Archive for the ‘Testing’ Category

Highlights from LDA/Columbia Lyme Disease Conference

https://globallymealliance.org/highlights-from-lda-columbia-lyme-disease-conference/

lyme disease conference

October 31, 2018

Highlights from LDA/Columbia Lyme Disease Conference

Highlights from LDA/Columbia 19th Annual Scientific Conference Lyme & Tick-Borne Diseases: Turning the Corner Through Research

Global Lyme Alliance (GLA) recently attended a conference jointly organized by Lyme Disease Association, Inc. and Columbia University. The meeting featured speakers from around the country who gave updates about diverse subjects relevant to Lyme and tick-borne diseases.

Dr. Claudia Molins from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) discussed her work on finding metabolic signatures for Lyme disease. These are byproducts of metabolism that are specific to Lyme patients, and since they are unique to different diseases, identifying these signatures might be useful as a diagnosis of Lyme disease. Even more compelling, they may yield clues about which subsets of patients are unlikely to be cured by first-line antibiotic therapy.

Another speaker, Dr. William Robinson of Stanford University, spoke about his collaboration with Dr. John Aucott of Johns Hopkins University, who is funded by GLA. Together, they work on samples from the landmark SLICE study, which deciphers immunological data from patients in various stages of Lyme disease. Dr. Robinson’s talk focused on antibody production in Lyme disease. These can be both protective against the pathogen, as well as directed against the host, that may help to explain both the failure to protect against the microbe as well as to harm the patient, painting a complex picture of the immune response against Borrelia. He also discussed how these may correlate with disease stage.

A potential new therapeutic drug candidate for Lyme disease was presented by Dr. Kim Lewis, a GLA grant recipient. His group has rediscovered hygromycin A, a previously known drug that was never screened for activity against B. burgdorferi, which it kills without any effect on other bacteria. Thus, it may potentially be developed as a treatment for Lyme disease that will not harm the commensal human microbiome.

Dr. Utpal Pal, Mark Blackman, and Dr. Chrysoula Kitsou

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From the University of Maryland, Dr. Utpal Pal, who is on the GLA scientific advisory board, the conference heard of his findings about BBA57, a Borrelia gene that is critical for the initial infectivity of the bacteria into a mammalian host, via various strategies to block the host immune system. Curiously, mutations in BBA57 only transiently stop bacterial infection, and bacteria that rebound from the initial delay are able to persist in the host, attesting to the difficulty of bacterial eradication.

Dr. Shannon Delaney from Columbia University spoke about patients who suffer from symptoms that are similar to, but subtly different from Lyme disease. Her study reveals that infection by Borrelia miyamotoi, related to B. burgdorferi, may be responsible for these illnesses, which are missed by standard Lyme disease testing.

Finally, Dr. Anne Louise Oaklander from Massachusetts General Hospital discussed small-fiber peripheral neuropathy, disorders of the nervous system that may result from hyperinflammation in peripheral sites, leading in some cases to chronic pain and other symptoms. Characterization and documentation of these disorders has begun, and greater understanding of the underlying mechanism may reveal whether they are linked to persisting symptoms attributed to tick-borne infections. The conference overall spread a wealth of knowledge and inspired new research ideas.

Understanding Lyme and tick-borne infections is enormously complex. That’s why it’s so important for the scientific community to collaborate. Only through collaboration can we find the answers that will allow us to treat and, ultimately, cure those suffering from tick-borne diseases.

 

 

 

One Third Finish Ticks Carrying at Least One Disease Pathogen

https://yle.fi/uutiset/osasto/news/one_third_of_ticks_in_finland_carry_at_least_one_disease_pathogen/10488767  2/11/18

One third of ticks in Finland carry at least one disease pathogen

Thanks to a growing tick database at the University of Turku, researchers have new insights into the disease pathogens that the tiny, blood-sucking arachnids carry.

Taigapunkki
Close-up photo of taiga tick specimen. Image: Maija Laaksonen / Turun yliopisto

Around a third of the ticks in Finland – mostly found in the south – carry at least one pathogen. Two percent of the persistent arachnids carry several disease-causing agents, researchers at Turku University said.

About 30 percent of common ticks and 24 percent of taiga tick populations have been found to carry one disease pathogen. Common ticks more commonly carry several disease causing pathogens than taiga ticks, according to the researchers.

The most common pathogen found in the ticks was Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterial species that causes Lyme disease in humans – an illness referred to locally as borreliosis – and was found in 17 percent of the ticks at the university’s growing tick database bank.

Lyme disease cases are treated with aggressive antibiotics, without necessarily determining which specific bacterium is responsible for the infection.

Tavallinen puutiainen
Common tick specimen. Image: Maija Laaksonen / Turun yliopisto

New research has revealed that ticks on the south coast carry the most pathogens but the region is home almost exclusively where the most common ticks – Ixodes ricinus or castor bean ticks – are found.

Both castor bean ticks and taiga ticks are now commonly found in areas across central Finland, the researchers said. Even further north, the tick populations are quite similar to ones in central areas, but the taiga has become more common in the north.

About three years ago researchers at the university asked members of the public to send in ticks they had found and now the institution has received more than 20,000 ticks. The researchers say that they want to take advantage of the significant amount of information they can learn from the specimens.

Examination of those thousands of tiny arachnids have uncovered many types of disease-causing bacteria and researchers have new insights into the arachnids themselves and the potential illnesses they carry.

The researchers said they hope to learn more about ticks, saying that their research has only begun, and that their study of the ticks will continue for several years. Ultimately, their goal is to find how tick-borne illnesses are transmitted, they said.

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**Comment**

The data just keeps pouring in.  Ticks carry many, many things that infect us.

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/07/01/one-tick-bite-could-put-you-at-risk-for-at-least-6-different-diseases/  It’s up to 18 pathogens and counting…..

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/10/30/study-shows-lyme-msids-patients-infected-with-many-pathogens-and-explains-why-we-are-so-sick/   Key Quote: “Our findings recognize that microbial infections in patients suffering from TBDs do not follow the one microbe, one disease Germ Theory as 65% of the TBD patients produce immune responses to various microbes.”

The authors state the “Borrelia persistent form,” biomarker can enhance the sensitivity of any LD test. Using the CDC recommended two-tier testing, the study also showed that 72% of individuals classified “negative” by the CDC, were positive for ‘Borrelia persistent form’ and other microbes such as Babesia, Bartonella, and Ehrlichia. Co-infections are common and have been documented all over the world.

This seminal work proves that exposure to tick transmitted microbes weakens the human immune system, making people very ill due to the synergistic effects of these pathogens.  This complex then further opens the door to opportunistic microbes, such as Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Epstein-Barr virus and others.

This is exactly what is happening in the real world.  I pray the CDC/NIH/IDSA get the memo.

 

 

 

Hawk Found Carrying Asian Long-horned Tick – the One that Drains Cattle of all Their Blood

https://www.localdvm.com/news/virginia/virginia-hawk-first-bird-in-north-america-found-carrying-invasive-tick/1560920669  (News story found here)

It’s confirmed.  The tick from hell has been found on a hawk in Virginia.  

This Asian “dracula” tick causes SFTS (severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome), “an emerging hemorrhagic fever,” causing  fever, fatigue, headache, nausea, muscle pain, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, disease of the lymph nodes, and conjunctival congestion, but the potential impact of this tick on tickborne illness is not yet known. In other parts of the world, this Longhorned tick, also called the East Asian or bush tick, and has been associated with several tickborne diseases, such as spotted fever rickettsioses, Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, and Borrelia, the causative agent of Lyme Disease.  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/06/12/first-longhorned-tick-confirmed-in-arkansas/

Main concerns:

  1. IT CLONES ITSELF & MULTIPLIES QUICKLY…..
  2. It can drain cattle of their blood: https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/03/12/asian-tick-found-in-new-jersey-can-kill-cattle-by-draining-them-of-blood/
  3. It’s been known to cause disease in Asia
  4. A top ecologist wonders if infection by this tick has gone undetected in the past.
  5. There isn’t a systematic national method to look for invasive ticks.
  6. It’s quickly showing up in other states: https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/05/26/tick-from-hell-now-sited-in-west-virginia/
  7. It survives cold temps: https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/04/21/ticks-from-hell-survived-the-winter/ (Again, the spread if ticks and infection has ZIPPO to do with climate change)

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/09/12/three-surprising-things-i-learned-about-asian-longhorned-ticks-the-tick-guy-tom-mather/  Tick guy, Tom Mather, found that this particular tick, which reproduces by cloning itself, lines up on a single blade of grass motionless, tightly knitted together like the scales on a snake.  Once they found one glad of grass like this, they started seeing this every couple of feet.  He quickly realized this is NOT a rare tick.

LIKE A BOMB, THEY EXPLODE WHEN SOMETHING BRUSHES BY.

three_surprising_4.png

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/07/19/rutgers-racing-to-contain-asian-longhorned-tick/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/08/17/of-birds-and-ticks/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/06/08/hemorrhagic-fever-virus-found-on-ticks-on-migratory-birds/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/10/02/the-role-of-birds-in-tickborne-illness/

Advanced Heart Block in Children With Lyme Disease

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00246-018-2003-8

Advanced Heart Block in Children with Lyme Disease

Meena Bolourchi, Eric S. Silver, Leonardo Liberman

 

Original Article

 

Abstract

Background

The clinical course of children with advanced heart block secondary to Lyme disease has not been well characterized.

Objective

To review the presentation, management, and time to resolution of heart block due to Lyme disease in previously healthy children.

Methods

An IRB approved single-center retrospective study was conducted of all patients < 21 years old with confirmed Lyme disease and advanced second or third degree heart block between 2007 and 2017.

Results

Twelve patients (100% male) with a mean age of 15.9 years (range 13.2–18.1) were identified. Six patients (50%) had mild to moderate atrioventricular valve regurgitation and all had normal biventricular function. Five patients had advanced second degree heart block and 7 had complete heart block with an escape rate of 20–57 bpm. Isoproterenol was used in 4 patients for 3–4 days and one patient required transvenous pacing for 2 days. Patients were treated with 21 days (n = 6, 50%) or 28 days (n = 6, 50%) of antibiotics. Three patients received steroids for 3–4 days. Advanced heart block resolved in all patients within 2–5 days, and all had a normal PR interval within 3 days to 16 months from hospital discharge.

Conclusion

Symptomatic children who present with new high-grade heart block from an endemic area should be tested for Lyme disease. Antibiotic therapy provides quick and complete resolution of advanced heart block within 5 days, while steroids did not appear to shorten the time course in this case series. Importantly, no patients required a permanent pacemaker.

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**Comment**

Two things stick out 1) These are all kids 2) They need to be followed for a much longer period of time.  There is a third thing as well and that’s the ineffectiveness of steroids, which has long been known, as catabolic steroids will suppress the immune system allowing the infection to worsen.  Many a Lyme/MSIDS patient has had to learn that fact the hard way.  The next question begging to be asked is are these kids were infected with other TBI’s (tick borne infections) such as Bartonella, Babesia, Mycoplasma, and numerous viruses?  After all, one tick bite could give you 18 and counting different infections:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/07/01/one-tick-bite-could-put-you-at-risk-for-at-least-6-different-diseases/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/02/13/lyme-disease-treatment/  This link shows the importance of overlapping treatment with many antimicrobials to effectively treat a pleomorphic (shape-shifting), complex bacteria(ish) organism that pretty much defies all convention in the infectious world.  It’s complexity has never been taken seriously by main-stream medicine.

Myopic and limited research such as this worries me greatly.  These kids are young and have full lives ahead of them.  Due to the lack of recognition and acceptance of the complexity of the organisms involved, these children in my mind are in harm’s way and are in great risk of developing serious issues in the not so distant future.  

Please spread the word!

For more on Lyme:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/10/30/study-shows-lyme-msids-patients-infected-with-many-pathogens-and-explains-why-we-are-so-sick/

Key Quote: “Our findings recognize that microbial infections in patients suffering from TBDs do not follow the one microbe, one disease Germ Theory as 65% of the TBD patients produce immune responses to various microbes.”

And I’ll bet that 65% is still low….

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/10/27/school-related-difficulties-with-lyme-disease/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/08/23/caring-for-a-child-with-lyme-podcast/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/08/12/lyme-disease-case-started-with-headaches/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/10/08/misdiagnosed-how-children-with-treatable-medical-issues-are-mistakenly-labeled-as-mentally-ill/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/06/04/ld-diagnosis-took-forever-because-of-mental-health-stigma/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/06/30/child-with-lymemsidspans-told-by-doctors-she-made-it-all-up/

Skull Infection Due to Bartonella

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/30319958/

Skull osteomyelitis as a rare complication of cat scratch disease.

Rafee Y, et al. Avicenna J Med. 2018 Oct-Dec.

Abstract

Bartonella henselae, the causative agent of cat scratch disease (CSD), is one of the most common causes of regional lymphadenitis in children. Other less common manifestations of B. henselae infection including fever of unknown origin, neuroretinitis, and osteomyelitis are being increasingly recognized. We describe a 3-year-old female with a recent history of typical CSD involving lymph nodes who developed osteomyelitis of the skull, a very rarely recognized complication of this infection.

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**Comment**

Having spent two days getting my head crammed full of information on Bartonella from some of the leading experts, I chuckle once again at the words, “rare complication” of a disease that frankly is probably going to surpass Lyme disease in sheer numbers and devastation.  Few are studying Bartonella and fewer yet are connecting it to Lyme/MSIDS, yet so many of us have it.

I saw bold, colored pictures of Bartonella in skin, bone, brain, liver, heart, synovial fluid, blood, and the prostrate.  In other words, everywhere.  It was clearly demonstrated that Bartonella can cause long-lasting and even lethal intra-erythrocytic (inside red blood cells) bacteremia in mammals.

In the abstract above, a toddler has a true bone infection from being chronically and inadequately treated for Bartonella.  Being only 3, this study is informative in that this type of infection doesn’t take a long period of time to occur.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2884909/  This next link explains that due to facial skeletal anatomy, a bone infection here is more difficult to treat. Bones involved in osteomyelitis of the skull include the mandible, frontal bone, maxilla, nasal bone, temporal bone, and skull base bones.  (Those of you with facial pain can probably identify with this)

While they state it is rare and mostly happens in third-world countries, Bart is going to blow that myth to the wind.

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/01/03/bartonella-treatment/  This link corroborates the above link in that one of the mechanisms of Bart is to compress blood vessels, causing inflammation and edema of the area it infects.  In this case, the marrow.  This of course compromises blood flood and perpetuates a ripe area for the infection to abide.  This explains why the bottoms of our feet feel like someone beat them with a hammer.

In the talks on Bart, I learned that it was all over the area when a port was removed from a patient, indicating the need for continuing treatment to clear up the Bartonella infection in the surrounding tissue.  Please share this information with your doctor.

For more on Bartonella:

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/05/07/fox-news-bartonella-is-the-new-lyme-disease/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/02/07/finally-rt-pcr-detected-bartonella-henselae-dna-on-tissue-valve/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/09/13/dr-fox-cat-scratch-fever-warning/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/05/11/bartonella-henselae-in-children-with-congenital-heart-disease/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2017/01/04/endocarditis-consider-bartonella/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/08/09/a-bartonella-story/