment. The issue has even been raised in Congress.

Tracking ticks

Between 1992 and 2006, 248,074 cases of Lyme were reported to the CDC. Reported cases increased 101 percent from 1992 to 2006. But the CDC sets high standards for cases of Lyme disease that can be reported higher standards than those needed to diagnose Lyme, in fact.

Between 1992 and 2006, Lyme cases were reported from every state in the union, with a handful from Colorado a small number compared to states in the Northeast.

The chronic Lyme community believes Lyme is extremely underreported and has spread to every state and many other countries. Bacteria are being discovered that are closely related to the Lyme bacteria, cause the same symptoms as Lyme, and are spread by ticks different kinds of ticks that live in different parts of the country.

Martz says he had six patients who “clearly got sick after a Colorado-based tick bite.” In Boulder County, Mary Parker says she found a swollen bite on her body after hauling wood outside her home. She came down with the characteristic rash and was diagnosed over a year later. Several of her neighbors, and her dog, got Lyme, too, she adds.

In fact, many dogs in Colorado have been diagnosed with Lyme. Results from a single veterinary test facility, IDEXX labs, combined with telephone surveys and results from veterinary clinics, found 571 Colorado dogs with Lyme disease between 2001 and March 2007.

During the same time period, the CDC recorded one human case of Lyme in Colorado.

Back in his living room, Bill Rathbun paces the floor. He’s having a bad day. The inexplicable red dot has appeared between his eyes. His head tremors involuntarily. His mind wanders.

Rathbun feels like a victim, one of many in a worldwide epidemic. And he blames the mainstream doctors, who he believes are sacrificing his health, and the health of others, in the name of profit.

“I just can’t believe these doctors are getting away with it,” he says. “I can’t believe it.”

Suddenly, he is stuck on history. World War II. How the Holocaust went unnoticed by the world for so long, only being revealed when soldiers opened the gates to the death camps.

“When Hitler said people will more easily believe the great lie than the small lie,” he says, “he knew what he was talking about.”

stanley@csindy.com

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Wild Meat Raises Lead Exposure http://lymebook.com/fight/wild-meat-raises-lead-exposure/ http://lymebook.com/fight/wild-meat-raises-lead-exposure/#respond Mon, 16 Nov 2009 21:21:25 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=498 Linda’s comments:  No only do we have to worry about eating wild meat containing Lyme disease, but now we have to be concerned about the “lead” exposure from eating this meat.  There is also proof that deer from our high mountain ranges are getting lead exposure from the “coal” stacks in China.

Heavy metals is all around us and it is a must that we begin a journey in a lifelong daily detox program to reduce these heavy metals from our bodies.  For those with chronic illness, like Lyme disease, it becomes deadly.  If you have amalgams, it is important to have them safely removed by a dentist that knows how to remove them properly.  Look for a Holistic dentists and if there are none in your community, then ask around for dentists that have experience in removing amalgams safely.

You can help protect yourself by finding a lifelong daily detox like the FIGHT program.  I have been on this protocol for over a year and am very pleased.  Feel free to ask questions about the products I have found that replenish my body to a healthy state.  Don’t get caught up in a once a year cleanse.  A lifelong cleanse is vital for good health.

Regards,
Linda

Scientific American
September 28, 2009

Wild Meat Raises Lead Exposure
Tests by the CDC show that eating venison and other game can raise the amounts of lead in human bodies by 50 percent
By Scott Streater and Environmental Health News

To Dr. William Cornatzer, it was an unforgettable image, one that troubled him deeply.

An avid hunter, Cornatzer was listening to a presentation on the lead poisoning of California condors when an x-ray of a mule deer flashed on an overhead screen. The deer had been shot in the chest with a high-powered rifle. Cornatzer was shocked that the deer’s entire carcass was riddled with dozens of tiny lead-shot fragments.

“My first thought had nothing to do with California condors; it had to do with what I had been doing as a hunter myself, and what I had been feeding our kids,” said Cornatzer, a clinical professor of medicine at the University of North Dakota School of Medicine & Health Sciences.

“I knew good and well after seeing that image that I had been eating a lot of lead fragments over the years,” he said.

That realization led Cornatzer and a radiologist last year to X-ray 100 packages of venison that had been donated by a sportsmen group to a food bank. About 60 percent of the packages contained lead-shot fragments, even though it’s common practice among hunters to remove meat around the wound.

The discovery prompted North Dakota to warn pregnant women and children 6 and under not to eat venison killed with ammunition containing lead.

It also sparked a flurry of new research that raises questions about the safety of eating wild game, as well as a renewed debate about eliminating lead ammunition.
ecosystems
Earlier this year, the National Park Service announced a controversial plan to ban lead ammunition and fishing tackle in the parks, which Acting Director Dan Wenk said “will benefit humans, wildlife, and  inside and outside park boundaries.”

Cheap, durable and readily available, lead has been used in weapons and other products since the Romans first mined it more than 2,500 years ago. Bullets have contained lead, which upon impact mushrooms to create a larger wound, since the 14th century.

But lead is a dangerous neurotoxin, particularly for children and fetuses. Low levels can harm children’s developing brains, causing learning disabilities and reduced IQs. High levels can trigger severe neurological problems.

Sporting groups are opposed to any restrictions on lead-based ammunition, arguing that there’s no clear evidence that it is dangerous when used to hunt deer and other animals.
“The use of traditional ammunition does not pose a health risk to human beings,” said Ted Novin, director of public affairs for the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade association for the firearms, ammunition and hunting industries.

Novin added that “there has never been a documented case of lead poisoning among humans who have eaten game harvested with traditional ammunition.”

New research, however, has shown that eating venison and other game can substantially raise the amounts of lead in human bodies. The findings have prompted some experts to recommend bans on lead ammunition.

“We want to avoid having people exposed to lead to the extent that it’s feasible and practical, and it’s clear that one of the key ways to minimize exposure is to use alternatives to lead ammunition,” said Dr. Michael Kosnett, a medical toxicologist at the University of Colorado at Denver School of Medicine. “You’re putting food on the table to nourish your family. Why not nourish them with healthy food if that’s a possible alternative?”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tested 736 people, mostly adults, in six North Dakota cities and found that those who ate wild game had 50 percent more lead in their blood than those who did not eat it. The lead exposure was highest among people who consumed not only venison, but also birds and other game, according to the study published last month in the journal Environmental Research.

Those who ate wild game meat had average lead levels of 1.27 micrograms per deciliter, compared with 0.84 for those who ate no game. Most said they either hunted the animals themselves or obtained the meat from friends or family members.

“What was most troubling is that as wild game consumption increases, the blood-lead levels increase,” said study co-author Mary Jean Brown, chief of the CDC’s lead poisoning prevention branch. “The strong recommendation we would make is that pregnant women should not consume this meat.”

The CDC is planning a second round of testing this year involving hunters in Wisconsin, Brown said.

The National Shooting Sports Foundation argues that everyone in the North Dakota study had blood-lead levels below the CDC’s health guideline of 10 micrograms per deciliter.

However, recent research has reported that children’s mental abilities are reduced by lead at levels far below the CDC guideline. Brown and others say there is no threshold below which lead does not cause harm, particularly with children.

As a result, the CDC recommends that “all nonessential uses of lead should be eliminated,” according to a 2005 statement. Less than 2 percent of children in the United States have lead levels that exceed the amount that the CDC considers safe. Most exposure comes from old, deteriorating lead-based paint, which was banned in 1978.

Another study, published in April, showed that eating venison containing lead-shot fragments can quickly raise blood-lead levels.

Researchers at Washington State University and Boise State University fed lead-tainted venison to four pigs and lead-free venison to a separate control group of pigs. The pigs that ate the venison containing lead fragments reached a lead level of 3.8 micrograms per deciliter after only two days—more than three times higher than the highest level in the control group of pigs, according to the study, which was sponsored by The Peregrine Fund, a group that advocates for the removal of lead shot to protect condors.

“At risk in the U.S. are some ten million hunters, their families, and low-income beneficiaries of venison donation,” the report says. One program, Sportsmen Against Hunger, donates the meat to low-income people.

The National Park Service posted the results of The Peregrine Fund study on its Web site, noting “that while the results are preliminary and much further study needs to be done to better assess risks to humans, it appears that if lead bullets are used, odds are high that you will ingest lead particles in ground meat.”

Mostly to protect wildlife, the park service plans to end the use of lead bullets and fishing gear in all parks. A public comment period will be held next year, said Jody Lyle, an agency spokeswoman.

“Our goal is to eliminate the use of lead ammunition and lead fishing tackle in parks by the end of 2010,” Wenk said when announcing the proposal in March. “We want to take a leadership role in removing lead from the environment.”

Although hunting is prohibited in most national parks, it is allowed on some park properties. Rangers also would have to stop using lead ammunition when culling herds or killing wounded or sick animals.

Hunting groups say any restriction on traditional ammunition will price many people out of hunting, because the alternatives–steel, copper or tungsten shells–can cost as much as six times more.

This is not the first time the federal government has considered restrictions on lead ammunition. The United States in 1991 phased out lead-shot for hunting waterfowl, mostly because bald eagles that prey on them were being poisoned.

Twenty-nine other countries have adopted voluntary or legislative restrictions. Some of the most aggressive regulations have been adopted in Europe, where lead-shot poisoning has killed white-tailed eagles and endangered Spanish Imperial eagles.

While there is no European Union standard for lead ammunition, Denmark was the first to ban lead shot for waterfowl in wetlands in 1985, followed throughout the 1990s by Norway, the Netherlands, Finland, England, Spain and Sweden. France did so in 2006. Denmark, followed by Norway and the Netherlands, extended the lead-shot ban to all hunted species in 2000.

California and Arizona also have taken action, implementing mandatory and voluntary bans, respectively, on lead bullets and shot in an effort to protect condors.

Pressure to ban lead-based ammunition in the U.S. intensified last year with the release of a report on threats to wildlife commissioned by The Wilderness Society and the American Fisheries Society.

The report said that lead fishing sinkers have poisoned brown pelicans, mute swans and Canada geese. Even more dangerous is lead shot in gut piles left behind by hunters and consumed by scavengers, including endangered condors, said Barnett Rattner, a wildlife toxicologist with the U.S. Geological Survey and a co-author of the review.

John H. Schulz, a resource scientist at the Missouri Department of Conservation, has calculated that as many as 15 million mourning doves are killed in North America each year from lead poisoning, mostly from eating spent lead shot that looks like the weed seed they depend on for food. That’s almost as many as the estimated 20 million mourning doves legally shot and killed each year by hunters.

But it’s the science pointing to possible human health impacts that has Schulz convinced that there’s more than enough scientific evidence to begin a phase-out of lead ammunition.

“Let’s not spend any more time studying whether the problem is significant. It is real. It is serious. It is significant,” Shulz said. “Now, how are we going to address it in a thoughtful and sensitive manner so no affected stakeholders are disenfranchised?”
This article originally ran at Environmental Health News, a news source published by Environmental Health Sciences, a nonprofit media company.

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