Archive for the ‘Treatment’ Category

Ozone Therapy for Lyme Disease & Other Tick-Borne Illness

https://www.globallymealliance.org/blog/ozone-treatment-for-lyme-disease

GLA’s Chairman, Paul Ross interviews ozone therapy specialist Dr. Robbins, along with a Lyme patient, Charles Toepher who has experience with the treatment

Watch the interview:

“Recognizing the importance of evaluating novel treatment options for chronic Lyme disease patients, GLA is funding a study of the effects of ozone on Lyme bacteria at world-renowned Tufts University.”- Timothy Sellati Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer, GLA.

Read the transcript of the video interview below.

note: The transcript has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Paul Ross: Dr. Robbins, I thought we’d begin with you giving us a brief overview of how you got interested in using ozone therapy for Lyme, and do you also consider it a treatment for other tick-borne disease?

Dr. Robbins: I’ve treated several thousand Lyme patients successfully, to the point where I believe we’ve put it in remission because we have to be able to prove it’s gone. And I think we need a much better, more reliable test to prove that true.

Paul Ross: So, when a patient comes to see you, do you know from the outset or after an initial discussion and/or exam which type of ozone you’re going to use?

Dr. Robbins: Everybody gets the simplest method first because the most important thing about the therapy is all these people are suffering. They find ozone as a last resort when other things have failed. So, I have to be very careful that they don’t get hurt, and while in all my years and 380,000+ treatments that we’ve done intravenously, I have only had two patients that I had to stop treating because they had what I would call an allergic or hypersensitive response to ozone.

So, with that in mind, I can dose this very, very carefully. The best part about ozone is that it’s completely adjustable to the individual. I like to tell patients, it’s a little shocking the way I say it purposely, I go, “You’re not the boss and I’m not the boss. Your body is our boss. Your body tells us whether it’s going to be full speed ahead or whether we have to be far more gentle with you, and with a small percentage of the Lyme patients, I have to adjust every single treatment because of the way it may cause a Herxheimer reaction in them, and I’m sure there isn’t a person listening to this that doesn’t know what a Herx is.

So, to minimize that, we take actions we can talk about later, but more importantly, I adjust the therapy to the individual so they don’t have to suffer any more than they already have, if possible. Herxing isn’t a bad thing. It means it’s working. We’re killing off junk, but it’s not a wonderful thing to go through either.

Paul Ross: So, you’ve treated an extraordinary number of patients. If you had to guess, what percentage of those are Lyme and/or tick-borne disease?

Dr. Robbins: It’s about an average of about 100 new Lyme patients a year. I’ve only had one patient that had Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, but I always find Lyme disease… because, remember, I’m not a LLD (Lyme-literate Doctor). I’m an expert in getting rid of it with ozone, but I’m not an expert on Lyme disease and every aspect of it. I’m still learning, I would have to say. And there’s so many co-infections. it’s all these different co-infections that ozone is treating because when ozone enters your blood, it has the unique ability to destroy every bacteria and spirochete, every virus, fungus, yeast, mold, parasite, toxin, and harmful free radical, and even chelate toxic metal off nerve tissue, which regular chelation therapy can’t do, and that’s where all the damage is done, by toxic metals. It acts as an anti-inflammatory and as a pain killer.

It stimulates natural stem cell activity, so I call that fixing the unfixable, repairing the unrepairable. It has many other positive side effects, including hair and nails growing healthier and faster. People sleep better and have more energy all day long. It increases oxygen utilization at the cellular level by allowing the organelles, the mitochondria that make energy, to uptake oxygen and create more energy molecules. It has circulation benefits as well. So, it has a versatility that’s caused much of its problem. It’s so versatile, and it sounds too good to be true. So, that’s ozone’s biggest problem and worse, it’s not a patentable medicine. If it were patentable, it would be in every hospital already. So, big pharma has no use for it whatsoever.

Paul Ross: So, I think the lesson to take away is that ozone is extremely effective for all tick-borne diseases.

Dr. Robbins: Yes, and while you’re doing ozone therapy, you can be doing any pharmaceutical that you’re already on or suddenly have to be put on, including antibiotics. You could be taking any nutraceuticals, which includes vitamins, minerals, herbs, homeopathy, Ayurvedic medicine, Chinese medicine. You could be doing any other therapy you want.

Paul Ross: Patients will be relieved to hear that they can use this while continuing their other treatments. So, it seems this isn’t only a treatment for people with chronic Lyme. What if someone is bitten by a tick and they immediately go on a short course of antibiotics. Is it beneficial for them to do ozone at that time?

Dr. Robbins: I’ve only had five “I’ve just got bitten” cases in my career with Lyme disease. When we can get them that close to it, we not only do intravenous, but we inject right into where the bite is and around it to kill the toxins and infection that still may be living there. That’s just done once or twice and then the rest of it is just IV. In those cases, in a relatively short time, we stop treating them. They had absolutely no symptoms. So, the sooner they get in the better, but unfortunately, I only see Stage II and Stage III Lyme. That’s what I mostly see. I also like to point out to people that there is a Stage IV, I call it, is death. Lyme is a life-taking disease. It is not a life-changing disease, and it has to be taken seriously that way.

Paul Ross: is there an average or typical number of treatments that one has to take in order to start seeing improvement?

Charles Toepher: I can actually address that. I speak for both my sister and I, who had chronic fatigue as well. After the first treatment it was immediate. We were like, “Hey, that’s what feeling better is like.” And that feeling went away after a couple of hours, but I said, “Okay, this actually can make a difference, so I’m going to go back for more and see what happens.”

Dr. Robbins: I always want to point out that ozone, and for Lyme disease, particularly late-stage Lyme, is a marathon. It’s not a sprint. But the good news, while I normally say there is no average, usual, or typical number of treatments that it takes to get rid of any medical problem in anybody, the fact is that by the time they’ve done a minimum of three or four treatments a week for about 24, 26 treatments, they will know it’s working. They will see there is changes and benefits.

Ozone is medicine. It’s just medicine, but it’s in a different form than we’re used to using medicine. Where normally, it’s a capsule, powder, tablet, or liquid. This is in a gas form. And when we take medicine, we take it every day or usually several times a day, not just once a week, month, or a year. When you want to get rid of a very serious, life-taking disease, to expect that one or two treatments, one or two doses of medicine in a week is going to change everything, is very unrealistic. it’s important to understand that not everybody receives ozone miracles. I wish everybody did, but it’s important to recognize that.

Paul Ross: Most of the chronic Lyme sufferers, they experience a journey until they receive some sort of relief, usually often after seeing many doctors and trying many different protocols. Can you briefly describe your experience with Lyme, and perhaps you had other infections, and then how you ended up trying ozone?

Charles Toepher: Yes. I got sick when I was in college. I was on the crew club. So, they take you out to the woods, they leave you there, you go run back six, seven miles, and I ended up getting really ill. It turned out to be Borrelia and Lyme.  Ultimately, they gave me a course of antibiotics, and generally, I was okay after that for probably about four or five years.

In my mid-20s, I got really sick again, and this time, I couldn’t function. You feel like your brain is on fire all the time, and you have to sleep but you can’t sleep, and you’re tired all the time. It’s like you’re hungover, and I don’t drink. That’s how I felt pretty much 24/7, and luckily, I had a friend who recommended me to a fellow by the name of Martin Feldman.

And Martin, Dr. Feldman, did tests on me and said, “Oh, you have Epstein-Barr and Lyme disease.” I got, “What’s that?” Because I had no idea what this was. He said, “It’s a tick-borne disease. The other is not, but we have to treat you with IV therapy. We’re going to change your diet. We’re going to give you Vitamin B shots. We’re going to supplement you.” And so, I went through that and there was improvement, quite a bit of improvement.

Paul Ross: How long did it take?

Charles Toepher: About a year and a half. I mean, I was really not well. And then, again, things sort of settled down and then 2006, for me, August, because I remember because I woke up with swelling around my eyes. And I ended up taking Chinese medicine because I spent two years working in China and had access to Chinese medicine. But after that, really until probably about 2016, I tried acupuncture, vitamin therapies, and Panchakarma, which actually was temporarily helpful.

Paul Ross: Can you tell us about what that is? I’m not familiar with it.

Charles Toepher: Panchakarma is traditional Indian medicine, and it up-regulates the function of your liver to help you detoxify. You’re fed a highly alkalizing diet and very specific herbs for the period of time that they’re treating you. They actually give you medicated oils, which are massaged into the body, into the head. It actually really helped, but it didn’t help me for a long enough period of time, and was pricey. But in 2016, a friend of mine mentioned ozone therapy, and so I started doing research on it because being in the environmental cleanup business, we would clean up oil spills. We would work on cleaning up radiological contamination, and also, funny enough, we used a bacteria to eat the oil spills, in a machine and so, I understood, conceptually, how bacteria functioned.

So, I read about it and I went to see Dr. Robbins as a result. The first time I saw him, he said, “Okay. You need to come for at least 35, 36 treatments. But you need to come consistently three times a week for this, and then we’re going to reevaluate at the end of that time.” Dr. Robbins also had me take a liquid probiotic, which really were helpful and worked with the treatment, even though past probiotics had given me some kind of intestinal distress.

Additionally, because you become friendly with people there, and I met somebody who said to me, “Listen, you should also consider going to this Chinese medicine person, traditional Chinese medicine.” And what I found was that Dr. Robbins’ treatments became more effective with me taking the Chinese herbal medicine that she was prescribing for me as well. Over time I saw great improvement. Now I have mostly good days and once in a while I’ll have a bad health day.

I continued the probiotic, which is interesting because, literally, the equipment that we built to clean sewage and clean oil-contaminated water, conceptually operated the same way. The bacteria would sort of populate this iron stomach or intestine and would eat the food. And so, the probiotic, which ultimately Dr. Robbins made, Doctor’s Biome, he calls it, worked very effectively with the treatment because the ozone gets rid of everything, the bad bacteria and the good bacteria, and so, you need to repopulate the good bacteria. And especially if you took as many antibiotics as I was given. It sort of elevates your sense of wellbeing. So, the Chinese medicine, the ozone therapy, and also I did what Dr. Robbins calls a glute sandwich. So, I had Glutathione, first the ozone therapy, then Glutathione injected, which was wonderful for me.

The other thing that was interesting is, I had to get used to feeling better because you get used to feeling bad all the time, and so you almost want or are looking for that familiar feeling. And so, part of the journey is being willing to go to a place you either haven’t been for a very long time or you don’t remember, and having the confidence to continue on that path. Part of that also was meditation. Some of the meditations that Dr. Joe Dispenza does, I like to use because it, from a scientific standpoint, makes sense to me, and everything I do. I mean, I research everything to death because that’s a big part of what we do. I’m a business person, but everything we do has a basis in science, whether it’s environmental sciences or health sciences, and so, I really need to know.

Paul Ross: Dr. Robbins, when Charles came to see you, did you find him to be a typical Lyme patient or was he sicker than most? What were your initial impressions?

Dr. Robbins: Well, no. I would say more that’s what I see. It’s very typical. Many of the Lyme patients today have other co-infections like Epstein-Barr virus, very common. Mold toxicity seems to be something, in the last couple years, that I see quite a bit of, and I’m published on mold toxicity, actually. The Online Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine on ozone and its ability to eliminate mold and mixed mold mycotoxicosis. So, in any case, these co-infections, that’s why ozone’s working because it’s fighting and attacking all these different things.

Dr. Robbins: And there’s only three things patients with ozone therapy have to do. The first is to be well hydrated. The second is to take vitamin C, which has become a very interesting thing with Lyme. It’s almost a diagnostic test for it, in some patients. Even small amounts of it can cause a person to Herx. No other kind of medical problem seems to be hit by Vitamin C that way. The third is to change the diet. We have to put good biome back in.

Paul Ross: Charles, did you Herx from the treatment, and if so how did this Herxing compare to Herxing from you’ve had many different treatments?

Charles Toepher: Yes, I have had a Herx reaction. It got a little bit of tightness in the chest, so I sat with an oxygen cannula for about 10 minutes and then I was fine. Or if I was a little too aggressive and I’m often like let’s do more! – which isn’t always the best thing to do. In that case, you go home and you go, okay, I kind of overdid it. I would do breathing exercises, cold therapy (an ice cold shower or an ice bath), and meditation. A sauna, but far infrared saunas were helpful when I wouldn’t feel great after a treatment, which would happen every once in a while. But in general, never had any issues. The  treatment was usually about 10 minutes, 15 minutes. That’s it. And then, I’d sit there, have some green tea, which seems to help a lot.

Paul Ross: From the time that you first saw Dr. Robbins to the time you stopped, or perhaps you’re continuing to use ozone, you could let us know how long until you felt like you were well?

Charles Toepher: Probably after the first 30, 40 treatments, I felt like a human being again, but I really wanted more, so I continued. I then stopped for two years because I was fine, but started having weird balance issues where going down stairs became a challenge, and so I went back for more treatment and did the herbs, and then just continued. And what I found is that there hasn’t been an endpoint where I’ve stopped getting better or stronger, and I’ve used a fitness tracker to mark my progress.

Now, I’m a once-a-month guy, so to speak, for ozone, and I am a once-every-other-week guy for a Vitamin C IV, and that has worked, and I’ve continued with doing let’s say, and infrared sauna once a week or twice a week as well. When I have access to the Chinese herbs, I take them, but the funny thing is, I don’t need them anymore. I dedicate three hours a week to treatments that make my life better, and it has made a meaningful difference in my life and the quality of my life and the energy I can give to my work and to other people around me.

Paul Ross: I think for many who will be viewing this, this story that you’re telling will be so very reassuring and I imagine there will be some converts, some people who will be very, very eager to try this therapy. Before we close, is there anything that either of you would like to add, something that we should have covered that we didn’t cover?

Dr. Robbins: No moral or ethical doctor should ever promise or guarantee a result. I usually tell patients if a doctor promises you 100%, leave skid marks getting out of that office. The fact of the matter is, with Lyme disease, if you stay with it and you’re consistent with care, I have to say, I have not failed yet. The primary goal is to get you well so you can live your life again, and that’s why I’m doing this at my age because we’re changing people’s lives.

Charles Toepher: I would second what Dr. Robbins says. It’s about being consistent. There definitely were times where I really didn’t feel great, but I went anyway, and then the sun comes out, as it were a bit. The other thing I would say is not ozone is created equal, in terms of who’s applying it, and again, I’ve done a lot of research, there’s a standard of care that I found with Dr. Robbins that, when you look around, what’s available in the United States is not always so consistent. So, in terms of both the equipment, the knowledge. And so, that’s the only caution I would say.

Paul Ross: Well, on behalf of GLA, we want to thank the two of you. I think this has been an extremely informative session and I trust that the viewers will find it to be as enlightening as I can tell you I have found it to be. Our guests today were Dr. Howard Robbins and a patient of his, Charles Toepher.  Again, on behalf of GLA, thank you both of you. Very informative and we hope to continue bringing you, that is our audience, additional alternative treatments.

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To reach Dr. Robbins for questions: Email OzoneDoctor@yahoo.com or call: 212-581-0101

To read more blog posts, click here.

48,465 DEAD Following COVID Shots According to Whistleblower Lawsuit & Fauci Protocols Killing People

https://healthimpactnews.com/2021/whistleblower-lawsuit-government-medicare-data-shows-48465-dead-following-covid-shots-remdesivir-drug-has-25-death-rate/

Whistleblower Lawsuit! Government Medicare Data Shows 48,465 DEAD Following COVID Shots – Remdesivir Drug has 25% Death Rate

by Brian Shilhavy
Editor, Health Impact News

Sept. 28, 2021

Back in July of this year we reported that Ohio-based Attorney Thomas Renz was filing a federal lawsuit in Alabama based on a “sworn declaration, under threat of perjury,” from an alleged whistleblower who claims to have inside knowledge of a cover-up of reported deaths filed with the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS). See:

Attorney Files Lawsuit Against CDC Based on “Sworn Declaration” from Whistleblower Claiming 45,000 Deaths are Reported to VAERS – All Within 3 Days of COVID-19 Shots

Attorney Renz spoke at an event in Colorado this past weekend, and stated that more whistleblowers have now come forward, and that the death rate with those taking the COVID-19 vaccines is much higher than they originally thought.

Presenting data that he claims comes directly from the CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) database, there have been 48,465 deaths among CMS beneficiaries within 14 days of a 1st or 2nd dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

There are about 59.4 million Americans covered by Medicare, representing 18.1% of the population, so these are staggering numbers!

In his presentation, Renz states that they chose deaths within 14 days of vaccination, because the federal health agencies are no longer counting deaths within 14 days of a COVID-19 as a death among the “vaccinated,” but among “unvaccinated.

Renz also presented very damning data on the drug Remdesivir, the new COVID-19 drug that was rushed to market while existing, safe and effective older drugs like Ivermectin are prohibited in hospital settings.

According to CMS data, almost 26% of people put on Remdesivir die. But it is a huge money maker for the government and Big Pharma.

By contrast, only 3.5% of people put on Ivermectin died, according to CMS data. But there are no longer any patents on Ivermectin, so it is not a money maker for the government and Big Pharma.

As attorney Renz states: “You’re being defrauded by your government!”

He also goes on to show what are allegedly documents from Pfizer that seem to suggest they knew that “shedding” occurred with their COVID-19 mRNA shots.

Here is the presentation. I have excerpted the key data he presented. This is from our Bitchute channel, and it will also be on our Rumble channel.

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https://thenewamerican.com/fauci-protocols-not-covid-responsible-for-many-deaths-in-us-dr-ardis-says/v  Video Here (Approx. 17 Min)

Fauci Protocols, Not COVID, Responsible for Many Deaths in US, Dr. Ardis Says

The reason hundreds of thousands of Americans died in hospitals over the last two years was not from COVID, contrary to the media narrative, warns Dr. Bryan Ardis in this interview on Conversations That Matter with The New American magazine Senior Editor Alex Newman. Instead, many of the deaths were caused by organ failure caused by the so-called “Fauci protocols” for COVID treatment imposed on the nation by the federal government and Dr. Anthony Fauci. More specifically, the deaths were caused by the drug Remdesivir, Dr. Ardis says, citing numerous studies–including one funded by Fauci’s office–that showed the drug was causing large numbers of deaths. Acute kidney and liver failure were both listed in the very study Fauci cited to claim the controversial drug was safe and effective. One study showed more than 50 percent of patients receiving the drug were dying. Once the organs shut down, the patients are put on respirators, all but sealing their fate. Make sure to share this video with loved ones.

For more:

More on Remdesivir:

For more:

Whistleblowers are coming out of the woodwork:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2021/09/22/three-whistleblowers-covid-jab-exposed-patients-deserve-to-be-heard-shots-kill-more-than-they-save/

Project Veritas has also been exposing a lot of important information:

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2021/09/29/jj-officials-kids-shouldnt-get-covid-vaccines-but-adults-who-dont-comply-with-mandates-should-be-inconvenienced/

The Cheapest, Most Accessible Therapy for Viral Infections – Dr. Thomas Levy

https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5zaW1wbGVjYXN0LmNvbS9sdkNSUlo4Xw/episode/NmEzNzk0  Podcast Here or here:  https://store.drsozone.com/pages/listen?utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Rapid+Virus+Recovery

The Cheapest, Most Accessible Therapy for Viral Infections w/ Dr. Thomas Levy

Play • 36 min

Welcome to another episode of Ditch the Quick Fix podcast!

In today’s conversation, I am honored to host and talk to Dr. Thomas Levy, MD. He is a board-certified cardiologist and a bar-certified attorney.

He practiced adult cardiology for more than 15 years and then began to research the enormous toxicity associated with much of dental work and also the pronounced impact of properly administered vitamin C to neutralize this toxicity.

In addition, he is a prolific writer, having written 13 groundbreaking medical books. His latest book, Rapid Virus Recovery, highlights the natural treatment for all viral infections, especially those contracted through the respiratory route.

Dr. Levy will also highlight the impact of periodontal disease on heart health and cancer.

Join us in this conversation as we learn from Dr. Levy about some natural and inexpensive opportunities to improve our health.

Key Takeaways

– The cheapest, most accessible therapy for viral infections (01:48)

Good viral therapies that don’t require a prescription (08:31)

– Don’t fear; you have good choices available to you (13:45)

– The many benefits of hydrogen peroxide (14:35)

– The only thing that causes disease (15:31)

– Why healthy mouth and teeth are vital to overall health (21:37)

– Your health care is directly dependent on your initiative (31:51)

Additional Resources:

Get in Touch with Dr. Thomas Levy  here:

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You can find the podcast on Apple, Google, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you listen to podcasts.

If you haven’t already, please rate and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts!

For more: 

How About Health As a COVID Exit Strategy?

https://lacrossetribune.com/opinion/columnists/opinion-how-about-health-as-a-covid-exit-strategy/article

Opinion: How about health as a COVID exit strategy?

Frank Edelblut
Frank Edelblut

Excerpts:

What is common among many of these health conditions are the significant influence lifestyle choices have in controlling them. This is particularly true for the top three causes of severe COVID-19. Of course, hereditary factors play a role in these conditions for some people, but for many people, these health conditions can be controlled with lifestyle choices.

The lesson we might take from this is health and wellness should be a key strategy in the avoidance of severe COVID-19 effects.  (See link for article)

The article points out that anxiety and fear-related disorders increased the chance of death from COVID-19 by 28%, which is the second-highest health condition accompanying death from COVID-19.

The author then astutely points out that for over 18 months the media has done nothing but emphasize and focus on risks, dangers, and tragic outcomes with little coverage on making healthy choices as a strategy.  To demonstrate this, a German paper finally came clean and apologized for its fear-mongering.

The media should be reporting on the complete censorship of doctors who are trying to truly help patients with effective, safe treatments and saving lives.  Instead, they are complicitly spreading the government’s misinformation.

For more:

There are also many, many success stories of people who have survived COVID. You never read about these cases – only fear, gloom, doom, and more fear.  The healthiest thing you can do for your mental health is turn off mainstream media.  Just turn it off. 

A NY Times reporter just got caught lying about a COVID surge in schools that didn’t actually happen.

Why is Lyme Difficult to Treat & What About Dormant Spirochetes?

https://www.globallymealliance.org/blog/dear-lyme-warrior…help-1

Every few months, Jennifer Crystal devotes a column to answering your questions. Do you have a question for Jennifer? If so, email her at lymewarriorjennifercrystal@gmail.com.
Why is Lyme disease so difficult to treat?

Lyme disease is not always difficult to treat. If it is caught early and treated effectively, the infection can be cleared with a few weeks of antibiotics. Some 10-20% of people treated for Stage 1 Early Localized Lyme Disease do go on to experience persistent symptoms, sometimes referred to as Post Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS). For some patients, this may be due to persistent infection that requires further treatment. Researchers are also studying the role of immune dysregulation, debris left over from Lyme disease, and ongoing inflammation as potential causes (not necessarily mutually exclusive) for ongoing symptoms. GLA-funded research has also identified biofilms, which form a protective layer around Lyme disease bacteria so that antibiotics can’t kill them, as a reason for persistent disease.

PTLDS refers to patients whose Lyme disease was caught and treated early but whose symptoms persist. Due to nebulous symptoms and faulty diagnostic tests, many patients are not diagnosed until Stage 2 (Early Disseminated Lyme Disease) or Stage 3 (Late Disseminated Lyme Disease). Those infections are more difficult to treat because they have spread to other parts of the body and, in Stage 3, have crossed the blood-brain barrier. Lyme disease bacteria, called a spirochete, coils into cells, bones, and joints, and away from antibiotics. Lyme infections can also be more difficult to treat when a person is co-infected with another tick-borne disease. Some co-infections, like babesiosis, require different treatment than Lyme disease; if a person doesn’t know they’re co-infected, they may only be fighting half the battle.

The other tricky part about tick-borne disease is that no two cases are alike. In addition to factors like how long it took for someone to get diagnosed and whether they’re co-infected, each person reacts differently to treatment. The protocol that works for one person might not work for another. Individual immune response, as well as other underlying conditions (for example, I also have chronic active Epstein-Barr virus), can make Lyme disease more difficult to treat. The most important thing is to make sure you’re in the hands of a good Lyme Literate Medical Doctor (LLMD) who can create a treatment plan tailored for your specific case.

Do Lyme bacteria lie dormant, waiting to interfere with healing from surgery or other medical conditions?

Lyme bacteria (spirochetes) can go into a dormant state and flare during periods of stress, including acute medical issues. Spirochetes love scar tissue, so surgery can particularly have the potential to rile them up. This does not mean this will be the case for all Lyme disease patients, however. As I mentioned in response to the previous question, if your Lyme disease was caught early and treated effectively, the infection could be completely cleared. Lyme disease that isn’t caught for months or years—called Stage 3 or Late Disseminated Lyme Disease—is much more difficult to treat, especially if complicated by co-infections. In these cases, the infection can be battled into remission, with bacteria going into a dormant state but relapsing from time to time.

My own flare-ups have tended to happen during stressful transitions such as starting a new job, moving, or going through a breakup. Pushing myself too hard physically or neurologically can cause setbacks, too. When I had knee surgery that took much longer than expected to heal, I’d unknowingly been harboring Lyme disease, babesiosis, ehrlichiosis, and possible bartonella for three years, but hadn’t yet been diagnosed or treated. Because the infections were running unchecked in my body, they interfered with healing. Had I already been treated for tick-borne disease, my recovery from that surgery probably would have been much faster.

Since being treated for tick-borne disease, recovery from other surgeries has been appropriate. I’ve had a breast excision and wisdom teeth removal with no Lyme disease flares. My doctor prescribed additional antibiotics for a week or two pre-and-post operations. You might talk to your LLMD about taking this precautionary measure if you are facing surgery. It’s also important to give yourself enough time to heal, to nourish your body before and after surgery with anti-inflammatory foods, and to get adequate rest. Your LLMD may also want you to start or to increase immune-building supplements before surgery. I’ve taken these measures when dealing with other acute medical issues, including COVID-19, and they have helped me to heal without interference from flaring tick-borne disease.

Jennifer Crystal

Opinions expressed by contributors are their own. Jennifer Crystal is a writer and educator in Boston. Her work has appeared in local and national publications including Harvard Health Publishing and The Boston Globe. As a GLA columnist for over six years, her work on GLA.org has received mention in publications such as The New Yorker, weatherchannel.com, CQ Researcher, and ProHealth.com. Jennifer is a patient advocate who has dealt with chronic illness, including Lyme and other tick-borne infections. Her memoir about her medical journey is forthcoming. Contact her via email below.

Email: lymewarriorjennifercrystal@gmail.com

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**Comment**

A few points:

  • Microbiologist Holly Ahern has written a marvelous piece that exposes that the oft repeated dogma that only 10-20% go on to have symptoms is false.  This percentage only includes those diagnosed and treated early.  There is a larger group of 30-40% that are diagnosed and treated late.  When you simply add the two groups you discover that up to 60% or more struggle with persistent symptoms.  This is important to clarify for many reasons.
  • People can jump from stage to stage in any random order.  People try and put this into a nice containable box when there is much that is unknown.  I wrote about the little girl who went out to play in the morning, got a tick bite above her eye, and in the total time of 4-6 hours lost the ability to walk or talk.  The idea that a tick must be attached for 48-72 hours before transmission is ludicrous, yet is also repeated ad nauseum as if it is established fact.
  • We need to drop the PTLDS moniker like a bad habit.  This acronym allows everyone to believe that persistent infection is a myth.  It also enables “experts” to say ludicrous things like Lyme patients just need to choose to be better, as if this complex disease(s) was simply an issue of mind over matter.
  • This article is a perfect example of how much still needs to be done to properly educate patients.

For more: