Archive for June, 2019

Can Lyme Disease Cause Depression?

https://www.amenclinics.com/blog/can-lyme-disease-cause-depression/

CAN LYME DISEASE CAUSE DEPRESSION?

Erin was just 9 years old, but she had already been plagued by depression and other issues for years. She had taken antidepressants and other medications, but they hadn’t helped her. In fact, they made her worse. When Erin started talking about suicide, her parents knew they had to do more for their daughter. They took her for a brain imaging test called SPECT that looks at activity and blood flow in the brain.

Erin’s brain scan did not look healthy. It showed notable overactivity, which can be an indicator of inflammation. Blood tests and lab work revealed that the young girl had Lyme disease as well as other issues. Antidepressants would never heal the underlying infection.

Lyme Disease in the Brain

Lyme disease is a bacterial infection that is transmitted through the bite of an infected deer tick. Untreated, Lyme disease and other infections can interfere with the immune system and lead to inflammation. They can also cause changes in the brain that impact moods, learning, and more.

On SPECT brain scans, infectious diseases like Lyme disease can make the brain look like it has been exposed to toxins. A toxic appearance is a sign of a troubled brain.

The Lyme-Mental Health Link

Many people are surprised to learn that infectious diseases, including Lyme disease, are a major contributor to mental illnesses and cognitive issues. Research shows that children who have had an infectious disease are significantly more likely to have mental health problems as they grow up. In a study that followed over 3.5 million people, scientists found a 62% increase in the risk for mood disorders if a person had been hospitalized for any type of infection.

Why Don’t Most Doctors Test for Lyme?

Unfortunately, few healthcare professionals are aware of the connection between infections like Lyme disease and psychiatric problems like depression. If you go to your doctor and tell them you have symptoms of depression, you’re likely to walk out of the appointment with a prescription for antidepressants. But it is unlikely that they will do testing for infectious diseases or brain imaging. Because of this, Lyme disease often goes undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, allowing the immune system disruption, systemic inflammation, and brain changes to worsen.

This needs to change.

Getting a comprehensive evaluation that includes brain imaging and lab screening tests helps provide a more accurate diagnosis, which is key for zeroing in on the proper treatment. As more people in the medical community become aware of the problem, infectious disease psychiatry is likely to emerge within the next 30 years as a major discipline of psychiatry.

Targeting the Infection to Help Treat the Depression

When it is caught early, Lyme disease can usually be treated effectively with antibiotics. When it has been present in your system for months or years and is accompanied by depression or other psychiatric or cognitive problems, additional treatments may be necessary. A comprehensive treatment program worked for 9-year-old Erin, who went from having depression and suicidal thoughts to experiencing a remarkable turnaround.

At Amen Clinics we have treated hundreds of patients with treatment-resistant psychiatric symptoms like depression who tested positive for Lyme disease. When their treatment plan included targeted solutions for the infection, they finally got the help they needed. If you or a loved one has symptoms of depression that aren’t responding to treatment, speak to a specialist about getting a full brain-body evaluation to discover if infection like Lyme disease might be the root cause. For more information, call 888-988-9319 or schedule a visit online.

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**Comment**

Great article and reminder that mental health issues can be driven or caused by infections.  Tons of articles have crossed my desk recently on how this is happening more and more.  A few examples:

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/03/24/cat-scratch-disease-caused-teens-schizophrenia-like-symptoms-report-says/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/11/lyme-disease-neurological-changes-in-children/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/07/28/stories-of-pandas/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/01/05/scary-side-of-childhood-strep/

https://www.mercurynews.com/2014/04/19/misdiagnosed-bipolar-one-girls-struggle-through-psych-wards-before-stanford-doctors-make-bold-diagnosis-and-treatment/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/10/01/panspandas-steroids-autoimmune-disease-lymemsids-the-need-for-medical-collaboration/

I could literally go on and on.  The main thing is many mental health professionals are putting out great articles we need to share with others:

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/07/missing-links-connect-the-dots-between-lyme-mental-health/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/02/16/lyme-is-all-in-your-head-a-wake-up-call-to-mental-health-professionals/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/08/07/understanding-and-treating-depersonalization-and-derealization/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/01/11/sick-shaming-of-lymemsids-patients/

Spread the word!

How a Tick Bite Left a Healthy Mum blind, Paralyzed and ‘Waiting to Die’

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/how-tick-bite-left-healthy-16193345

How a tick bite left a healthy mum blind, paralysed and ‘waiting to die’

EXCLUSIVE: Within days Christine Jennings started to feel ill, and today is blind, bed-bound and needs round-the-clock care
By Matt Roper
Christine’s life has been devastated by one tick bite (Image: Supplied)

Sitting on a park lawn as she played with her two-year-old daughter Christine Jennings had no idea her life was about to be ripped apart.

The mother-of-four had taken her children to Leicester’s Bradgate Park to get them away from paint fumes as she redecorated the family home.

It was a decision she has regretted every day since.

That night, as she got ready for bed, Christine, then aged 32, was horrified to find an insect attached to the side of her torso at the rib cage.

Screaming at the sight of the creepy crawly – a deer tick – which had buried into her skin, she managed to rip it out.

Three years later she would learn she had left the creature’s tiny head inside.

Within days Christine, a talented painter and interior designer, started getting pains all over her body, migraines and swollen knees.

She thought she had picked up a virus and put the headaches down to the paint fumes.

Christine, playing with her children, before the nightmare began (Image: Supplied)

Yet it was only the start of a harrowing litany of serious and irreversible health afflictions – made worse by what she claims was shocking NHS indifference to her plight – which would rob Christine of everything.

Today, aged 57, the once energetic and devoted mother is a prisoner in her own body – unable to move, blind, bed bound and confirmed to a dark room.

She is in constant and excruciating pain as, in her words, she lies “waiting to die”.

Christine had been infected by Lyme disease , carried by the tick which bit her on that summer outing in 1994.

The rare bacterial infection is transmitted by the black-legged tick which feed on deer.

It can be more effectively treated if diagnosed early – yet Christine claims NHS doctors have refused to diagnose her and now claims she is now being refused treatment which could improve her quality of life.

Remembering how her full and accomplished life suddenly went into freefall 25 years ago, she said: “I’d taken the kids out on a nature walk to get out of the house I was painting. I’d recently got divorced and we’d moved into a new home.

She got the tick bite in Leicester’s Bradgate Park (Image: Loughborough Echo)

“After we’d gone quite a distance I sat in the short grass with my youngest while the others played with the dog.

“We were a long way from the deers, I was wearing walking boots, jeans and a denim blouse.

“When I got home I carried on decorating and ended up going to bed in the early hours, which is when I discovered I’d got this insect attached to my rib cage.

“I only realised it was a tick when I couldn’t get it off and after a bit of panic I eventually managed to grasp the body and rip it off, which I later discovered was the worst thing to do because I’d left the head in.”

Lyme disease rarely infects people if the entire infected tick is removed from the body within 36 hours.

In Christine’s case, the head was discovered and surgically removed three years later.

Two weeks after being bitten Christine got a bulls-eye rash on her arm and decided to go to the doctor.

She said: “From that moment on my life never recovered.

The blood-sucking bug behind Lyme disease, the deer tick (Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

“I’d never been one for being ill or suffering from bugs or headaches.

“The symptoms were like a flu without the cold, a really bad migraine , head pain, neck pain, and swollen knees. I was so ill I couldn’t get out of bed.

“When I got the rash on my arm a week after coming down with the other symptoms, I went to the doctor, who dismissed it as ringworm.

I told him about the tick, but he said that I didn’t have to worry, that you only get things like that in America. So Lyme disease was dismissed right from the offset.”

Christine claims doctors continued to rule out Lyme disease as she was afflicted by more health problems, including back pain, knee problems, and tinnitus .

She said: “I was so immobile at times that I couldn’t stand up, go up the stairs or move around. I felt so ill.

“Within four years I was having to use a wheelchair if I wanted to get from A to B.

“Until then I didn’t know about Lyme disease but one day I was reading a magazine article about little known summer illnesses, and there was some information about it.

“The symptoms were identical to mine. The fact that it was carried by deers, and I had been in a deer park.

“Everything I had been experiencing fitted, but doctors wouldn’t accept it, they just dismissed any mention of Lyme disease.”

Within four years Christine had to use a wheelchair (Image: Supplied)

Unable to get a diagnosis that would allow her to get treatment, Christine’s health continued to deteriorate as the infection wreaked havoc on her body.

By 2000 it began to affect her eyes, and knowing that Lyme disease can cause blindness, she began a desperate search for experts who were researching or treating the disease in the hope of saving her sight.

During that time she managed to get six clinical diagnoses, outside the NHS, for Lyme disease.

After after meeting a specialist in Sunderland she started a three-year treatment programme, in which she received a dual combination of antibiotics through a Hickman line.

But she was devastated when she was told she was already too ill to continue the treatment.

The disease had been left too long and she had lost the chance to bring it under control.

By 2004 Christine had developed a rare combination of four eye diseases.

Today she is confined to a dark room and in constant pain (Image: Supplied)

She says when a “staggered” doctor at a specialist eye hospital examined her, he found only three other similar cases – and all were as a result of Lyme disease.

Christine was passed on to a doctor who had worked with Lyme disease in the US “had no doubt” she had the disease and suggested a treatment regime involving neurologists and other professionals.

But Christine claims: “Then he received a letter from a public health officer and he told me he’d been told go to down a different path.

“So even though this rare combination of eye diseases needed specialist treatment, I was denied that care.

“I believe they were more worried that I would file a lawsuit against them if they acknowledged it really was Lyme than they were worried about my life.

“But that was never the case. I would have been happy to have had my sight saved and received the medical care I had been fighting for for years.

A watercolour painted by Christine before her illness left her unable to move (Image: Supplied)

“I’ve lost half of my life to this disease. My mental and emotional ability to carry on fighting is rapidly diminishing now.

“I can’t cope and the sense of hopelessness, knowing that there is no acknowledgement on any level, is very distressing.”

Christine says she has considered ending her life – but can’t do that to her children and grandchildren.

She said: “Right now, I’m just existing. I feel that I’m just lying here waiting to die.

“I’m bed bound, I can’t move around without assistance, I need 24-hour care day and night, I’ve had seven mini strokes, three bleeds on the brain, I’ve got arthritis , muscle wasting, bowel problems, I have no use of my left side, and I need help to eat, drink, shower, and get dressed.

“I’ve lost all independence and I’m now totally blind.

“The iris on one of my eyes has split open and blood vessels are exposed and are pushing through to lay on the surface of the eye.

“So even though I’m blind I have to stay in the dark as the slightest bit of light affects all the nerves in my eye and increases the pain in my brain.”

“Some days I don’t cope at all. Other days I want to end it, but I couldn’t take my own life because I’ve got four children, and grandchildren, and I couldn’t do that to them.

“Two of my daughters care for me, and without them I wouldn’t get through my days or nights.

“I’m never going to be cured now, it’s too late. I’m never going to get my sight back. A lot of what is wrong with me is damaged and cannot be put right.

“But I could be supported and my quality of life could be improved. That is all I am asking for.”

A spokesperson at Leicester’s Hospitals said: “We are sorry to find out Christine is unhappy with her care.

“Christine has been invited to appointments this year, but has not attended them.

“We have not yet received a formal complaint about her current concerns so would encourage her to contact our Patient Information and Liaison Service, and we will happily look into them for her.”

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**Comment**

Expect to hear more stories just like this one. This isn’t going away, in fact it’s spreading, and authorities are still in the Dark Ages.

This story also highlights the importance of early diagnosis and treatment. Even if you’ve had a delay, delay it no further and get to a ILADS trained practitioner.  This does not get better on its own but will worsen until there is irreparable damage.

Appropriate treatment is everything.

If you do not know the Lyme literate doctors in your area, contact your local support group.  They do.

Former CDC Chief Pleads Guilty in Connection with Misconduct Case, Won’t Serve Jail Time

https://www.foxnews.com/us/former-head-of-the-cdc-pleads-guilty-to-violation  (News Story Here)

Former CDC chief pleads guilty in connection with misconduct case, won’t serve jail time

The former head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) has pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct related to his arrest last August for alleged sexual misconduct and will not serve jail time, Fox News has learned.

Dr. Thomas Frieden, also a former New York City health commissioner, appeared Tuesday in Brooklyn Criminal Court.

Under the terms of his plea, Frieden’s case will be sealed and dismissed in a year if he isn’t arrested during that time.

Frieden was the director of the CDC from 2009 to 2017.

Frieden was arrested in August. A woman he knew had accused Frieden of grabbing her buttocks on Oct. 20, 2017, in his Brooklyn home.

He did not admit guilt in the groping allegation.

He and his attorney declined to comment.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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**Comment**

This isn’t the first time CDC directors have been guilty:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/01/31/another-cdc-conflict-of-interest-director-resigns/

It becomes clearer all the time, why we are in the fix we are in.

Watch Today’s TBDWG Meeting (June 4,2019)

https://player.cloud.wowza.com/hosted/kyzclbpj/player.html

Tick-Borne Disease Working Group Meeting – June 4, 2019 Meeting #9

 

How Vector-Borne Diseases Impact Heart Health

https://www.galaxydx.com/bartonella-lyme-impact-heart-health/

How Vector-Borne Diseases Impact Heart Health

LET’S SUFFICE IT TO SAY, HEART ISSUES WITH TICK BORNE ILLNESS IS NOT RARE.