spirochete – 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 Borrelia disseminating via OSP-C http://lymebook.com/fight/borrelia-disseminating-via-osp-c/ http://lymebook.com/fight/borrelia-disseminating-via-osp-c/#respond Tue, 11 Jan 2011 05:48:11 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=2023 Link: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0015830

Excerpt:

The Lyme disease spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi dramatically upregulates
outer surface protein C (OspC) in response to fresh bloodmeal during
transmission from the tick vector to a mammal, and abundantly produces the
antigen during early infection. As OspC is an effective immune target, to
evade the immune system B. burgdorferi downregulates the antigen once the
anti-OspC humoral response has developed, suggesting an important role for
OspC during early infection.

Methodology/Principal Findings

In this study, a borrelial mutant producing an OspC antigen with a
5-amino-acid deletion was generated. The deletion didn’t significantly
increase the 50% infectious dose or reduce the tissue bacterial burden
during infection of the murine host, indicating that the truncated OspC can
effectively protect B. burgdorferi against innate elimination. 
However, the deletion greatly impaired the ability of B. burgdorferi to
disseminate to remote tissues after inoculation into mice.

Conclusions/Significance

The study indicates that OspC plays an important role in dissemination of B.
burgdorferi during mammalian infection.

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New Challenge to Chronic Fatigue Virus http://lymebook.com/fight/new-challenge-to-chronic-fatigue-virus/ http://lymebook.com/fight/new-challenge-to-chronic-fatigue-virus/#respond Wed, 31 Mar 2010 23:36:51 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=962 AAAS article on most recent XMRV study

 In their publication “Science Now.”  Hedging their bets?

Linda’s comment: So as I see it, it is just another pathogen that chronically ill people need to deal with….Is it really a virus, parasite, bacterial?????  Don’t feed it, get on the FIGHT program and stop it in its track. All of these critters like the spirochete love feeding off GMO, toxic chemical sweeteners, heavy metals, etc., etc., etc.,  This gives them their energies/food supply to wreak havoc on our bodies.  Healthy people have an advantage over chronic illness.  The FIGHT program is one of the best prevention programs I have ever experienced.

Listen up as the XMRV is just one of many new things that are attacking our bodies.  Scientists are having a difficult time keeping up with all the new tragedies attacking our bodies because of our toxic environments.

Excerpt:

A theory linking chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) to an infectious mouse virus known as XMRV has taken a second major hit. First proposed last October in Science, the virus-CFS connection was quickly challenged by a British group. Now a second team of British virologists reports that, after examining tissue from 170 CFS patients, they have failed to find evidence of XMRV.

Patients with CFS often report that their condition–a mix of symptoms including unexplained pains and excessive fatigue–began after an otherwise normal viral infection. And scientists in the past have preliminarily linked CFS to a few viruses. However, those links have fallen apart under scrutiny, and without a firm biological cause for CFS, victims continue to face skepticism that their condition is a “real” disease.

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Lyme disease presenting as subacute transverse myelitis http://lymebook.com/fight/lyme-disease-presenting-as-subacute-transverse-myelitis/ http://lymebook.com/fight/lyme-disease-presenting-as-subacute-transverse-myelitis/#respond Fri, 12 Feb 2010 00:18:30 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=854 Lyme disease (borreliosis) is a systemic illness resulting from infection
with the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi. It is transmitted to humans by the
bites of infected ticks belonging to several species of the genus Ixodes.
After the bacteria enter the body via the dermis, most patients develop the
early, localised form of Lyme disease, which is characterised by erythema
migrans and influenza-like symptoms. This disease may also affect the heart,
nervous system and joints. The neurological findings of this disease may
include peripheral and central nervous system signs.
A 21-year-old woman attended a family medicine outpatient clinic complaining
of unexplained pain and muscle power loss in her lower extremities. The
problem had started in her right leg 3 months earlier and worsened in the
last week. She had a neurology consultation and was hospitalised. Her
neurological examination revealed bilateral facial paralysis and sensory
impairment. Immunoglobulin M antibody to B. burgdorferi was positive on
Western blotting in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid. The patient was
diagnosed with subacute neuroborreliosis and treated.

Acta Neurol Belg. 2009 Dec;109(4):326-9.

Koc F, Bozdemir H, Pekoz T, Aksu HS, Ozcan S, Kurdak H.

Department of Neurology, Cukurova University School of Medicine, Adana,
Turkey.
koc.filiz@gmail.com

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Presence of Borrelia burgdorferi in endomyocardial biopsies http://lymebook.com/fight/presence-of-borrelia-burgdorferi-in-endomyocardial-biopsies/ http://lymebook.com/fight/presence-of-borrelia-burgdorferi-in-endomyocardial-biopsies/#respond Mon, 11 Jan 2010 03:40:04 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=765 Full article:

http://www.springerlink.com/content/b8x4742136623114/

Excerpt:

Abstract Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) represents the third most common cause of heart failure and the most frequent cause of heart transplantation. Infectious, mostly viral, and autoimmune mechanisms, together with genetic abnormalities, have been reported as three major causes of DCM. We hypothesized that Lyme disease (LD), caused by spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), might be an important cause of new-onset unexplained DCM in patients living in a highly endemic area for LD such as the Czech Republic.

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Asymptomatic, Transient Complete Heart Block in a Pediatric Patient with Lyme Disease http://lymebook.com/fight/asymptomatic-transient-complete-heart-block-in-a-pediatric-patient-with-lyme-disease/ http://lymebook.com/fight/asymptomatic-transient-complete-heart-block-in-a-pediatric-patient-with-lyme-disease/#respond Thu, 31 Dec 2009 05:20:28 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=729 Lyme Disease, caused by the spirochete Borrellia burgdorferi, is the most common vector-borne disease in the United States. Clinically, it primarily affects the skin, joints, nervous system, and heart. Lyme carditis occurs in 4%-10% of adults with Lyme disease. Transient variable-level atrioventricular blocks, occurring in 77% of adults with Lyme carditis, are the most common cardiac manifestation. Up to 50% of Lyme carditis patients may develop complete heart block. The incidence of Lyme carditis in the pediatric population is not well established. We present a pediatric patient with a transient asymptomatic complete heart block resulting from Lyme carditis, an under-recognized complication of Lyme disease in the pediatric population.

Clinical Pediatrics, Vol. 49, No. 1, 82-85 (2010)
DOI: 10.1177/0009922808330784
Asymptomatic, Transient Complete Heart Block in a Pediatric Patient with Lyme Disease
 
Alan K. Heckler, DO National Capitol Military Children’s Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC, alan.heckler@nccpeds.com

Daniel Shmorhun, MD

National Capitol Military Children’s Center, Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC

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Neurological manifestations of Lyme disease in children http://lymebook.com/fight/neurological-manifestations-of-lyme-disease-in-children/ http://lymebook.com/fight/neurological-manifestations-of-lyme-disease-in-children/#respond Tue, 24 Nov 2009 07:21:57 +0000 http://lymebook.com/fight/?p=540 Lyme Disease is transmitted by an arthropod, the Ixodes dammini tick. The spirochete causing the disease is the Borrelia burgdorferi.

Over the past nine years, we have treated over three hundred children for Lyme Disease in the hospital because they had significant neurologic manifestations of Lyme Disease or, in the minority of cases, an arthritis necessitating hospitalization for intravenous antibiotics.

It is impossible to know how many children have Lyme Disease in our area. One pediatrician with a very large practice sees at least three ECM rashes a day and places the children on either Amoxicillin or penicillin for twenty-one days. Obviously, the majority of the children who are seen early on who manifest the rash do not go on to have chronic problems, but a small percentage do.

In some of our communities with populations of 20,000-25,000 people, as many as sixty percent of the ticks are carrying the Borrelia spirochete so the chance for an infection is very high.

Since 1982, I have seen a large number of children who have had neurologic symptoms due to Lyme Disease. Many of these children are not diagnosed initially because their complaints are vague and thought to be all functional. I have treated a patient who has been sick for five years. Others were sick three and four years before being diagnosed. Recently, we have become more concerned about children with, what are considered, vague symptoms and are becoming more aggressive in diagnosing and treating.

I have seen children develop neurologic symptoms within a few weeks after a tick bite. Others will not develop the symptoms for one year or more.

Less than fifty percent of the children even remember being bitten by a tick and even a smaller percentage than that remember any ECM rash.

The parents recall the children having a flu-like illness that preceded their developing these rather persistent symptoms and usually that flu-like illness will occur six weeks or more after the tick bite or the exposure to the ticks. Many parents claim that after this “flu-like illness,” the child never was well again. The majority, over ninety percent, of the children that we have treated complain of headache. The headache, in a few cases, has been very acute accompanied by papilledema but in the majority of cases the headache comes on gradually, becomes quite persistent and does not respond to over-the-counter analgesics.

In addition to the headache, the children complain of photophobia, dizziness, a stiff neck, backache, somnolence and, those that are in school, have problems with memory and difficulty concentrating. Some patients have developed progressive weakness.

The parents complain that preschoolers develop mood swings and become very irritable and they see a personality change.

Among the children that are school-age and those who are in adolescence, chest pain is a very frequent complaint. At least seventy percent have complained of chest pain. About fifty percent have complained of abdominal pain. More than half the children have arthralgia usually involving the knee and sometimes the wrist.

Other complaints include palpitations, tingling, numbness, rashes that come and go, usually malar rashes, and sore throats that are excruciatingly painful.

It is easy to see how this long list can be very non-specific and many of these children are thought to have functional problems.

Children present with central or peripheral nervous system manifestations frequently. The central nervous system manifestations include an encephalopathy. These children have difficulty with memory, concentration and learning new material in school. They have an excessive amount of fatigue and have a wake-sleep disturbance, either becoming hypersomniac or insomniac.

Rarely, we have seen children present with an encephalitic picture.

There have been reports of individuals having stroke from Lyme. We have one child who presented with the sudden onset of a hemiplegia and aphasia.

Patients may have involvement of the optic nerve with an optic neuritis or a papillitis, resultant vision loss.

Peripheral neuropathy with distal parasthesias, subtle weakness, diminished deep tendon reflexes have also been seen.

The laboratory work-up is rather unrevealing. CBC’s are almost always normal. Sed Rates of greater than 30 have occurred in only ten percent of the patients and we have had only two patients who have Sed Rates of 100 or more. EEG’s have been abnormal in one-third of the patients showing bilateral sharp waves and some slowing. The CAT Scans have been normal but a number of MRI’s have been abnormal showing evidence of increased signal in the white matter.

The decision to do a spinal tap on a patient with Lyme Disease is based on the physical findings. Obviously, if a patient has papilledema, they will be tapped after a CAT Scan or MRI shows no mass lesion. But in other cases, the decision to do the tap is based primarily on the need for additional diagnostic information or where there is a question as to whether the diagnosis is something other than Lyme. We have tapped about twenty-five [sic] patients so far. The majority have had normal spinal fluid findings. Usually, they have no elevation of their white cells. Protein and sugars are normal. Cultures are negative. Interestingly, however, at least fifty percent of them show increased pressure with opening pressures greater than 200, sometimes as high as 400. Every patient with papilledema has had a pressure of at least 300 or more except for one girl whose opening pressure was 260 but she had obvious papilledema and also loss of vision in her left eye. Eight of the patients had a pleocytosis with cells ranging from 60 to 700, predominantly lymphocytes. Only two patients showed a positive CSF titer.

The diagnosis of Lyme Disease is a clinical one. The serology, if positive, is helpful. We consider a positive serology as a 1:128 IFA; ELISA that is greater than .79. Urine antigens can also be measured. The tests on urine antigens are still considered investigational.

We will treat patients with negative serologies without hesitation if they truly have a number of the symptoms and are incapacitated by them. We have had children who have been out of school for an entire year because they have been too sick to leave the house.

Other children have had to give up all extracurricular activities, sports, etc. because they are too sick and too weak to participate. Every patient we have treated with the diagnosis of Neurologic Lyme Disease has had persistent complaints. These children have a headache and frequently chest pain. Many of them have seen numerous doctors without any specific diagnosis being made and many of them have had antibiotics for various reasons along the way, sore throats, otitis media, rash and, therefore, never developed an antibody response to their spirochetal infection.

The diagnosis of Neurologic Lyme Disease is a clinical one, not a laboratory one. If the patient’s symptoms are compatible with the diagnosis, the patient is ill, the disease is having a significant effect on the person’s ability to function, then they deserve treatment. I believe it is safer to be aggressive and treat someone under those circumstances than to allow them to continue suffering indefinitely.

Treatment consists of intravenous antibiotics, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime, ampicillin given for as long as is necessary, minimum of four-six weeks initially. Many patients are treated for months if they continue to be clinically ill.

Patients can take Benadryl if they develop pruritis. I encourage them to eat yogurt to try to prevent diarrhea while they are on the antibiotics. Aspirin is the best medication to relieve the pain but, because of the reluctance in the past of physicians to prescribe aspirin in children, many of them are given other NSAIDS.

During treatment and even afterward, they need to rest. They cannot resume full activity as soon as they have been treated. About twenty-five percent of the patients we have treated have had to be re-treated and of these re-treated, the vast majority then do well. Usually, if I treat them initially with ceftriaxone, I will re-treat them with either ceftriaxone or cefotaxime or ampicillin.

Many of the children I have seen with these complaints have been given the benefit of antibiotics by mouth to no avail. Once the patients have these neurologic complaints and, in some cases the positive neurologic findings, they truly deserve a course of aggressive intravenous antibiotic treatment, perhaps more than one time.

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