Archive for the ‘Lyme’ Category

Could Cytokine Storms Lead to Brain Fog in Lyme Disease Patients?

https://danielcameronmd.com/cytokine-brain-fog-lyme-disease/

COULD CYTOKINE STORMS LEAD TO BRAIN FOG IN LYME DISEASE PATIENTS?

brain-fog-lyme-disease

Lyme disease and COVID-19 patients often complain of having ‘brain fog.’ In a recent study, Remsik and colleagues suggest that brain fog reported by COVID-19 patients may be due to cytokines rather than an infection with the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2.

In their article, published in the journal Cancer Cell,¹ the authors explain, “One of the dozens of unusual symptoms that have emerged in COVID-19 patients is a condition that’s informally called ‘COVID brain’ or ‘brain fog.’ It’s characterized by confusion, headaches, and loss of short-term memory. In severe cases, it can lead to psychosis and even seizures.”

The authors expected to find evidence of COVID-19 infection in the cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) of 13 patients hospitalized with COVID-19. They did not.

Instead, Remsik and colleagues found an elevation of cytokines in the spinal fluid of their COVID-19 patients with brain fog. According to the authors, “These patients had persistent inflammation and high levels of cytokines in their cerebrospinal fluid, which explained the symptoms they were having.”

“These increased CSF cytokines are likely the result of both increased blood barrier permeability and local production by cells in the CNS,” the authors write.

Investigators have previously raised concerns that Lyme disease spirochetes could cross the blood-brain barrier leading to brain fog. In his article, Dr. Robert Bransfield raised concerns that persisting immune activation causes a cytokine storm in patients with chronic Lyme disease.²

Remsik et al. add support to the role of cytokines in patients with brain fog, leading to the question: Are cytokine storms associated with brain fog in Lyme disease patients?

References:
  1. Remsik J, Wilcox JA, Babady NE, et al. Inflammatory Leptomeningeal Cytokines Mediate COVID-19 Neurologic Symptoms in Cancer Patients. Cancer Cell. Feb 8 2021;39(2):276-283 e3. doi:10.1016/j.ccell.2021.01.007
  2. Bransfield RC. The psychoimmunology of lyme/tick-borne diseases and its association with neuropsychiatric symptoms. Open Neurol J. 2012;6:88-93. doi:10.2174/1874205X01206010088

COVID Long Haulers & Lyme Disease

https://globallymealliance.org/long-haul-covid-19-brings-attention-to-persistent-lyme/

by Jennifer Crystal

This past January, the New York Times published an article entitled “What if You Never Get Better From Covid-19?”. Many Lyme patients sent it to me in frustration. “This is just like Lyme disease!” they exclaimed. “We haven’t gotten better, either. Why is everyone talking about COVID long-haulers when we’ve been suffering for years?”

I hear that frustration. I also think it’s precisely this attention on long-haul COVID that will finally shed light on, and bring credibility to, persistent Lyme disease.

In fact, the article itself draws comparisons between COVID-19 and Lyme disease, as well as myalgic encephalomyelitis, or chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). As with Lyme disease, the cause of ongoing COVID-19 symptoms is now under investigation: is it ongoing infection? Is it a post-acute syndrome? Is it an immune response? These are questions that have echoed in the Lyme world for years, causing polarizing debate that leaves some patients fighting for validation, diagnosis, and treatment.

Now, that struggle is coming out of the echo chamber and into the limelight—pun intended—in a world that has newfound understanding of long-term illness and its effects. Words like “immunocompromised” and “long-hauler” were not part of the general lexicon before COVID-19, even though they’ve been part of Lyme patients’ vocabulary for years. Now these words are vernacular, and that’s good news for Lyme patients, ME/CFS patients, and anyone else struggling with a complex illness that strikes different patients in different ways. As the article states, “The Lyme problem is underrecognized but immense.” One silver lining of a horrific pandemic that has killed half a million Americans and left countless others still struggling is that it’s bringing recognition to illnesses that have long caused long haul suffering.

Indeed, just a few weeks after the aforementioned article was published, New York Times Opinion Columnist Ross Douthat wrote “Long-Haul Covid and the Chronic Illness Debate: What persistent Covid cases might have in common with chronic fatigue syndrome and Lyme disease, and why it matters”. A Lyme patient himself, Douthat wrote, “Living through the coronavirus era after spending so many years in the world of Lyme disease is a strange experience because you can see all kinds of different pieces of the tick-borne epidemic refracted strangely in the Covid pandemic—disputes over testing, mysterious and shifting symptomatology, expert failures and medical populism, and controversies around what it means when the disease just hangs around indefinitely.”

Even back in spring 2020, when COVID-19 testing difficulties were at their height, people were taking notice of the similarities to Lyme disease. I was interviewed on this topic for an article on Undark.org called “In the Uncertainties of Lyme Testing, Lessons for COVID-19”.

One important distinction that Douthat notes between long-haul COVID and Lyme, ME/CFS and other illnesses is that “we’re taking the lived experience of long-haul [COVID] patients seriously—probably because we have so many of them all at once—instead of treating them as weaklings or hypochondriacs.”

To that, I can speak personally. For years before I was diagnosed with Lyme disease, babesiosis, and ehrlichiosis, I fought just for people to believe that I was sick; that my flu-like fatigue, insomnia, hallucinogenic nightmares, trembling hands, difficulty concentrating, systemic hives, and fevers were not psychosomatic. Then, once I was properly diagnosed, I fought for understanding from people who literally did not believe in my illness—as if a documented physical disease is simply an opinion or mystical power one can choose to believe in or not.

Conversely, when I first developed COVID-19 symptoms in March 2020, not one person questioned whether I actually had COVID-19, even though I had a (false) negative test. No one said, “Oh, you must have something else” or, “It must just all be in your head.” They knew that my shortness of breath, dry cough, low-grade fever, and loss of taste and smell meant COVID-19. When the positive antibody test came back in June, it was simply validation of what everyone already knew to be true.

When I had COVID-19, I only had to fight to get well, not to be believed.

What a difference that validation meant, as I discussed in my “Comfort in Solidarity” post. I want that type of understanding for all Lyme patients, in all stages of illness. I believe the COVID-19 pandemic will help get us there.

GLA is offering a free webinar, “COVID-19 Vaccines and Lyme Patients: What You Need to Know” on March 3rd at 6:00 p.m. You can register here.

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jennifer crystal_2

Opinions expressed by contributors are their own.

Jennifer Crystal is a writer and educator in Boston. Her memoir about her medical journey is forthcoming. Contact her at lymewarriorjennifercrystal@gmail.com.

 

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**Comment**

She was ill with something, but it is uncertain if she truly had COVID based on two things: it’s never been isolated and proven to cause disease, as well as the fact antibody as well as PCR testing is as bad if not worse than Lyme.  How can you have something that hasn’t been proven to exist and cause illness?  

This is truly the foundational issue that most are bypassing.  Our public ‘authorities’ have been getting away with this forever.

There is an inaccuracy in the Times article which states there are 329,000 people infected with Lyme per year. The CDC just upped that number to 476,000.

There were; however, important issues exposed by the Times article, but I don’t hold the same optimism Crystal does. If our public ‘authorities’ can bamboozle nearly the entire American populace with a ‘virus mania’ dating back decades, and convince them to take the jab on an experimental, fast-tracked injection that hasn’t been proven to be safe or effective, doesn’t stop transmission or infection, changes your DNA, can monitor and track you, and is said by whistleblowers to cause sterility, has caused 40 times more deaths in Israeli elderly and 240 times more deaths in the younger ages in the 5 week vaccination period than the virus itself, and the death of 25% of German nursing home residents, I highly doubt this same populace will embrace the complexity of Lyme/MSIDS.

I’d love to be proven wrong.

In my experience, the only forward progress we’ve made has been when we’ve done the work ourselves with independent researchers unaffiliated with government funding.

New Vaccine Developed By Massachusetts Doctor To Prevent Lyme Disease in Humans

https://www.fieldandstream.com/story/hunting/lyme-disease-vaccine/

New Vaccine Developed By Massachusetts Doctor to Prevent Lyme Disease in Humans

Clinical Studies have begun for making your enjoyment of the outdoors a lot easier.

By Tom Keer

March 1, 2021

A Massachusetts doctor may have discovered a shot that will prevent Lyme disease in humans.  the drug received federal approval from the Food and Drug Administration to be tested on people at the end of 2020.  The Phase 1 clinical trial on 66 human subjects began last week.  If effective, the shot will be available in Spring 2023.

Dr. Mark Klempner of Massachusetts Biologics at the UMASS Medical School has been working on a cure for Lyme disease for a decade.  (See link for article)

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**Comment**

You may recognize the name of Klempner.  That’s because his  flawed study is still being used to keep chronically sick Lyme/MSIDS patients from extended treatment.  ILADS points out that the Klempner trial relied on average treatment effects, employed small samples (ranging from 37-129), and excluded over 89% of patients who sought to enroll.

Dr. Klempner has been in this game a long, long time.  

He was also the director the BU Biodefense Laboratory.

Excerpt:  

In February 2003, Boston University (BU) submitted a proposal to the NIH to construct a facility with the highest-risk level bioweapons research laboratory (called a BSL-4 laboratory) that would be sited within the BU Medical Center. The medical center is located in a dense, urban neighborhood with a majority of low-income and minority residents nearby. The process of proposal development, site selection and subsequent approval for funding took place in secret, without informing and consulting the local community. The site selected for the laboratory was pre-determined prior to BU undertaking a National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) mandated environmental impact review and without involving the surrounding residential and working community – all in violation of federal policy. Nonetheless, NIH approved BU Medical Center’s proposal for $128 million.

But I’m sure this is all purely coincidental.

We are told his ‘pre-exposure prophylaxis’ (PrEP) delivers anti-Lyme antibodies, and they are “unlike vaccines” which trigger the immune system to produce antibodies. PrEP supplies the antibodies directly and kills the bacteria before a person becomes infected.  You would need the jab every single year as it only lasts 9 months.

Before you believe everything they say, you might want to read this.

As you can clearly see, this injection contains OspA, the same outer surface protein found to cause severe adverse reactions in the first Lyme vaccine called Lymerix.  (Please read about the bitter history of how our public ‘authorities’ eliminated from the Western blot two Bb proteins, outer surface protein A (OspA), from which LYMErix was made, and outer surface protein B (OspB), the intended component of next-generation vaccines. This has kept the sickest from being diagnosed.)

For more: 

These people notoriously repackage their ideas and hope we won’t notice. We may be sick but we aren’t dumb.

Autoimmune Pandemic: Dr. Phillips & Dana Parish

https://www.betterhealthguy.com/episode139

Why You Should Listen

In this episode, you will learn about the autoimmune pandemic and how microbes are often at the core of autoimmune conditions.

Watch The Show

Listen To The Show

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About My Guests

My guests for this episode are Dr. Steven Phillips and Dana Parish. Steven Phillips, MD is a renowned Yale-trained physician, international lecturer, and media go-to expert. Well-published in the medical literature, he has treated over 20,000 patients with complex, chronic illness from nearly 20 countries. Dr. Phillips experienced firsthand the nightmare of an undiagnosed, serious infection after nearly dying from his own “mystery illness,” and having to save his own life when 25 doctors could not. Dana Parish developed Lyme-induced heart failure as a result of being improperly diagnosed by some of the “top” doctors in the country—and had her life saved by Dr. Phillips. A chart-topping Sony/ATV singer/songwriter who has written songs for artists like Celine Dion and Idina Menzel, she has become a major voice in the world of chronic illness. Her popular column on Huffington Post has been read by more than one million people globally.

Key Takeaways

  • Is autoimmunity a symptom of an underlying pathogen or a condition of its own?
  • Why does modern medicine attempt to use steroids and biolgoics, and what are the potential consequences?
  • Why are infections more likely to lead to autoimmunity today?
  • Is detoxification important in a healing strategy?
  • Are vector-borne microbes the core issue or simply one component of autoimmune conditions?
  • What is “Post Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome”? Is it just another way to invalidate patient experiences?
  • How often are people infected with these organisms but not picked up with existing labs?
  • What role do Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) Borrelias play?
  • Do parasites play a role in chronic, complex illness?
  • Do infections serve as triggers for demyelination?
  • What are the top triggers for PANS?
  • Are vector-borne pathogens sexually transmitted? During a pregnancy?
  • Can psychiatric conditions be the result of an underlying infection?
  • Can mast cell stabilizers have potential downsides?
  • What role do viruses play?
  • What are the core issues in ALS?
  • What is missing from current treatment strategies for neurodegenerative conditions?
  • Does autism have an infectious component?
  • How might liposomal oregano oil be helpful in the treatment of vector-borne infections?
  • What are some potential concerns with the use of Disulfiram and methylene blue?
  • What does “maintenance” look like?
  • Might a focus on mental and emotional health benefit patients?
  • Does limbic system retraining have a place?

Connect With My Guests

http://TheChronicBook.com

Transcript (Go to top link)

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HHS Request for Information (RFI) Diagnostic Testing for Lyme

https://lymediseaseassociation.org/government/federal-government/govt-departments-a-policies/dept-of-health-a-human-services-hhs/hhs-request-for-information-rfi-diagnostic-testing-for-lyme/

HHS Request for Information (RFI) Diagnostic Testing for Lyme

As part of the LymeX public-private partnership between Health & Human Services (HHS) and the Cohen Foundation, HHS has published an RFI in the Federal Register, 2.11.21 that seeks information on the current state of the science and technology to accelerate “innovative solutions” for Lyme disease diagnosis.

The RFI contains a series of questions it encourages responders to answer including the types of technologies being developed, any emerging technologies that could be used to characterized stages of Lyme, what sample type optimum for a detection test, and challenges in clinical practice.

Responses need to be submitted no later than 5:00 PM ET, March 15, 2021.

See the Federal Register for all details:
Request for Information (RFI): Accelerating Innovation in Diagnostic Testing for Lyme Disease

See LDA website: HHS, Steven & Alexandra Cohen Foundation Announce “LymeX” Partnership

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From the HHS website (please go to link for more info):

We encourage responders to answer the following questions:

  • What challenges/barriers exist for the development and validation of innovative diagnostic tests for Lyme disease?
  • What types of diagnostic technologies are being developed (or could be developed or adapted) to detect Lyme disease, including technologies and breakthroughs adapted from COVID-19 diagnostics with potential applications for Lyme disease (e.g., highly sensitive nucleic acid amplification testing [NAAT])?
  • What emerging technologies (e.g., epigenetic mapping, inflammatory markers, gene arrays, NAAT, or others) might be developed or adapted to characterize different stages of Lyme disease, including Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS), etc.?
  • What analyte (e.g., DNA, RNA, protein, metabolite) does existing or developing Lyme disease diagnostic tests detect?
  • What is the optimal sample type (e.g., whole blood, plasma) for the detection of a test analyte in patients with Lyme disease? The optimal sample type can be generally defined as the one where the analyte can be best detected.
  • What challenges exist in the implementation and use of Lyme disease diagnostic testing in clinical practice?
  • What role can or should public-private partnerships play in accelerating Start Printed Page 9077development, validation, or appropriate use of innovative Lyme disease diagnostic tests, and what factors are most critical to ensure their success?

For more on testing: