Archive for the ‘Testing’ Category

Decoding NeuroLyme: Live Webinar With Dr. Rawls – June 19, 2019

https://rawlsmd.com/webinars/decoding-neurolyme/?

Decoding NeuroLyme: Live Webinar with Dr. Bill Rawls

Wednesday 6/19, 8pm EDT

Lyme disease can manifest in seemingly endless ways. But neurological symptoms such as brain fog, limb pain, muscle weakness, anxiety, and more can feel especially debilitating and difficult to diagnose, manage, and overcome.

So why are some people more likely to experience neurological Lyme disease — and what can you do to feel better? 

Join a live webinar with Dr. Bill Rawls, best-selling author of Unlocking Lyme, who knows firsthand what it’s like to live with chronic Lyme disease, as he demystifies neurological Lyme and offers an alternative view of causes and solutions.

You’ll learn how to take control of your health, and the essential steps for empowering your body’s natural defenses. 

PLUS: Don’t miss an exclusive gift for webinar attendees, and have your questions ready for a LIVE Q&A on neurological Lyme disease with Dr. Rawls.

“Dr. Rawls is such a genuine resource in this bewildering Lyme maze. I appreciate you making his insights readily available.” – David

Understanding and Overcoming Neurological Lyme Disease

Live Webinar with Dr. Bill Rawls

RESERVE MY SEAT »

“Super helpful and informative. It was great to hear someone talk about this in a knowledgeable manner given that it seems like a mystery to so many others in the medical community. Thank you!” – Christian

In this webinar, Dr. Rawls will also discuss:

  • Why neurological symptoms such as cognitive impairment, nerve and limb pain, mood disruption, and more are so prevalent among Lyme sufferers
  • What causes these symptoms to become so overpowering in some people
  • Connections between neurological Lyme and other infections and chronic illnesses
  • Why conventional methods of diagnosis and treatment are limited and controversial
  • His holistic, restorative approach to overcoming neurological Lyme

“Neurological symptoms are the most exasperating of all Lyme symptoms, because they disconnect you from the world at large. There is a path to recovery.”  — Dr. Bill Rawls

 

Breaking Down the Baronella Spp. ePCR Triple Blood Draw: How Does It Work?

https://www.galaxydx.com/bartonella-epcr-steps/

Breaking down the Bartonella spp. ePCR Triple Blood Draw: How does it work?

ArminLabs (EliSpot) With Dr. Schwarzbach – Podcast

http://www.betterhealthguy.com/episode93

Why You Should Listen

In this episode, you will learn about EliSpot testing and the various testing options available through ArminLabs in Germany.

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About My Guest

My guest for this episode is Dr. Armin Schwarzbach.  Armin Schwarzbach, MD, PhD is a medical doctor and a specialist in laboratory medicine from the laboratory ArminLabs in Augsburg, Germany.  Dr. Schwarzbach began by studying biochemistry at Hoechst AG in Frankfurt, Germany and pharmacy at the University of Mainz in Germany in 1984. In 1985 he studied medicine for 6 years at the University of Mainz and finished his MD in 1991.  Dr. Schwarzbach developed the worldwide first Radioimmunoassay (RIA) for human Gastric Inhibitory Polypeptide from 1986 – 1991, getting his PhD in 1992.  He is member of the Swiss Association for tick-borne diseases, the German Association of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, and the German Society for Medical Laboratory Specialists.  He is an Advisory Board member of AONM London, England, and Board member of German Borreliosis Society, and Member and former Board Member of the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS) and has served as an expert on advisory committees on Lyme Disease in England, Australia, Canada, Ireland, France, and Germany.  Dr. Schwarzbach is the founder and CEO of ArminLabs in Augsburg, Germany and has specialized in diagnostic tests and treatment options for patients with tick-borne diseases for over 20 years.

Key Takeaways

  • What is an EliSpot?
  • What organisms can be tested for using EliSpot technology?
  • How specific is the EliSpot in testing for Borrelia, Bartonella, Babesia, and other organisms?
  • Does the state of the immune system matter when considering EliSpot results?
  • Which infections are the most persistent?
  • Can the EliSpot be used to track progress or success of treatment?
  • What is Yersinia and where might it be encountered?
  • Can EliSpot testing be used in newborns and infants?
  • What role do viruses such as EBV, CMV, Coxsackie, and others play in chronic illness?
  • Can Mast Cell Activation Syndrome be triggered by viruses?
  • Why are Mycoplasma and Chlamydia so important to explore?
  • Why is IgA testing a promising new direction in laboratory medicine?
  • Is CD57 helpful clinically?
  • What microbes are more commonly associated with specific medical conditions?
  • How common are Rickettsial organisms?
  • What is “Post Lyme Syndrome”? Is it real?

Connect With My Guest

http://arminlabs.com

Disclaimer

The content of this show is for informational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any illness or medical condition. Nothing in today’s discussion is meant to serve as medical advice or as information to facilitate self-treatment. As always, please discuss any potential health-related decisions with your own personal medical authority.

The ‘Tick Act’ Should Aid Fight Against Lyme Disease, But Will Congress Pass It? And, Will More Tax-Payer Money Go to ‘The Cabal’?

https://www.change.org/p/the-us-senate-calling-for-a-congressional-investigation-of-the-cdc-idsa-and-aldf/

The ‘Tick Act’ should aid fight against Lyme disease, but will Congress pass it?

JUN 12, 2019 — 

Today’s letter to Rep Smith with Cc: to the Tick-Borne Disease Working Group.

Lyme Bumper Stickers (Public Service Announcement)
https://www.ebay.com/itm/123659578861

WAKE UP AMERICA!

——— Original Message ———-
From: CARL TUTTLE <runagain@comcast.net>
To: chris.smith@mail.house.gov
Cc:  tickbornedisease@hhs.gov  (97 Undisclosed Recipients)
Date: June 12, 2019 at 8:51 AM
Subject: The ‘Tick Act’ should aid fight against Lyme disease, but will Congress pass it?

The ‘Tick Act’ should aid fight against Lyme disease, but will Congress pass it?

Jerry Carino, Asbury Park Press June 11, 2019

https://www.app.com/story/news/health/2019/06/11/lyme-disease-congress-pass-tick-act/1410038001/?fbclid=IwAR1u_z0fKsX1CIx0gh6_ymu56T1UZEG8h7louZK3eKtcupYzPcEV2CHsCw4

June 12, 2019

U.S. Congressman Chris Smith   chris.smith@mail.house.gov
2373 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20515

Dear Rep. Smith,

Is there a provision within the Tick Act to restrict research funds from the con artists who have characterized Lyme as a simple nuisance disease (Hard to catch and easily treated)?

Like untreated strep throat, Lyme has the ability to ruin lives with irreversible damage all of which has been hidden from the public for the past forty years as Lyme has been portrayed as hard to catch and easily treated with a one-size-fits-all IDSA treatment guideline.

The one-size-fits-all IDSA treatment guideline does not scratch the surface for a Borrelia infection misdiagnosed and untreated for years or decades and up to two-thirds of individuals infected with B. burgdorferi will fail conventional 30-year-old antibiotic therapy for Lyme disease. [1] This growing class of Lyme patient has been ignored by the CDC, IDSA and American Lyme Disease Foundation as the focus has always been on the acute stage of Lyme disease with bulls-eye rash after early treatment. [2]Patients who fail treatment are kicked to the curb and told they have “Medically Unexplained Symptoms” [3] while ignoring the large body of evidence that we have been dealing all along with an antibiotic resistant/tolerant superbug. [4]

Quote from Dr. Willy Burgdorfer: “The controversy in Lyme disease research is a shameful affair. And I say that because the whole thing is politically tainted. Money goes to people who have, for the past 30 years, produced the same thing—nothing. [5]

Previous NIH funding for Lyme was under the direction of Edward McSweegan and Philip Baker. Corrective action: The NIH should suspend all funding to researchers with a bias against persistent Borrelia infection particularly those who have been named in the Texas racketeering lawsuit [6] who continue to use taxpayer dollars to fund their ongoing racketeering/propaganda scheme.

There needs to be an immediate shutdown of the “open checkbook” handed to Dr. Gary Wormser by the US Centers for Disease Control (Funding: RO1 CK 000152) with his unethical fixation on the acute stage of disease purposely avoiding the advanced stage which hides the horribly disabled.

Complaint filed with the Office of Research Integrity:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/94jv3w2hb0z9lv7/Email%20sent%20to%20the%20Office%20of%20Research%20Integrity.docx?dl=0

Here is the short list of con artists who were also coauthors of the deplorable Lancet article, Lyme disease antiscience. [7]

Defendants in the RICO lawsuit: (There are many more researchers to be included in this short list)

1.      GARY P. WORMSER

2.      RAYMOND J. DATTWYLER,

3.      EUGENE SHAPIRO

4.      JOHN J. HALPERIN

5.      LEONARD SIGAL

6.      ALLEN STEERE

Put an end to the favoritism in research funding for Lyme at the NIH or are we going to experience yet another decade of unimaginable pain and suffering.

Respectfully submitted,

Carl Tuttle

Lyme Endemic Hudson, NH

References:

1. Lyme disease: the promise of Big Data, companion diagnostics and precision medicine

https://www.dovepress.com/lyme-disease-the-promise-of-big-data-companion-diagnostics-and-precisi-peer-reviewed-article-IDR

2. Subjective symptoms after treatment of early Lyme disease(WORMSER)

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20102996

3. Eugene Shapiro, MD, on suspected Lyme disease

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkO3q0ahVow

4. 700 Citations- Persistent Lyme Disease

https://www.dropbox.com/s/lbnye1u0ifsjzu3/700%20Citations-%20Persistent%20Lyme%20Disease.pdf?dl=0

5. Prof. Willy Burgdorfer Talks About Lyme Disease

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCnrUmAPcOE

6. Texas racketeering lawsuit

https://www.dropbox.com/s/18uyrli878ug51m/LymeDisease%20RICO%20Lawsuit.pdf?dl=0

7. Lyme disease antiscience

http://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(12)70054-3/fulltext

____________________

**Comment**

Tuttle raises a solid point – that the SAME researchers are given tax dollars to continue the SAME research on the acute phase with very strict parameters as entrance into the study (have to have EM rash & test positive on their abysmal serology testing)

And in the words of Burgdorfer: “Money goes to people who have, for the past 30 years, produced the same thing—nothing.” [5]

The other glaring issue with mainstream research is they have rarely if ever discussed concurrent infection, which is the reality for thousands and thousands of patients:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/10/28/lyme-wars-part-5-coinfections/

We even know ticks are coinfected with numerous things. It only follows they will transmit these things to us:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/05/01/co-infection-of-ticks-the-rule-rather-than-the-exception/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/24/tick-data-76-infected-with-one-organism-20-have-three-or-more-pathogens/

OUR CURRENT RESEARCH SHOWS:
  • 76% of ticks tested have at least one disease causing organism
  • 49% are co-infected with two or more organisms
  • 20% carry three or more
  • 9% of the ticks tested carry four or more

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/26/three-strains-of-borrelia-other-pathogens-found-in-salivary-glands-of-ixodes-ticks-suggesting-quicker-transmission-time/  Concurrent infection within ticks most probably allows for quicker transmission times to humans.  Something that isn’t being touched with a 10-foot pole.

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/05/18/powassan-and-bb-infection-in-wisconsin-and-u-s-tick-populations/

Nobody has a bead on what a patient looks like who has 2 or more tick-borne illnesses. They continue to push this into a 2 minute sound bite.

 

 

 

Lyme Disease is Spreading Across the US But Your Dog Can Help Track It

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2204178-lyme-disease-is-spreading-across-the-us-but-your-dog-can-help-track-it/

Lyme disease is spreading across the US but your dog can help track it

HEALTH 22 May 2019
Many dogs in the US are screened annually for Lyme disease
Many dogs in the US are screened annually for Lyme disease

Wavetop/Getty

As the climate warms, Lyme disease is spreading. To assess the risk of catching the infection in new areas, we need to be able to track the ticks that carry it. Now an analysis of veterinary records suggests dogs are the answer.

Lyme disease can lead to heart failure or paralysis but we don’t monitor how many people come into contact with the bacterium that causes it. “We don’t screen ourselves for exposure,” says Jenna Gettings at the University of Georgia. “The only time people are tested for tick-borne disease is when they have symptoms. Whereas with dogs, we screen healthy animals.”

In the US, pet dogs are tested for Lyme disease at yearly health checks, and their data is reported to a central database. It’s currently possible to share veterinary records widely, as these don’t have the same kinds of privacy concerns as human health data, says Gettings.

She and her colleagues analysed data from more than 16.5 million dog screening test results from 2012 to 2016. The test detects if dogs have produced antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi, the Lyme-causing bacterium that can be passed to animals and people in tick bites. Because dogs tend to go to the same places as their owners, their data should reveal where people are at the most risk of contracting the disease.

When the team compared the dog data with the reported rates of Lyme disease in humans during the same five-year period, they found an association between the two. In counties where 0 to 10 per cent of dogs screened positive for B. burgdorfei exposure, there was a rapid increase in human incidences of Lyme disease.

In areas where 10 to 30 per cent of dogs screened positive, human rates also rose, but more slowly. In areas where more than a third of dogs encountered the bacterium, there was no link between dog and human data.

“We don’t fully understand why the association drops off,” says Gettings. “It may be that we don’t have a ton of data at that level.” Thankfully, not many counties in the US have such high levels of dog exposure to the bacterium, she says.

Because vets mostly test dogs at annual check-ups, this data can’t tell us how Lyme is changing over short periods of time. It also can’t take into account when a pet dog contracted Lyme disease outside of their home county. Nevertheless, the team found that the data could be used to build a model that helps predict where Lyme disease may be spreading.

“Where the value of this analysis seems to be the greatest is in the sort of leading edge of the range of Lyme disease,” says Rick Ostfeld at Tufts University in Massachusetts. “In places where incidence is low, it may be that the dog data is a good sentinel for us.”

In places where Lyme is endemic in the US – the Northeast and the upper Midwest – public health officials and doctors make people aware of their risks and give advice on how to avoid tick bites. But people living in counties where Lyme hasn’t historically been a problem may be caught unawares as ticks and the diseases they carry spread into their area. This new model could help give people a much-needed warning, Ostfeld says.

Journal reference: Geospatial Health, DOI: 10.4081/gh.2019.750

_________________

**Comment**

Again, climate change has nothing to do with this:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/11/07/ticks-on-the-move-due-to-migrating-birds-and-photoperiod-not-climate-change/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/08/13/study-shows-lyme-not-propelled-by-climate-change/

For more:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/08/24/canine-maps-better-than-the-cdcs-in-predicting-lyme-disease/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/05/28/lyme-disease-new-study-confirms-dogs-are-sentinels-to-assess-human-risk/