Author Archive

Emerging Rodent-Associated Bartonella: A Threat For Human Health?

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13071-022-05162-5

Emerging rodent-associated Bartonella: a threat for human health?

Abstract

Background

Species of the genus Bartonella are facultative intracellular alphaproteobacteria with zoonotic potential. Bartonella infections in humans range from mild with unspecific symptoms to life threatening, and can be transmitted via arthropod vectors or through direct contact with infected hosts, although the latter mode of transmission is rare. Among the small mammals that harbour Bartonella spp., rodents are the most speciose group and harbour the highest diversity of these parasites. Human–rodent interactions are not unlikely as many rodent species live in proximity to humans. However, a surprisingly low number of clinical cases of bartonellosis related to rodent-associated Bartonella spp. have thus far been recorded in humans.

Methods

The main purpose of this review is to determine explanatory factors for this unexpected finding, by taking a closer look at published clinical cases of bartonellosis connected with rodent-associated Bartonella species, some of which have been newly described in recent years. Thus, another focus of this review are these recently proposed species.

Conclusions

Worldwide, only 24 cases of bartonellosis caused by rodent-associated bartonellae have been reported in humans. Possible reasons for this low number of cases in comparison to the high prevalences of Bartonella in small mammal species are (i) a lack of awareness amongst physicians of Bartonella infections in humans in general, and especially those caused by rodent-associated bartonellae; and (ii) a frequent lack of the sophisticated equipment required for the confirmation of Bartonella infections in laboratories that undertake routine diagnostic testing. As regards recently described Bartonella spp., there are presently 14 rodent-associated Candidatus taxa. In contrast to species which have been taxonomically classified, there is no official process for the review of proposed Candidatus species and their names before they are published. This had led to the use of malformed names that are not based on the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes. Researchers are thus encouraged to propose Candidatus names to the International Committee on Systematics of Prokaryotes for approval before publishing them, and only to propose new species of Bartonella when the relevant datasets allow them to be clearly differentiated from known species and subspecies.

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**Comment**

Candidatus is a term in the taxonomy of bacteria that is put before the genus and species name of bacteria that cannot be maintained in a bacteriology culture collection (grown on an agar plate or in other culture). 

For more:

Pfizer Overwhelmed With “Vaccine” Side-Effect Reports

https://thenewamerican.com/pfizer-overwhelmed-with-vaccine-side-effect-reports

Pfizer Overwhelmed With Vaccine Side-effect Reports

Pfizer Overwhelmed With Vaccine Side-effect Reports
scaliger/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer needed “an army of 1,800” new full-time employees in 2021 to handle the deluge of adverse-event reports that followed public rollout of its Covid-19 vaccine. This, according to an analysis by Brian Hooker, chief scientific officer of Children’s Health Defense, after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) disclosed information April 1, per an expedited Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request.

FDA’s newly released documents include a report titled “Cumulative analysis of post-authorization adverse event reports … received through 28-Feb-2021.” It reads in part:

Pfizer has also taken a multiple actions to help alleviate the large increase of adverse event reports. This includes significant technology enhancements, and process and workflow solutions, as well as increasing the number of data entry and case processing colleagues. To date, Pfizer has on boarded approximately 600 additional full time employees (FTEs). More are joining each month with an expected total of more than 1,800 additional resources by the end of June 2021.

(See link for article)

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**Comment**

The truth always outs for those with ears to hear.

  • The FOIA request was made late last August but the intel wasn’t received until recently due to having to SUE the FDA in September for failure to comply
  • The FDA initially wanted 75 YEARS to publish info it used to authorize the Pfizer jab, which BTW has been tyrannically used to take away medical freedom
  • When Pfizer applied for FDA approval, they were completely aware of almost 159,000 adverse events but wanted this fact sealed for 75 years
  • The documents that have been released list nearly 1,300 different types of adverse events including cardiac, neurological, and pregnancy complications.
  • Predictably, the FDA is worried about people “cherry-picking” the data

Despite “vaccine” manufacturer claims that the shots are “safe and effective,” please remember that ‘vaccine’ manufacturers did a ‘slight of hand’ to obtain their highly touted positive results: they simply discarded absolute risk.  When absolute risk is included, COVID injections are 1% or less effective.  They also purposely omitted those with natural immunity because those who have recovered from COVID are at risk for a hyperimmune response after “vaccination,” and some WILL actually DIE.  Big Pharma didn’t want that fact to be exposed.  These jabs lose any effectiveness they might have within weeks and don’t work at all for variants.

There have been more adverse reactions and deaths than for any other vaccine in the entire history of VAERS.

The following has been discovered about the COVID injections:

Last WG- Helping or Hindering Lyme Patients? You Decide

https://lymediseaseassociation.org/blogs/presidents-blog/last-wg-helping-or-hindering-lyme-patients-you-decide/

Last WG – Helping or Hindering Lyme Patients? You Decide

By Pat Smith, President of LDA

If you think government agencies have softened their position against Lyme disease patients, perhaps you did not watch the 2nd meeting of the last term of the Working Group (WG) Feb. 28 – March 1.

The law creating the Working Group (WG) under the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), requires at least two meetings to be held per year, but in 2021 only one meeting was held, and in 2022, the meeting devoted about 5 out of 9 total meeting hours to report presentations from regular subcommittees. Subcommittees consist of a number of individuals including researchers, medical providers, government entities, advocates/patients plus WG member Co-Chairs. Subcommittee members often devote many hours to the task of providing a report with findings and also with recommendations for the WG—recommendations which may/may not be adopted in some form by the WG for inclusion in the upcoming 2022 WG Report to Congress.

Disease Prevention and Treatment Subcommittee Co-Chair Backgrounds

This subcommittee presentation to the WG was led by two WG member Co-Chairs: NIH representative, Dennis Dixon, Chief of Bacteriology & Mycology Branch, NIAID; and Sunil K. Sood, MD, pediatric infectious disease, Chair of Pediatrics South Shore Hospital−neither being a stranger to Lyme disease, nor having a track record of openness to recognizing chronic Lyme or treatment for it; a situation leaving tens of thousands of people without treatment recourse for decades.

Burden of Disease

According to the NIH (Tick-Borne Disease Working Group: 2020 Report to Congress), “Bacteria cause most tickborne diseases in the US, with Lyme representing the vast majority (82%) of reported cases.” The NIH is one of the most powerful government agencies with a huge budget, a budget which includes clinical trials, although few trials have been devoted to Lyme disease− three placebo-controlled trials on prolonged antibiotic treatment. As the 2020 WG Report indicates (chart below), Lyme ranks below leprosy in number of trials for infectious diseases.  Lyme is a research disadvantaged disease. According to CDC, there are 150-250 cases of Leprosy per year in the US, and it is curable with antibiotic treatment; yet CDC’s estimate indicates 476,000 individuals are treated annually in the US for Lyme. Research shows up to 20% or more with Lyme go on to develop persistent symptoms after treatment.

From: Tick-Borne Disease Working Group:2020 Report to Congress

Source: Johnson et al., 2018; Derived from Goswami et al., 2013

 

NIH Grant Process

The NIH grant review selection process for researchers for Lyme disease has long been held by many to be flawed. An excerpt from Congressional hearing testimony presented on the NIH grant process by Lyme researcher S. Barthold, PhD, at the first Lyme hearing in the “House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Subcommittee on Africa,  Global Health and Human Rights,” 2012, states:

Because of firmly entrenched opinion within the medical scientific community, evidence of persisting viable but non-cultivable spirochetes is slow to be accepted, and research proposals submitted to NIH that feature persistence following treatment are likely to receive prejudicial peer review in the contentious environment of Lyme disease*. Negative comments by peer reviewers of grant applications in the current financially austere NIH climate result in unfundable scores, if they are scored at all (triaged). I have no personal stake in this issue any more, as I am retiring within a year. *a major weakness cited by a peer reviewer in a recent unfunded R01 application: “The lay public that has so far denied the validity of scientific data will misunderstand the significance of… [persisting non-cultivable Borrelia burgdorferi]…and use it as additional evidence to support the idea of treatment-resistant Lyme disease.

Advocates Anti-Science, Public Health Threat

WG Treatment Sub Committee Co-Chair Dr. Sood’s Lyme publications include being coauthor of the “Clinical Practice Guidelines by the infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), American Academy of Neurology (AAN), and American College of Rheumatology (ACR): 2020 Guidelines for the for Prevention, Diagnosis and Treatment of Lyme Disease,” (Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2021), and of “Antisocial and ethical concerns associated with advocacy of Lyme disease,” (Lancet, 2011) the latter which says in part,

Advocacy for Lyme disease has become an increasingly important part of an antiscience movement that …supports unproven (sometimes dangerous) alternative medical treatments. …some portray Lyme disease, a geographically limited tick-borne infection, as a disease that is insidious, ubiquitous, difficult to diagnose, and almost incurable; they also propose that the disease causes mainly non-specific symptoms that can be treated only with long-term antibiotics and other unorthodox and unvalidated treatments….

The Lancet article goes on to describe Lyme advocates as “Similar to other antiscience groups” creating “alternative selection of practitioners, research and publications….” Advocates have even “coordinated public protests,…and spurred legislative efforts to subvert evidenced based medicine and peer reviewed science….actions of some advocates… pose a threat to public health.” [my emphasis]

Thus, I was much surprised to see Dr. Sood volunteer to serve and to have been chosen to serve on the WG−a body whose impetus, and structure was created by those “antiscience” advocates, whose actions dare to publicly & peacefully protest dogma, whose existence threatens public health, and whose impetus created and got passed into law the legislation creating the very TBD working group whose purpose is then presumably, according to his Lancet article, to subvert peer-reviewed science.

“Disease Prevention and Treatment Subcommittee Final Findings-General”  Dixon/Sood

From the slide listing the treatment subcommittee composition, many whose past stances scream “no chronic Lyme/no treatment for chronic patients” to the slide titled “Areas of Discussion” which relegates Lyme disease treatment to the last of 7 bulleted areas– a scenario which does not consider the needs of the main stakeholders, the patients, is created to marginalize Lyme disease.

Although CDC indicates that 476,000 people seek treatment annually in the US for Lyme disease, which constitutes 76% of all tick-borne diseases (TBD), it has been clear for decades to the Lyme community and continues to be hammered home by the so called “experts,” they particularly don’t want to recognize or want to help the 20+ % who go on to develop chronic disease/chronic symptoms. To ensure this message was conveyed to the WG, these Co-Chairs presented to the WG that no outside experts were chosen to present to the Subcommittee. None were needed. The Subcommittee members were the experts. A quote from author Douglas Preston is my polite way to address this situation, “Hubris and science are incompatable.”

No Experts Needed

The stage was set, however. The signal was given to the entire Working Group: This Subcommittee, according to its WG Co-Chairs, neither wanted nor needed advice or guidance from anyone whose research/opinions might differ from theirs. Who would dare challenge these “experts” −a common form of intimidation in the world of Lyme disease, used on the Working Group? Another tactic to quash any WG public discussion was revealed through a WG member question after the presentation−the Subcommittee had never provided its presentation in advance to the WG. These professional “experts” had ~6 months to prepare and provide the material for the WG so that the important FACA process could be carried out —a public, transparent, and informed discussion of the results of this subcommittee report—a report so damaging to Lyme patients.

It was also revealed later in the WG meeting that other Subcommittee presentations were not provided to the Working Group beforehand. Where were the two Working Group Co-Chairs who had a responsibility to ensure Subcommittee reports were provided to the WG? If they did not hold the Working Group members accountable for providing material for public meeting discussion, who will do it moving forward?  Were they afraid to challenge their fellow WG members who co-chaired this or any other subcommittee and who had had ~6 months to prepare the product?

Lyme patients need people who provide accountability, not silence. It is no secret that WG members are chosen by the government agencies, and thus most likely, also the Co-Chairs. Last term’s WG was a perfect example of how Chair behavior influences the process. The idiom, if the cats away, the mice will play, is often quite valid, and it may apply to the present WG.

Questions 

I had served on the WG for 2 terms, and I question:

  • the number of WG meetings held by this WG to date
  • the lack of provision of material by Subcommittee Chairs to the entire WG before the public meeting– important material the purpose of which is to facilitate discussion and inform the WG report
  • the lack of accountability over the process

I wonder what kind of discussions and/or activities took place behind the scenes, if any. Except for some questions from Dr. Maloney on the Treatment Subcommittee content, no one questioned this Subcommittee’s decades old rhetoric that there is no science supporting chronic Lyme or extended treatment, that IDSA guidelines provide the only answers to treatment, that pathogenesis research must be provided before addressing treatment (conveniently not mentioning Lyme has been around 4+ decades for pathogenesis studies and that their NIH grant process has often precluded studies which might have provided answers or broad brushed study conclusions of clinical trials).

Guidelines Bias

More disturbing, no one questioned the use of only the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Lyme treatment guidelines several times in this report—Guidelines both CDC and NIH have publicly professed their distance from in the past. If this were indeed a balanced presentation on Lyme treatment, the International Lyme & Associated Diseases Society’s (ILADS),  “Evidence Assessments and Guidelines Recommendations in Lyme Disease: The Clinical Management of Known Tick Bites, Erythema Migrans Rashes and Persistent Disease” Expert review of Anti-infective Therapy, 2014,  should also have been referenced in this subcommittee presentation, yet were not. Where were the voices of the WG patient advocate members to question this bias? I heard none, although I did hear at the end of day one comment from one of them that the presentations were “fabulous.” Perhaps someone should poll the patients to see if that’s how they see it.

Comprehensive Presentation

On a more positive note, the Access to Care Subcommittee presentation from Co-Chair Dr. Elizabeth Maloney was excellent, despite CDC’s Dr. Ben Beard’s criticisms of that Subcommittee composition and findings, criticisms which would have seemed more appropriate to be directed to the Treatment Subcommittee presentation. He did appear to ameliorate his stance a bit later, but too little, too late.

Bottom Line: Who Will Help Our Patients?

WG Members, I ask you to remember the Lyme patients—of course all the tick-borne disease patients—but their diseases generally lack the controversy and certainly the vitriol that has faced Lyme patients for decades from the same “experts.” Your presence on the WG is guaranteed; we can see you, but we can’t hear you−only a deafening silence fills the void, silence that continues to sicken, disable, and kill our Lyme patients.


LDA Note: Thanks to James Berger, HHS, for quick reply to inquiry on when the video of meeting will be posted and reasons for that time frame: about 1 month on TBDWG webpage. https://www.hhs.gov/ash/advisory-committees/tickbornedisease/index.html

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**Comment**

Hopefully this article educates you on what goes on behind the scenes, and clearly shows why Lyme/MSIDS has stagnated for over 40 years and shows no signs of changing.

What we have experienced with the COVID debacle in the past two years is part and parcel of Lymeland for decadesWe need an overhaul of public health and research in general and until that happens, we are shouting at the mountain.

For more:

Congress Supports More Research on Maternal-Fetal Transmission of Lyme

https://www.lymedisease.org/maternal-fetal-lyme-transmission/

Congress supports more research on maternal-fetal transmission of Lyme

Appropriations directives encourage NIH to intensify research on links between Lyme disease during pregnancy and adverse birth outcomes

Congress is pleased that NIH has taken action to advance research on maternal-fetal transmission of Lyme disease.

In response, lawmakers have issued a directive that commends NIH officials and encourages them to intensify research on adverse outcomes from Lyme disease during pregnancy and continue collaboration with advocacy organizations to advance research.

The House report for the fiscal year 2022 appropriations bill for NIH that was signed into law on March 15 includes the following directive:

The Committee is gratified that NIH officials have recognized the need for further exploration of maternal-fetal or vertical transmission of Lyme disease and the occurrence of adverse outcomes among women with untreated and disseminated Lyme disease during pregnancy. The Committee encourages NIH to intensify research on adverse outcomes related to Lyme disease during pregnancy and to continue to participate with Lyme advocacy organizations on these issues.”

The Senate report for the bill includes even stronger language that explicitly directs NIH to conduct this type of research:

“The Committee directs NIH to conduct research to better understand modes of transmission for Lyme and other tick-borne diseases, including vertical transmission.”

Collaborations with advocates

An example of NIH collaboration with advocacy organizations was participation in the April 29, 2021 webinar: Lyme Disease and Pregnancy: State of the Science and Opportunities for Research Support.

Presenters included research program managers from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD).

The webinar was hosted by Mothers Against Lyme and co-sponsored by Project Lyme. The event was attended by a wide variety of researchers, research administrators, healthcare professionals, caregivers and advocates.

According to Mothers Against Lyme Chair Isabel Rose, “We had a good response to the webinar and have been following up with researchers to encourage them to contact NIH program managers for guidance on how to submit applications for research grants.”

The webinar was a follow-up to a December 7, 2020 meeting between Mothers Against Lyme and a group of officials and research program managers from NIAID and NICHD.

The goal of the meeting was to establish a working relationship and discuss a formal request for NIH to designate Lyme disease as a high priority perinatal infection of interest.

Notice of special interest

While NIH has yet to make that designation, they issued a notice of special interest that encourages research on “gestational Lyme disease” and the impact of pregnancy on immune response.

During the meeting, the NIH emphasized this type of research was “investigator initiated” and that the “community” could help get the word out to researchers about opportunities for funding and research support.

Rose says, “The webinar and notices of special interest are examples of how NIH can advance this much-needed research. We need NIH to issue similar notices for research to better understand links between Lyme disease and adverse birth outcomes and for research to improve diagnosis and treatment for pregnant women with Lyme and children who are congenitally infected. As a mother who has experienced firsthand the devastating impact of misdiagnosed and untreated Lyme disease on my children and family, I urge NIH to fund and support research that will prevent other families from suffering.”

Rose cites the November 2018 article A Systematic Review on the Impact of Gestational Lyme Disease in Humans on the Fetus and Newborn as an example of why this research is urgently needed. In its meta-analysis, adverse outcomes were noted for 11% of pregnant women treated with antibiotics and 50% of untreated women.  Adverse outcomes included spontaneous miscarriage, fetal death and a range of congenital abnormalities and health issues.

“Anyway you look at it, treated or untreated, the incidence of adverse outcomes is a concern,” says Rose. “In addition to NIH making this research a priority, collaboration with advocacy organizations and other federal agencies is essential to make sure the research is focused on studies that will improve health outcomes for pregnant women and children with Lyme.”

More funding is critical

According to Bruce Fries, President of the Patient Centered Care Advocacy Group and co-founder of Mothers Against Lyme, “NIH participation in the webinar on Lyme disease and pregnancy was a good start. The true test of NIH’s response to this urgent issue is the amount of research they fund on gestational and congenital Lyme that has measurable benefits for patients.”

In a July 2020 letter to NIH Director Francis Collins, Mothers Against Lyme outlined the following objectives for this research:

  1. Improve prevention, diagnosis, testing, and treatment of Lyme disease and other tick-borne diseases in pregnant women, infants, and children.
  2. Determine the extent of maternal-fetal transmission and investigate the impact of congenital Lyme disease.
  3. Establish best practices for prevention and treatment of maternal-fetal transmission and congenital Lyme disease.
  4. Understand the social, educational, cognitive, psychological, behavioral, and life outcomes for children infected with Lyme disease.
  5. Increase awareness of common symptom presentations among obstetricians and pediatricians.

To achieve these goals, the letter asks NIH to incorporate input from parents of children with Lyme disease when setting research priorities and requested that patients, advocates, researchers, and physicians with experience treating tick-borne diseases be included as representatives on the Advisory Board/Councils that review grant applications.

The letter said research is needed to:

  1. Assess birth outcomes and monitor growth and development in babies born to mothers with acute, previously treated or late disseminated Lyme disease.
  2. Determine the appropriate antibiotic regimen to prevent transmission of Lyme disease from mother to fetus.
  3. Examine the effects of pregnancy on immune response and symptoms.
  4. Assess the immunological response in children who are congenitally infected with Lyme disease.
  5. Evaluate the role co-infections play in the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease in pregnant women and in children who may have acquired Lyme disease in utero or through tick bites.

The letter also urged NIH to authorize longitudinal studies on the risks of developmental disorders and other long-term impacts of untreated or insufficiently treated Lyme disease in children that address the following areas:

  1. Social, educational, cognitive, psychological, behavioral, and life outcomes for children infected with Lyme disease in utero or in childhood.
  2. Common neuropsychiatric presentations of congenital and primary Lyme disease in children.
  3. Educational needs of children affected with Lyme disease, with recommendations for school accommodations that allow for treatment of neuropsychiatric and physical disease.

Fries adds, “We look forward to ongoing collaboration with NIH, the research community and other advocacy organizations to advance this much needed research.  Mothers, children, and families whose lives have been disrupted by the devastating effects of Lyme and associated tick-borne diseases are counting on NIH to provide solutions by making this a high priority and by supporting scientific research and evidence-based policy.”

About Mothers Against Lyme

We’re a group of mothers, and mother-advocates, who are concerned about the impact of Lyme disease and its co-infections on pregnant women, children and families. Our focus includes awareness, education, advocacy and community building, as we promote research that advances diagnosis, treatment and prevention.

PRESS RELEASE SOURCE: Mothers Against Lyme

For more:

3 Minute Video: COVID Shots Causing a Form of AIDS

Within this 3 minute video, Dr. Robert Malone explains how the COVID injections are:

  • not working against variants as even the FDA acknowledges the need to update the shots due to waning efficacy & virtually no protection from Omicron. Wanting to treat COVID shots like flu vaccines, even the best-matched flu vaccines end up being around 60 percent effective on a good day
    • the FDA recently cleared fourth doses for millions without consulting the advisers, part of a growing pattern of minimizing their role
  • may increase risk of infection, hospitalization and death
  • may increase the risk of myocarditis
  • may reactivate latent DNA viruses (and even possibly other bacterial infections like Lyme disease & Bartonella) such as:

Malone makes a good case to seriously question why would take another dose of something that: