Archive for February, 2021

Yolanda Hadid on Lyme: “If it Weren’t For My Children, I Wouldn’t Be Here Today”

https://www.vogue.co.uk/beauty/article/yolanda-hadid-lyme-disease

Yolanda Hadid on Lyme: “If it weren’t for my children, I wouldn’t be here today”

Data Disaster: Call For a CDC Investigation FREE Online Event Feb. 17, 2021

https://standforhealthfreedom.com/CDC-investigation/?  Register Here

Data Disaster: Call for a CDC Investigation 

iu-17

A Free Online Event

Wednesday, February 17, 2021 – 6 p.m. EST / 3 p.m. PST / 5 p.m. CST

In March 2020, the CDC abruptly changed how death certificates were recorded. While this might seem like a mere formality, the CDC only made this change for one type of death — COVID-19 — and circumvented multiple federal laws to do so.

Join our panel of experts — researchers, doctors, lawyers, medical ethicists, educators and lawmakers — as they take an in-depth look at the CDC’s actions and the dire consequences they’ve had on all of American society. This includes unending lockdowns, school and business closures, an increase in suicides and mental health issues, economic hardship and despair, loved ones being forced to die all alone, and many more atrocities that have been inflicted on individuals in the name of “protecting public health.”

Tune in to Learn:

  • Why we should be concerned about death certificate data.
  • Why accuracy, integrity and transparency are so important during a public health crisis.
  • How the CDC set the stage for widespread devastation — physical, psychological and economic.
  • Simple steps we can take so that incidents of this magnitude never happen again.

Watch the Live Event Here

Panelists

Sayer Ji (Moderator)

Sayer Ji (Moderator)

Founder of GreenMedInfo and Co-founder, Stand for Health Freedom

Dr. Peter Breggin

Dr. Peter Breggin

World-renowned psychiatrist and medical ethicist

Mary Starrett

Mary Starrett

Board of Commissioners Chair, Yamhill County, Oregon

Dr. David Martin

Dr. David Martin

Founder and CEO of M·CAM Inc. and University of Virginia Batten Fellow

Mark Thielman

Mark Thielman

School superintendent, Alsea School District

Ana Garner, Esq.

Ana Garner, Esq.

Attorney and legal mediator

Dennis Linthicum

Dennis Linthicum

Oregon state senator

Dr. James Lyons-Weiler

Dr. James Lyons-Weiler

Biomedical research scientist and public health policy journal editor-in-chief

Dr. Henry Ealy

Dr. Henry Ealy

Naturopathic physician and biomedical research scientist

 
What You Should Know

We believe that a federal investigation would reveal that the CDC irreparably compromised data quality during a time of public crisis through its apparent failure to follow established laws for changing the recording of COVID-19 mortality metrics.

The CDC’s actions come with great costs to society. Had COVID-19 data not been manipulated, our state of emergency conditions and responses would have likely been vastly different, with far fewer negative consequences to the American public. 

It is not acceptable that the agency that is entrusted with protecting the health of our country set the stage for widespread national devasta

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**Comment**

Many do not know that the CDC started out in 1946 as mosquito spraying company:  https://www.cdc.gov/about/history/index.html  A year later it paid $10 for 15 acres in Atlanta where headquarters have been ever since.

Deaths due to or exacerbated by tick-borne illness have been denied for decades, minimizing the impacts of this complex illness.  Currently there is a bill in the NY Assembly requiring the state to track Lyme-related deaths:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2021/02/15/ny-senate-passes-bill-requiring-state-to-track-lyme-related-deaths/

All tick-borness illnesses should be reportable to the state.  Since many are not reportable, this too minimizes the problem.  You can’t recognize something that isn’t being tracked or tracked properly.  This is how the CDC/IDSA/NIH continues to downplay this plague.  The continuing mythology surrounding all aspects of this devastating illness confines it into a simplistic box when in fact the only box it fits into is Pandora’s.

Meanwhile, they’ve rigged everything to be COVIDfalsely inflating numbers.  Don’t be duped.  The CDC has a reason for everything it does, from downplaying Lyme/MSIDS to hyping COVID.

I agree with Dr. Weiler.  We need to end the current form of American Corporatist Fascism by walking away from the CDC/NIAID/FDA:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/09/01/it-is-time-to-reboot-public-health-time-for-a-cdc-niaid-fda-walk-away-movement/

These organizations have repeatedly proven they can not be trusted with public health.  

2020 Report to Congress By the Tick-borne Disease Working Group

https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/tbdwg-2020-report_to-ongress-final.pdf  Report Here

Contributions:

  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
  • James J. Berger, MS, MT(ASCP), SBB
  • B. Kaye Hayes, MPA

Working Group Members

  • David Hughes Walker, MD (Co-Chair)
  • Leigh Ann Soltysiak, MS (Co-Chair)
  • Charles Benjamin (Ben) Beard, PhD
  • Scott Palmer Commins, BS, MD, PhD
  • Angel M. Davey, PhD
  • Dennis M. Dixon, PhD
  • Sam T. Donta, MD
  • Adalbeto Perez de Leon, DVM, MS, PhD
  • Kevin R. Macaluso, PhD
  • Eugene David Shapiro, MD
  • Patricia Smith, BA
  • Leith Jason States, MD, MPH
  • CAPT Scott J. Cooper, MMSc, PA-C
  • CDR Todd Myers, PhD, HCLD (ABB), MB (ASCP)

Executive Summary p. 1

Chapter 1:Background p. 4

Chapter 2: Methods of the Working Group p. 10

Chapter 3: Tick Biology, Ecology, and Control p. 14

Chapter 4: Clinical Manifestations, Diagnosis, and Diagnostics p. 28

Chapter 5: Causes, Pathogenesis, and Pathophysiology p. 44

Chapter 6: Treatment p. 51

Chapter 7: Clinician and Public Education, Patient Access to Care p. 59

Chapter 8: Epidemiology and Surveillance p. 84

Chapter 9: Federal Inventory p. 93

Chapter 10: Public Input p. 98

Chapter 11: Looking Forward Conclusion p. 103

Conclusion p. 112

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For more articles on the TBDWG:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/?s=TBDWG
 
Nothing has changed in Lyme-land.  
The Cabal wins again.

NY Senate Passes Bill Requiring State to Track Lyme-Related Deaths

https://www.lymedisease.org/nys-lyme-deaths-bill/

NY Senate passes bill requiring state to track Lyme-related deaths

Feb. 12, 2021

Pandas & Lyme in a 7-Year Old

https://danielcameronmd.com/pandas-and-lyme-disease-in-a-7-year-old-child/

PANDAS AND LYME DISEASE IN A 7-YEAR-OLD CHILD

PANDAS-Lyme-disease

Hello, and welcome to another Inside Lyme Podcast. I am your host Dr. Daniel Cameron. In this podcast, I will be discussing the case of a 7-year-old child who was initially diagnosed with PANDAS and later, Lyme disease.

The article by Cross et al. entitled “Case Report: PANDAS and Persistent Lyme disease with Neuropsychiatric Symptoms: Treatment, Resolution and Recovery” was published in Frontiers in Psychiatry. [1]

The 7-year-old girl developed multiple physical and neuropsychiatric symptoms six months after travelling to a tick endemic region of the U.S. During this period, she was treated for 3 separate strep infections and was subsequently diagnosed with Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal infections (PANDAS). PANDAS was considered based on classic symptoms and a history of strep, a positive ASO titer and a slightly elevated DNase B titer.

However, despite treatment, the patient’s symptoms continued to worsen. Additional testing revealed that she was also positive by CDC’s criteria for Lyme disease. The Lyme EIA and western blot IgM were positive (with 2 of 3 bands). The western blot IgG was positive for 3 of 10 bands at the IGeneX lab. Her B. henselae IgG was positive at Quest labs. Her IgG Mycoplasma and IgG Babesia duncani antibodies were positive at IGeneX.

Dr. Charles Ray Jones, co-author and treating physician, describes the patient’s broad range of symptoms.

Neuropsychiatric symptoms

On her first visit, “the patient presented with crying, anxiety, headache, joint pain, decreased cognitive functioning, fatigue, nighttime awakening and an extreme fear of sleeping alone.”

The patient’s symptoms were extensive, Jones explains, and included:

• Obsessions, compulsions
• ADHD-like behavior
• Decline in school work
• Separation anxiety
• Panic attacks
• Muscle and joint pain
• Mood lability
• Aggressive behavior
• Fatigue
• Headaches
• Difficulty sleeping
• Word selection problems
• Cognitive decline
• Irrational fears (would not sleep alone)

Functional decline 

The young girl was considered a gifted child and excelled in academics. But cognitive symptoms emerged. She reportedly told her mother, “Mom, something happened to my brain.”

“The patient regressed from being a year ahead of her class in math, to being unable to add beyond the number 10. She began having trouble comprehending more difficult reading,” the authors explain.

“During a ride home with her mother, the patient asked, ‘Who are you? What’s your name again?’ And ‘I know you are mommy but what’s your name?’”

Lyme disease, PANDAS and PANS

PANDAS may be diagnosed when a strep infection triggers multiple neurologic and psychiatric symptoms. PANS or Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome, on the other hand, may be triggered by other bacterial, viral or fungal infections. Researchers believe that Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacteria that causes Lyme disease can trigger PANS in some patients.

Lyme disease, PANS and PANDAS can present with similar symptoms. Dr. Bransfield, a psychiatrist who specializes in tick-borne diseases, describes a broad range of neuropsychiatric symptoms that he has seen in his Lyme disease patients. [2]

These include: behaviors associated with developmental disorders or autism spectrum disorder, schizoaffective disorders, bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety disorders (panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, intrusive symptoms), eating disorder, decreased libido, sleep disorder, addiction, opioid addiction, cognitive impairments, dementia, seizure disorders, suicide, violence, anhedonia, depersonalization, dissociative episodes, derealization and other impairments.”

Treatment

According to the authors, the child was treated with multiple courses of oral and IV antibiotics including: intravenous ceftriaxone, Omnicef 300 mg BID, Zithromax 250 mg BID, 500 mg BID and Tindamax 250 mg QD (Saturdays and Sundays only), Bactrim and Mepron. Despite this, her symptoms continued and the Cunningham Panel™ of tests was ordered.

Cunningham Panel™ and IVIG

“The Cunningham Panel was ordered to assess the presence of antineuronal antibodies against specific neuronal receptors,” the authors write. “If the Cunningham Panel is positive or strongly positive, that would be an indication that one has an autoimmune problem that needs to be treated with IVIG, as well as antibiotics,” explains Jones.

READ MORE: Highlights from the case report

Panel results indicated the patient had elevated levels for 3 out of 4 autoantibodies: Dopamine D1 Receptor (DRD1), Dopamine D2L Receptor (DRD2L), and Tubulin (TUB).

“Based upon the patient’s Cunningham Panel tests results, the decision was made to prescribe IVIG,” the authors write.

“Over a span of 31 consecutive months of treatment with various antimicrobials and 3 courses of IVIG she experienced complete remission and remains symptom free at the time of this publication.”

Outcome

“Currently this patient appears to be fully recovered and has been discharged from the care of the pediatric Lyme disease specialist. She is asymptomatic and performing academically at the “top” of her class according to her mother,” the authors write.

According to Jones, “multiple concomitant infections may be involved and require treatment to effectively resolve symptoms. Improvement in neuropsychiatric symptoms does not typically occur unless all co-infections are addressed and resolved.”

This podcast addresses the following questions:

  1. What is Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal infections (PANDAS)?
  2. What are the typical symptoms of PANDAS?
  3. What are the similarities between Lyme disease, PANS and PANDAS?
  4. Why was Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses considered?
  5. Why was the name Pediatric Acute-onset Neuropsychiatric Syndrome (PANS) introduced?
  6. What is the Cunningham Panel™ of tests and why was it ordered?
  7. What tests did the girl have that supported the diagnosis of a tick-borne illness?
  8. Can you discuss the range of symptoms this patient experienced?
  9. Can you discuss the girl’s treatment for PANS?
  10. Can you discuss the girl’s treatment for Lyme disease, Bartonella, and Babesia duncani?
    Thanks for listening to another Inside Lyme Podcast. You can read more about these cases in my show notes and on my website @DanielCameronMD.com. As always, it is your likes, comments, reviews, and shares that help spread the word about Lyme disease. Until next time on Inside Lyme.

Please remember that the advice given is general and not intended as specific advice as to any particular patient. If you require specific advice, then please seek that advice from an experienced professional.

Inside Lyme Podcast Series

This Inside Lyme case series will be discussed on my Facebook and made available on podcast and YouTube.  As always, it is your likes, comments, and shares that help spread the word about this series and our work. If you can, please leave a review on iTunes or wherever else you get your podcasts.

References:
  1. Case Report: PANDAS and Persistent Lyme Disease With Neuropsychiatric Symptoms: Treatment, Resolution, and Recovery. Cross A., Bouboulis D., Shimasaki C., Jones C.R. Front. Psychiatry, 02 February 2021
  2. Bransfield RC. Suicide and Lyme and associated diseases. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2017;13:1575-1587. Published 2017 Jun 16. doi:10.2147/NDT.S136137.

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