Archive for August, 2017

FREE: View “Under Our Skin” Best Primer on Lyme Disease

http://www.veoh.com/watch/v21055812yWtmpgB8  Approx. One hour forty five minutes.

If you have not watched the incredible documentary, “Under Our Skin,” please do so.  It reveals what patients and the doctors who dare to treat them go through.  It reveals the controversy up front and personally.  You will learn that Lyme is congenital, very probably a STD, and devastating.

The documentary covers so much ground but unfortunately doesn’t talk about the coinfections that typically come with Lyme (borrelia).

Predators Curb Lyme Disease

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/02/science/ticks-lyme-disease-foxes-martens.html?smid=fb-share  Lyme Disease’s Worst Enemy? It Might Be Foxes
By AMY HARMON AUG. 2, 2017

It is August, the month when a new generation of black-legged ticks that transmit Lyme and other diseases are hatching. On forest floors, suburban estates and urban parks, they are looking for their first blood meal. And very often, in the large swaths of North America and Europe where tick-borne disease is on the rise, they are feeding on the ubiquitous white-footed mice and other small mammals notorious for harboring pathogens that sicken humans.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. A new study suggests that the rise in tick-borne disease may be tied to a dearth of traditional mouse predators, whose presence might otherwise send mice scurrying into their burrows. If mice were scarcer, larval ticks, which are always born uninfected, might feed on other mammals and bird species that do not carry germs harmful to humans. Or they could simply fail to find that first meal. Ticks need three meals to reproduce; humans are at risk of contracting diseases only from ticks that have previously fed on infected hosts.

For the study, Tim R. Hofmeester, then a graduate student at Wageningen University in the Netherlands and the lead researcher of the study, placed cameras in 20 plots across the Dutch countryside to measure the activity of foxes and stone martens, key predators of mice. Some were in protected areas, others were in places where foxes are heavily hunted.

Over two years, he also trapped hundreds of mice — and voles, another small mammal — in the same plots, counted how many ticks were on them, and tested the ticks for infection with Lyme and two other disease-causing bacteria. To capture additional ticks, he dragged a blanket across the ground.

In the plots where predator activity was higher, he found only 10 to 20 percent as many newly hatched ticks on the mice. Thus, there would be fewer ticks to pass along pathogens to next generation of mice. In the study, the density of infected “nymphs,” as the adolescent ticks are called, was at 15 percent of levels in areas where foxes and stone martens were less active.

“The predators appear to break the cycle of infection,’’ said Dr. Hofmeester, who earned his Ph.D. after the study.

Despite stuffing his pant legs into his socks and using permethrin, a tick repellent, he said he removed more than 100 ticks from his own body.

Interestingly, the predator activity in Dr. Hofmeester’s plots did not decrease the density of the mouse population itself, as some ecologists had theorized it might. Instead, the lower rates of infected ticks, Dr. Hofmeester suggested in the paper, published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, may be the result of small mammals curtailing their own movement when predators are around.

“This is the first paper to empirically show that predators are good for your health with respect to tick-borne pathogens,” said Dr. Taal Levi, an ecologist at Oregon State University who was not involved in the study. “We’ve had the theory but this kind of field work is really hard and takes years.” He also said of Dr. Hofmeester, “Wow, I have to send him an email.”

Habitat fragmentation, hunting and the removal of larger predators like cougars may all figure into the dwindling of small mammal predators like foxes, weasels, fishers and martens, Dr. Levi said. If the study’s results are borne out by more research, public health officials might be moved to try interventions like protecting foxes or factoring the habitat needs of particular predators into land-use decisions to foster their population size. Nothing else — like culling deer or spraying lawns with tick-killing pesticide — has worked so far to stem the incidence of tick-borne disease, which is spreading in the Midwestern United States, in parts of Canada and at higher altitudes across Europe.

“The takeaway is, we shouldn’t underestimate the role predators can play in reducing Lyme disease risk,” said Richard S. Ostfeld, a senior scientist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, who originally speculated on the importance of small mammal predators in a 2004 paper. “Let’s not discount these cryptic interactions that we don’t see very often unless we put camera traps in the woods.”

Correction: August 3, 2017
Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article incorrectly described the number of newly hatched ticks found on mice in areas of a study where predator activity was higher. It was 10 to 20 percent, not 5 to 10 percent. The density of infected adolescent ticks in areas where foxes and stone martens were active was also incorrectly described. It was 15 percent, not 6 percent, of levels in areas where foxes and stone martens were less active.

CDC Maps For Lyme Disease – NOT Accurate

Published on Aug 1, 2017

At Lymedisease.org’s June board meeting, CEO Lorraine Johnson presented information on how different sources map Lyme disease.

The CDC is systematically under reporting Lyme in the South and West causing researchers and medical professionals to use circular reasoning and who quip, “There is no Lyme here because there are no reported cases and there are no reported cases because there isn’t any Lyme here.”  

Please remember the little girls from Arkansas who could not get treatment because the head of infectious diseases claimed there were no reported cases in Arkansas and even admitted that they have the ticks that carry Lyme.  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/09/24/arkansas-kids-denied-lyme-treatment/

Then they had to recant that statement thanks to the girls’ mother who wasn’t having it:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/03/02/hold-the-press-arkansas-has-lyme/

The next order of business is changing the surveillance criteria for reporting purposes.  Currently, if someone makes the CDC’s stringent criteria, I tell them that they’ve won the Lyme Lotto.  Few make the cut.  I didn’t, my husband didn’t, nor has hardly anyone else I work with.

CDC Laboratory Evidence for surveillance includes:   https://wwwn.cdc.gov/nndss/conditions/lyme-disease/case-definition/2017/  F

A positive culture for B. burgdorferi, OR
A positive two-tier test. (This is defined as a positive or equivocal enzyme immunoassay (EIA) or immunofluorescent assay (IFA) followed by a positive Immunoglobulin M1 (IgM) or Immunoglobulin G 2 (IgG) western immunoblot (WB) for Lyme disease) OR
A positive single-tier IgG2 WB test for Lyme disease3.

1. IgM WB is considered positive when at least two of the following three bands are present: 24 kilodalton (kDa) outer surface protein C (OspC)*, 39 kDa basic membrane protein A (BmpA), and 41 kDa (Fla). Disregard IgM results for specimens collected >30 days after symptom onset.

2. IgG WB is considered positive when at least five of the following 10 bands are present: 18 kDa, 24 kDa (OspC)*, 28 kDa, 30 kDa, 39 kDa (BmpA), 41 kDa flagellin (Fla), 45 kDa, 58 kDa (not GroEL), 66 kDa, and 93 kDa.

3. While a single IgG WB is adequate for surveillance purposes, a two-tier test is still recommended for patient diagnosis.

*Depending upon the assay, OspC could be indicated by a band of 21, 22, 23, 24 or 25 kDA.

Confirmed

A case of EM with exposure in a high incidence state (as defined above), OR
A case of EM with laboratory evidence of infection and a known exposure in a low incidence state, OR
Any case with at least one late manifestation that has laboratory evidence of infection.

In my case I had one positive band and an indeterminate in the IgM, and only 2 positive and 1 indeterminate for the IgG, yet I had migrating joint pain, severe fatigue, saw disco lights in my head, wild heart palpitations that would wake me up in the middle of the night (felt like a heart attack), chest pain, dizziness, horrific insomnia, pelvic pain, stiff and painful spine and neck, severe meningal headaches, confusion and memory loss, mood swings (rage, depression, couldn’t handle stress), and more.  

My husband and I were both pictures of health prior to this.

Thankfully a LLMD used the IGeneX extended Western Blot which is far more sensitive than the CDC’s two-tiered tests and diagnosed us clinically based on symptoms as well as evidence through testing.  For my story:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/02/24/pcos-lyme-my-story/

The plot thickens when you understand that coinfections are often not reportable to the CDC in many states.  There is absolutely no way the CDC is getting an accurate picture of Lyme/MSIDS land.

Time for things to change.  And change they must.

Science For Sale

http://gmwatch.org/en/news/latest-news/17764-uncovered-monsanto-campaign-to-get-seralini-study-retracted  Published 02 August, 2017  GM Watch

It seems that about every other day uncovers some sort of fraud when it comes to public health and “accepted” science.  At the end of the article I give links to more fraud – directly related to research being done on Lyme Disease and other tick borne illnesses.  This article by GM Watch is the recent discovery that the author of a retracted study by Gilles-Eric Seralini, which shows the toxic effects of Roundup, entered into a contract with Monsanto shortly before the retraction.

The study clearly showed that very low doses of Roundup had toxic effects on rats including liver and kidney damage and initiated cancer tumors.

“Monsanto scientist David Saltmiras admitted to orchestrating a third party campaign in which scientists who were apparently independent of Monsanto would bombard the editor-in-chief of the journal Food and Chemical Toxicology with letters demanding he retract the study.”

“Now that Monsanto’s involvement in the retraction of the Séralini paper is out in the open, FCT and Hayes should do the decent thing and issue a formal apology to Prof Séralini and his team. FCT cannot and should not reinstate the paper, because it is now published by another journal. But it needs to draw a line under this shameful episode, admit that it handled it badly, and declare its support for scientific independence and objectivity.”

The third party campaign tactic was used in the tobacco industry and I believe it is also being used in research regarding tick borne illness.  The people doing the CDC/NIH studies and the people sticking up for them are all in a group I like to call The Cabal.  Most receive money for patents for everything from vaccines to test kits, keep pushing the same agenda (Borrelia isn’t persistent and 21 days of doxy will cure everyone), keep research from being published that does not agree with their agenda, and foster an environment of fear in the research community which essentially states, “Conform or you will be ridiculed.”

It appears the days of scientific integrity are gone.

More fraud:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/01/13/lyme-science-owned-by-good-ol-boys/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/01/02/fake-science/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/01/28/sit-down-science/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/11/29/spider-attacks-cdc/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/01/19/cdc-denies-to-downplay-lyme-epidemic/

Transmission of Borrelia Miyamotoi Sensu Lato Relapsing Fever Group Spirochetes in Relation to Duration of Attachment by Ixodes Scapularis Nymphs

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ttbdis.2017.03.008

Transmission of Borrelia miyamotoi sensu lato relapsing fever group spirochetes in relation to duration of attachment by Ixodes scapularis nymphs

Nicole E.Breuner, Marc C.Dolan, Adam J.Replogle, Christopher Sexton, Andrias Hojgaard, Karen A.Boegler, Rebecca J.Clark, Lars Eisen
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases, Volume 8, Issue 5, August 2017, Pages 677-681.

Abstract

Borrelia miyamotoi sensu lato relapsing fever group spirochetes are emerging as causative agents of human illness (Borrelia miyamotoi disease) in the United States. Host-seeking Ixodes scapularis ticks are naturally infected with these spirochetes in the eastern United States and experimentally capable of transmitting B. miyamotoi. However, the duration of time required from tick attachment to spirochete transmission has yet to be determined.

We therefore conducted a study to assess spirochete transmission by single transovarially infected I. scapularis nymphs to outbred white mice at three time points post-attachment (24, 48, and 72 h) and for a complete feed ( > 72–96 h). Based on detection of B. miyamotoi DNA from the blood of mice fed on by an infected nymph, the probability of spirochete transmission increased from 10% by 24 h of attachment (evidence of infection in 3/30 mice) to 31% by 48 h (11/35 mice), 63% by 72 h (22/35 mice), and 73% for a complete feed (22/30 mice).

We conclude that
(i) single I. scapularis nymphs effectively transmit B. miyamotoi relapsing fever group spirochetes while feeding,
(ii) transmission can occur within the first 24 h of nymphal attachment, and
(iii) the probability of transmission increases with the duration of nymphal attachment.

**Comment**

I thank the authors for stating transmission can occur in 24 hours and that transmission increases with attachment time.  

At first I thought I’d posted this before; however,  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/07/18/transmission-time-for-borrelia-mayonii-by-nymphal-ticks-mouse-model/ in this study, No evidence of infection with or exposure to B. mayonii occurred in mice that were fed upon by a single infected nymph for 24 or 48 h. The probability of transmission by a single infected nymphal tick was 31% after 72 h of attachment and 57% for a complete feed.”

In essence the newer study found greater evidence of infection in shorter transmission times.  

Transmission time research, similarly to geographical maps of tick populations, has been used against patients for decades. Please read all transmission time studies with healthy skepticism, realizing many patients have become infected in under the oft quoted 24-72 hours. Thankfully, the CDC is now telling doctors to treat patients empirically, without waiting for test results, if they suspect tick borne illness. https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/07/12/start-treatment-if-tbis-are-suspected/
https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/04/14/transmission-time-for-lymemsids-infection/ Bob Giguere of IGeneX states a case of a little girl who went outside to play about 8:30a.m. and came inside at 10:30 with an attached tick above her right eye. By 2 o’clock, she had developed the facial palsy. At the hospital she was told it couldn’t be Lyme as the tick hadn’t been attached long enough. They offered a neuro-consult…..(not treatment)

http://www.clinicalmicrobiologyandinfection.com/article/S1198-743X(15)00294-3/pdfWhile Borrelia Burgdorferi (Bb) and Borrelia Miyamotoi (Bm) can both be transmitted by the same hard-bodied (ixodid) tick species, Bm is put with the relapsing fever group – normally transmitted by soft-bodied ticks.  Bm  may cause severe disease, including meningoencephalitis. The most common clinical manifestations of B. miyamotoi infection are fever, fatigue, headache, chills, myalgia, arthralgia, and nausea. Symptoms of B. miyamotoi infection generally resolve within a week of the start of antibiotic therapy. B. miyamotoi infection should be considered in patients with acute febrile illness who have been exposed to Ixodes ticks in a region where Lyme disease occurs. Because clinical manifestations are nonspecific, etiologic diagnosis requires confirmation by blood smear examination, PCR, antibody assay, in vitro cultivation, and/or isolation by animal inoculation. Antibiotics that have been used effectively include doxycycline for uncomplicated B. miyamotoi infection in adults and ceftriaxone or penicillin G for meningoencephalitis.