Archive for the ‘Treatment’ Category

‘A Very, Very Bad Look’ For Remdesivir

https://science.sciencemag.org/content/370/6517/642

‘A very, very bad look’ for remdesivir

Science  06 Nov 2020:
Vol. 370, Issue 6517, pp. 642-643
DOI: 10.1126/science.370.6517.642
Science‘s COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation
Embedded ImagePHOTO: ALEX BRANDON/AP PHOTO

President Donald Trump and FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn (right) met with Gilead CEO Daniel O’Day (left) after remdesivir received an emergency use authorization.

October was a good month for Gilead Sciences, the giant U.S. manufacturer of antivirals. On 8 October, the company inked an agreement to supply the European Union with its drug remdesivir as a treatment for COVID-19—a deal potentially worth more than $1 billion. Two weeks later, on 22 October, remdesivir became the first COVID-19 drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The decisions mean Gilead can cash in big in two major markets, both with soaring COVID-19 cases.

But they baffled scientists who have closely watched the clinical trials of remdesivir unfold over the past 6 months—and who have many questions about its worth. At best, one large, well-designed study found that remdesivir, which must be infused intravenously, modestly reduced the time to recover from COVID-19 in hospitalized patients with severe illness. A few smaller studies found no impact on the disease whatsoever, and none has found that the antiviral reduces patients’ level of SARS-CoV-2, the causative virus. Then, on 15 October, the fourth and largest study delivered what some believed was a coup de grâce: The World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) giant Solidarity trial showed that remdesivir does not reduce mortality or the time COVID-19 patients take to recover.  (See link for article)

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For more:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/26/remdesivir-gets-fda-approval-but-who-says-drug-ineffective-for-covid/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/30/anthony-fauci-40-years-of-lies-from-azt-to-remdesivir/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/01/gilead-big-pharma-and-the-who-an-unholy-trifecta-of-corruption-and-bioterrorism/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/07/02/remdesivir-for-covid-19-not-backed-by-results/

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/06/stunning-faucis-remdesivir-costs-9-per-dose-will-sold-3000-per-dose-china-company-linked-soros-will-also-mass-produce-drug/

Going back to 1997, Donald Rumsfeld chaired the Board of Directors at Gilead and after 2001 he held share packages valued at $5-25 Million. Gilead originally developed Tamiflu. George P Shultz, US Secretary of State also was on the board. He sold stocks at a value of more than $7 million. CA governor’s Pete Wilson’s wife also sat on the board.

‘I don’t know of any biotech company that’s’ so politically well-connected [as Gilead],‘ Andrew McDonald, of the analyst firm Think Equity Partners, told Fortune.” (Source: “Virus Mania, How the Medical Industry Continually Invents Epidemics Making Billion Dollar Profits At Our Expense”)

Excerpt:

Approximately $70 million in U.S. taxpayer funding began Gilead’s partnership with the U.S. Army, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop remdesivir. Initially for treating Ebola, it failed to show benefit and was shelved. If remdesivir is used to treat COVID-19, Gilead shareholders, not the taxpayers, will profit.

Nine COVID Facts: A Pandemic of Fearmongering & Ignorance

http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org/archives/featured-articles/2020/october/28/nine-covid-facts-a-pandemic-of-fearmongering-and-ignorance/

Nine Covid Facts: A Pandemic of Fearmongering and Ignorance

undefinedEver since the alleged pandemic erupted this past March the mainstream media has spewed a non-stop stream of misinformation that appears to be laser focused on generating maximum fear among the citizenry. But the facts and the science simply don’t support the grave picture painted of a deadly virus sweeping the land.Yes we do have a pandemic, but it’ a pandemic of ginned up pseudo-science masquerading as unbiased fact. Here are nine facts backed up with data, in many cases from the CDC itself that paints a very different picture from the fear and dread being relentlessly drummed into the brains of unsuspecting citizens.

1) The PCR test is practically useless

According to an article in the New York Times August 29th 2020 testing for the Covid-19 virus using the popular PCR method results in up to 90% of those tested showing positive results that are grossly misleading.

Officials in Massachusetts, New York and Nevada compiled testing data that revealed the PCR test can NOT determine the amount of virus in a sample. (viral load) The amount of virus in up to 90% of positive results turned out to be so miniscule that the patient was asymptomatic and posed no threat to others. So the positive Covid-19 tests are virtually meaningless.

2) A positive test is NOT a CASE

For some reason every positive Covid-19 test is immediately designated a CASE. As we saw in #1 above up to 90% of positive Covid-19 tests result in miniscule amounts of virus that do not sicken the subject. Historically only patients who demonstrated actual symptoms of an illness were considered a case. Publishing positive test results as “CASES” is grossly misleading and needlessly alarming.

3) The Centers for Disease Control dramatically lowered the Covid-19 Death Count

On August 30th the CDC released new data that showed only 6% of the deaths previously attributed to Covid-19 were due exclusively to the virus. The vast majority, 94%, may have had exposure to Covid-19 but also had preexisting illnesses like heart disease, obesity, hypertension, cancer and various respiratory illnesses. While they died with Covid-19 they did NOT die exclusively from Covid-19.

4) CDC reports Covid-19 Survival Rate over 99% 

The CDC updated their “Current Best Estimate” for Covid-19 survival on September 10th showing that over 99% of people exposed to the virus survived. Another way to say this is that less than 1% of the exposures are potentially life threatening. According to the CDC the vast majority of deaths attributed to Covid-19 were concentrated in the population over age 70, close to normal life expectancy.

5) CDC reveals 85% of Positive Covid cases wore face masks Always or Often 

In September of 2020 the CDC released the results of a study conducted in July where they discovered that 85% of the positive Covid test subjects reported wearing a cloth face mask always or often for two weeks prior to testing positive. The majority, 71% of the test subjects reported always wearing a cloth face mask and 14% reported often wearing a cloth face mask. The only rational conclusion from this study is that cloth face masks offer little if any protection from Covid-19 infection.

6) There are inexpensive, proven therapies for Covid-19

Harvey Risch, MD, PhD heads the Yale University School of Epidemiology. He authored “The Key to Defeating Covid-19 Already Exists. We Need to Start Using It”which was published in Newsweek Magazine July 23rd, 2020. Dr. Risch documents the proven effectiveness of treating patients diagnosed with Covid-19 using a combination of Hydroxychloroquine, an antibiotic like azithromycin and the nutritional supplement zinc. Medical Doctors across the globe have reported very positive results using this protocol particularly for early stage Covid patients.

7) The US Death Rate is NOT spiking

If Covid-19 was the lethal killer it’s made out to be one would reasonably expect to see a significant spike in the number of deaths reported. But that hasn’t happened. According to the CDC as of early May 2020 the total number of deaths in the US was 944,251 from January 1 – April 30th. This is actually slightly lower than the number of deaths during the same period in 2017 when 946,067 total deaths were reported.

8) Most Covid-19 Deaths Occur at the End of a normal Lifespan

According to the CDC as of 2017 US males can expect a normal lifespan of 76.1 years and females 81.1 years. A little over 80% of the suspected Covid-19 deaths have occurred in people over age 65. According to a June 28th New York Post article almost half of all Covid suspected deaths have occurred in Nursing Homes which predominately house people with preexisting health conditions and close to or past their normal life expectancy.

9) CDC Data Shows Minimal Covid Risk to Children and Young Adults

The CDC reported in their September 10th update that it’s estimated Infection Mortality Rate (IFR) for children age 0-19 was so low that 99.97% of those infected with the virus survived. For 20-49 year-olds the survival rate was almost as good at 99.98%. Even those 70 years-old and older had a survival rate of 94.6%. To put this in perspective the CDC data suggest that a child or young adult up to age 19 has a greater chance of death from some type of accident than they do from Covid-19.

Taken together it should be obvious that Covid-19 is pretty similar to typical flu viruses that sicken some people annually. The vast majority are able to successfully fight off the virus with their body’s natural immune system. Common sense precautions should be taken, particularly by those over age 65 that suffer from preexisting medical conditions.

The gross over reaction by government leaders to this illness is causing much more distress, physical, emotional and financial, than the virus ever could on its own. The bottom line is there is NO pandemic, just a typical flu season that has been wildly blown out of proportion by 24/7 media propaganda and enabled by the masses paralyzed by irrational fear.

State and local governments in particular have ignored the rights of the people and have instituted outrageous attacks on freedom and liberty that was bought and paid for by the blood and sacrifice of our forefathers.

Slowly the people are recognizing the great fraud perpetrated on them by bureaucrats and elected officials who have sworn to uphold rights and freedoms as spelled out in the US Constitution. The time has come to hold these criminals accountable by utilizing the legal system to bring them to justice.

Either we act now to preserve freedom and liberty for our children and future generations yet unborn, or we meekly submit to tyrants who crave more power and control. I will not comply!


Copyright © 2020 by RonPaul Institute. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit and a live link are given.
Please donate to the Ron Paul Institute

com/2020/07/10/coronavirus-why-everyone-was-wrong/  Beda M Stadler is the former director of the Institute for Immunology at the University of Bern, a biologist and professor emeritus.

Excerpt:

  1. Firstly, it was wrong to claim that this virus was novel.
  2. Secondly, It was even more wrong to claim that the population would not already have some immunity against this virus.
  3. Thirdly, it was the crowning of stupidity to claim that someone could have Covid-19 without any symptoms at all or even to pass the disease along without showing any symptoms whatsoever.

Success of Prescription & Alternative Medicine Lyme Treatments

https://www.treatlyme.net/guide/antibiotic-alternative-medicines-for-lyme

what_works_to_treat_Lyme_feature

Success of Prescription & Alternative Medicine Lyme Treatments

By Dr. Mary Ross

In my Lyme Q&A webinars and my clinical practice at Marty Ross MD Healing Arts, I answer questions about which treatments work best to recover from chronic Lyme.

Which prescription or herbal antibiotics really work for chronic Lyme disease and how long do they take? What about alternative medicine Lyme disease treatments like:

  • Rife machines,
  • stem cell therapy,
  • ozone,
  • hyperbaric oxygen,
  • hyperthermia,
  • supportive oligonucleotide therapy (SOT),
  • low dose immunotherapy (LDI), or
  • IV hydrogen peroxide?

(Go to link for article)

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**Comment**

Dr. Ross states that in the past he would have had to rely solely upon his clinical experience to address the issue of what works in treating Lyme/MSIDS as the NIH stopped funding clinical research on Lyme disease treatments over 15 years ago and only had studies looking at short term antibiotic use of three months or less.

In this article; however, he utilizes not only his clinical experience but that of MyLymeData, a registry of over 12,000 patients who submit information about their experience with treatment.  Learn more or sign up to participate in MyLymeData at lymedisease.org.

In brief:

  • 76% of those that got well used prescription antibiotics but that this took a year or more to accomplish.
  • patients did best when working with an ILADS trained doctor
  • patients found numerous other alternative therapies helpful (see Ross’ article for the breakdown)
  • Dr. Ross states that the results match his clinical experience 
  • Ross also found that hyperthermia benefits lasted only 2-3 months
  • Ross’ review of the science leads him to believe that ozone, hydrogen peroxide and other oxygen therapies do not kill germs due to anti-oxidants in the blood working as killing neutralizers, but that patients often feel better due to helping the mitochondria.  
  • Ross feels stem cell therapy is an expensive disappointment.
  • He finds those using Rife get benefit 35% of the time.
  • He feels CBD from cannabis is not a good germ killer in humans but that it can treat symptoms.
  • He is skeptical of both SOT and LDI.
  • He also lists many other issues Lyme/MSIDS patients experience (please see article)

All in all, a great informative article.  I’m so thankful whenever doctors write about their clinical experience as there is so little out there on what works. The fact that patients and Dr. Ross are stating the same things is also quite helpful and fruitful.  

We may not have NIH funded studies but we have experience on our side.  

For more:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2016/02/13/lyme-disease-treatment/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/01/new-dapsone-study-breaking-biofilm/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/06/26/new-treatments-for-lyme-disease-on-the-horizon/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/14/peer-reviewed-study-confirms-what-we-knew-all-along-longer-antibiotic-treatment-duration-is-associated-with-better-treatment-response-for-lyme-disease/

 

 

Understanding Bartonella: Symptoms, Testing, and Treatment

https://rawlsmd.com/health-articles/understanding-bartonella?

Understanding Bartonella: Symptoms, Testing, and Treatment

Understanding Bartonella: Symptoms, Testing, and Treatment

by Dr. Bill Rawls
Last Updated 10/27/2020

Bartonella bacteria are gram-negative, meaning they have a double cell wall that’s like a protective capsule that prevents the immune system’s white blood cells from ingesting them. They are slow growing, come in different shapes, and are very difficult to isolate in the lab. They can live inside cells and in isolated locations in the body, protected from the immune system and antibiotics.

Inside an average medical textbook, you will find references to three conditions caused by different strains of bartonella: cat scratch fever (Bartonella henselae), trench fever (Bartonella quintana), and Carrion’s disease (Bartonella bacilliformis). But research over the past 20 years has shown that bartonella is quite a bit more complex. Though some people develop acute symptoms associated with the classic bartonella infections, many people with symptoms of chronic illness who are found to harbor bartonella species have no memory of acute illness.

There are actually many species of bartonella that are widespread in all mammal populations, including whales and dolphins. More than a dozen species have been isolated that can infect humans, hence the broader-named category called bartonella-like organisms (BLO).

Bartonella is typically spread by biting insects (fleas, ticks, mosquitoes, sandflies, lice, chiggers, biting flies, scabies, mites, and even louse-eating spiders), but it can also be transmitted by contaminated bites (of animals), scratches (cat scratch), and ingestion.

Infection by any bartonella species is called Bartonellosis. Let’s examine some of the strains that impact human health.

Bartonella henselae

The most common bartonella strain (as far as anyone knows) is Bartonella henselae. It is the cause of cat scratch fever.

Classically, a scratch from a cat carrying B. henselae develops into a rash, followed about 3 to 10 days after the scratch by symptoms that include low-grade fever, headache, sore throat, and conjunctivitis. Swollen lymph nodes are typical and take weeks to months to subside. In most cases, symptoms are not generally debilitating and resolve without treatment.

Concept of homeless animals - young Stray cat on the street.

Classic cat scratch fever is common, with more than 20,000 cases reported in the U.S. each year. About a third of domestic cats are carriers, along with their fleas. Of course, cats are commonly bitten by ticks, and B. henselae is readily transmitted along with other tick-borne microbes.

When Bartonellosis with B. henselae is caused by an insect bite (ticks, fleas, mosquitoes, etc.), the symptom complex is less well defined and highly variable. Most cases are not reported, and the actual incidence of B. henselae infection may be 10 to 100 times or even a 1,000 times greater than that reported for classic cat scratch fever.

Beyond cats, dogs and other mammals — including humans — also carry B. henselae. Different studies of human populations around the world have shown that the carrier rate for B. henselae in asymptomatic individuals is anywhere from 10% to 30%.

But in certain circumstances, B. henselae may pose serious risks to your health. Emerging insights, like those reported in the journal Cancer Research, suggest B. henselae may be implicated in the development of inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), an aggressive form of breast cancer.

It may be that bartonella facilitates the dispersal of breast tumor cells through the lymphatic system and initiates an acute, cellular inflammatory response, leading to a state of chronic inflammation in patients with IBC. Although more research is needed to determine B. henselae’s contributions to IBC in humans, this preliminary information underscores the importance of understanding how bartonella species may be connected to other health conditions.

Bartonella quintana

Another common species of bartonella, Bartonella quintana is the cause of trench fever. The name comes from the trenches of WWI, where soldiers lived in desperate and debilitating conditions and the spread of Bartonellosis by B. quintana was rampant.

B. quintana, spread by body lice, causes severe fever, headache, muscle aches, leg and back pain, skin rashes, conjunctivitis, and, rarely, heart failure. Today, it’s common in homeless people, again, transmitted by body lice. About 10% to 20% of homeless populations in the U.S. harbor chronic infection with B. quintana. (Estimates suggest that the number of homeless people may be as high as 3.5 million.)

B. quintana can be transmitted directly by the bite of a louse as well as by infected bodies of dead lice scratched into abraded skin. The bacteria becomes tightly interwoven into the feces of the louse, which also is a transmission vector. Louse feces-bound bartonella is infectious for more than a year and can be inhaled or ingested with dust particles. B. quintana has also been found in cats, dogs, monkeys, gerbils, and rats, and it can be transmitted by other insect vectors.

What Bartonella Does to the Body

After entering the body (by whatever means), bartonella infects specialized white blood cells called CD 34+. These blood cells are precursors for cells that line blood vessels and other tissues (endothelial cells).

The microbe enters the cell and creates a cyst around itself (called a vacuole) to gain protection. It also turns off the ability of the cell to self-destruct. Chemical messengers stimulated by bartonella microbes cause more CD 34+ cells to congregate. These messengers simultaneously suppress other key parts of the immune response.

CD 34+ migrate throughout the body and replace damaged endothelial cells. This places bartonella exactly where it wants to be. Once established inside blood vessels, bartonella starts scavenging red blood cells as a nutrient source.

split image. bartonella on left, red blood cells on right

While all of this sounds highly threatening, B. henselae or B. quintana are actually not highly virulent microbes. If the person’s immune system is healthy, the cells of the immune system quickly gain the upper hand, and the microbe is dispatched within a couple of weeks. After a brief low-grade illness, the person is back to full health. Because the illness is rarely debilitating, a doctor and the healthcare system are generally not involved, and a formal diagnosis is never made.

If immune function is not up to par, however, chronic, low-grade infection can occur. It’s insidious The person has mild illness initially but then never gets completely better. The degree of debility is variable and dependent on immune status. It is possible (even common) to have chronic infection without having noticeable symptoms.

Bartonella gains protection from the immune system by invading cells that line blood vessels. Symptoms are mostly related to damage caused to small blood vessels (small vessel disease). Types of symptoms are related to the organs involved. Typical organs that can be affected include:

  • Liver
  • Spleen
  • Bone marrow
  • Eyes
  • Skin
  • Vascular system, including the heart

Stealth Characteristics of Bartonella

With only one known exception (see “The Exception” section, below), bartonella bacteria meet all the characteristics of stealth, low-virulence microbes, opportunistic pathogens with the advantage of persistence to gain a foothold in the body instead of relying on an aggressive attack. The characteristics of stealth microbes are as follows:

  • Widely prevalent in the natural world
  • Ancient host-vector relationship with multiple hosts and vectors
  • Initial infection is generally mild
  • Slow growing
  • Occurs in low concentrations in the body (even in very symptomatic individuals)
  • Associated with chronic infection in immunocompromised hosts
  • Symptoms of chronic infection are very nonspecific and similar to other low-virulence microbes
  • Have the ability to live and thrive inside cells in the body, shielded from the immune system
  • Both difficult to diagnose and difficult to eradicate, low-virulence microbes are very covert

Like other stealth microbes, bartonella is not much of a threat by itself. Virulence is additive, however; coinfection with multiple low-virulence microbes like bartonella and borrelia (the primary bacteria responsible for Lyme disease) can result in significant chronic illness. Bartonella occurs as a coinfection in at least 25% of Lyme disease cases.

Symptoms of Chronic Bartonella Infection

Symptoms of bartonella infection are highly variable, and some people who have it might not experience any signs of illness. The spectrum of symptoms widely overlaps with other low-virulence microbes and may include:

  • Skin rash at the site of initial infection
  • Low-grade fever (100℉ – 102℉)
  • Swollen lymph nodes near the initial infection site are hallmarks of initial infection; lymph nodes can be filled with pus and drain in severe cases.
  • Severe fatigue
  • Muscle pain
  • Body aches
  • Abdominal pain
  • Loose stools, constipation, or impaired general intestinal function
  • Eye infection (conjunctivitis)
  • Liver and spleen enlargement in acute or chronic infection
  • Relapsing low-grade fever
  • Chronic eye problems, including blurred vision, photophobia, and eye irritation
  • Bartonella commonly infects bone marrow with resulting bone pain; the most common location is the shin bone.
  • Pain in the soles of feet upon waking in the morning. This is associated with trauma to blood vessels in the soles of the feet with walking and is a classic bartonella symptom.
  • Ankle and knee pain on one or both sides
  • Anemia can occur from bartonella scavenging nutrients from red blood cells.
  • Small vessel disease, affecting the brain and nervous system
  • Headaches
  • Depression and rage
  • Anxiety
  • Neurological symptoms like poor balance, brain fog, decreased cognition, memory impairment, insomnia, and restlessness
  • Poor stress tolerance
  • Demineralization of teeth and jaw, causing chronic face and neck pain
  • Transient tooth pain
  • Chronic bartonella infections are associated with higher rates of root canals (due to compromise of small vessels supplying the tooth).
  • Small vessel disease can affect the function of the autonomic nervous system (sympathetic and parasympathetic systems), resulting in postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS).
  • Vascular system issues such as infection of cells lining the heart (endocarditis), leading to chest pain, shortness of breath, palpitations, and, in some cases, damage to heart valves
  • Respiratory symptoms, including unexplained cough
  • Urogenital problems like irritable bladder, kidney disease, pelvic pain, and infertility
  • Bartonella may be passed during pregnancy and between partners.
  • Severely immunocompromised individuals (mainly AIDS patients) can develop cranberry-like skin lesions from the proliferation of infected blood vessels under the skin.

With such an expansive list of symptoms that intersects with other microbes and health conditions, an average doctor isn’t going to consider bartonella. They would likely chalk it up to aging and offer only prescriptions to control the symptoms, nothing more.

A Word About Other Bartonella Species

Research over the past 20 years has revealed bartonella species other than B. henselaeand B. quintana. New ones are added to the list every year. A partial list includes B. clarridgeiae, B. elizabethae, B. vinsonii, B. berkhoffi, B. grahamii, and B. washoensis.

All but one bartonella species cause similar symptom profiles as the two better-known bartonella species and are somewhat interchangeable. In other words, other species of bartonella can cause cat scratch fever or trench fever. All bartonella species infect mammals via biting insect vectors. Ticks are known to transmit several different species of bartonella.

Bartonella is so prevalent that most people will cross paths with some form of it during a lifetime (but in most cases never know it).

But there is one exception: Bartonella bacilliformis, which causes Carrion’s disease. It is a highly virulent microbe that only occurs in the Andes regions of Peru, Ecuador, and Colombia.

A bite from a sandfly transmits B. bacilliformis, causing a high fever (called Oroya fever). This is accompanied by severe anemia from the destruction of red blood cells, severe enlargement of the spleen and liver, bleeding into lymph nodes, and destruction of blood vessels. Mortality is 40% without treatment.

Bartonella bacilliformis is an exception compared to other species of bartonella, but fortunately, it holds to the rule that higher-virulence microbes tend to be uncommon or rare.

How to Diagnose Bartonella

Doctor explaining diagnosis during a video conference with patient at midnight. Physician giving consultation to sick patient from hospital office during virtual examination, screen, medicine, appointment.

Like Lyme disease and other stealth microbes, bartonella is notoriously difficult to diagnose. Testing is species-specific and generally only looks for the most common species of bartonella. Because concentrations of the organism in the body are so low, it can be hard to find. The following are tests and methods to help gain some more information.

Indirect Fluorescence Assay (IFA)

IFA tests for antibodies (IgG and IgM) to bartonella. IFA is not very sensitive because antibodies levels tend to be low. Fry Laboratories (Scottsdale, Az) offers both IFA and standard PCA.

Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR)

Standard PCR detects bartonella DNA in a blood sample. Because concentrations of the microbe are very low with chronic infection, this test is unreliable. However, Galaxy Diagnostics (based in Research Triangle, NC) performs an amplified version of PCR called ePCR that is more reliable.

The presence of bartonella in blood is amplified with special culture media and then tested with PCR. The test takes 2 to 4 weeks to perform and tests for all known forms of bartonella. Additionally, Armin Labs (Augsburg, Germany) offers several testing methods, including PCR and IFA tests.

IGeneX

This test uses an amplified version of PCR and immunofluorescence testing (FISH), together for improved accuracy of testing for multiple species of bartonella. FISH testing is unique in that it evaluates for bartonella RNA, as opposed to relying on an immune response from the host. The primary drawbacks to testing with IGeneX are high expense and lack of coverage by insurance.

As a general rule of thumb, positive testing can help direct therapy, but a negative test does not rule out the presence of bartonella. The expense of testing must be weighed against money directed at comprehensive therapy. As with other low-virulent microbes, sometimes it’s best just to assume that it is there and develop a comprehensive recovery protocol that addresses it.

Conventional Medical Solutions

As a general rule, two antibiotics at one time are superior to one for bartonella infection, most commonly doxycycline and rifampin for 2 to 4 weeks. Individuals with serious or debilitating symptoms, such as those consistent with endocarditis, should be evaluated by a healthcare provider and should receive antibiotic therapy. Note that some people with chronic bartonella infection do respond to conventional antibiotic therapy, too.

Antibiotic-resistant bartonella is common, and because the microbes are slow growing, occur in low concentrations in the body, and concentrate in areas where antibiotics do not penetrate, nonresponders are common. Many people who do respond relapse later.

Natural Solutions for Bartonella

The best alternative solution to overcoming a bartonella infection is supporting the natural healing potential of the body. That calls for minimizing exposure to the modern-day factors that disrupt immune function and allow low- virulence microbes like bartonella to flourish, including artificially created food products, petrochemicals and other toxins, artificial sources of radiation, and constant daily stress . In fact, avoiding these factors as much as possible is an essential step for controlling the present epidemic of all chronic diseases like Lyme disease, fibromyalgia, fatigue syndromes, and autoimmune diseases.

image split into three. Cryptolepis, black walnut, and japanese knotweed

Natural herbal therapy offers a good alternative for chronic bartonella infection. Herbs reduce inflammation, restore normal immune function, and suppress a wide range of stealth microbes. Here are some top choices to get you started.

green Cryptolepis

Cryptolepis

Traditionally used to treat malaria in Africa, cryptolepis demonstrates systemic antibacterial properties and antiprotozoal properties. The herb is anti-inflammatory and provides antimicrobial activity, and new research in bioRxiv suggests it might defend against B. henselae as well.

Suggested dosage: Cryptolepis is available as a powder, tea, capsule, or tincture, so the dose varies depending on the preparation.

Side effects: It tends to be well tolerated in most people.

Black Walnut with green leaves

Black Walnut (Juglans nigra)

Native to North America, black walnut trees may be found in your own yard. Integrative healthcare professionals have long used black walnut anecdotally to combat intestinal parasites, however, the same research mentioned above indicates it may combat bartonella. In addition to antiparasitic and antibacterial properties, black walnut also demonstrates antioxidant and anti-inflammatory qualities.

Suggested dosage: Black walnut usually is found in tinctures and dried powders. The dose will likely depend upon the preparation and the professional expertise of your healthcare provider. Standard doses may range from 250 mg to 500 mg, two to three times daily.

Side effects: Because there is some potential for toxicity with black walnut, it is best used in conjunction with other herbs and for a shorter duration, like a couple of weeks to a couple of months at a time.

Japanese Knotweed with white flower blooms

Japanese Knotweed (Polygonum cuspidatum)

Japanese knotweed with resveratrol has been used for centuries in traditional Asian medicine, and it’s a potent antioxidant with antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties. Japanese Knotweed may eradicate various phases of bartonella bacteria, according to the bioRxiv study.

Suggested dosage: 200-800 mg Japanese knotweed (standardized to 50% trans-resveratrol), two to three times daily

Side effects: They’re rare, with low potential for toxicity. Caution is advised if you’re also taking anticoagulants, because resveratrol has blood-thinning properties. Avoid it during pregnancy.

Bartonella Reactions to Treatment

Bartonella has a very low potential to cause Herxheimer reactions. The outer coat from dead bacteria is much less reactive than most other bacteria involved with Lyme disease. The bacteria does not form biofilms, but it can form vacuoles that are similar in the liver. Generally, vacuoles are broken down by the body when healing occurs.

The Bottom Line

Chronic bartonella infections may require a combination of conventional and natural therapies. Therefore, it’s important to have a knowledgeable healthcare provider involved in your care to determine an appropriate treatment strategy for you. Treatments that include natural protocols to suppress microbes along and immune enhancement are the building blocks of a successful recovery.

Finally, remember to optimize immune health by prioritizing sleep, eliminating refined carbohydrates and processed foods from your diet, incorporating detoxification strategies to assist with toxin removal, and adding exercise as tolerated. Be patient, and you’ll begin to see your health gradually get better.

Dr. Rawls is a physician who overcame Lyme disease through natural herbal therapy. You can learn more about Lyme disease in Dr. Rawls’ new best selling book, Unlocking Lyme.
You can also learn about Dr. Rawls’ personal journey in overcoming Lyme disease and fibromyalgia in his popular blog post, My Chronic Lyme Journey.

REFERENCES
1. Breitschwerdt EB. Bartonellosis: one health perspective for an emerging infectious disease. ILAR J. 2014;55(1):46-58. doi: 10.1093/ilar/ilu015
2. Eschow, Rao, Mordechai, Concurrent Infection of the Central Nervous System by Borrelia burgdorferi and Bartonella henselae, Evidence for a Novel Tick-borne Disease Complex, Arch Neurol, 2001, 58 (9), p. 1357-1363 – http://archneur.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=780359
3. Walter Berghoff, Chronic Lyme Disease and Co-infections: Differential Diagnosis, Open Neurol J, 2012, 6: p. 158-178 – http://www.cdc.gov/bartonella/
4. Forsgren, Scott, Interview with B. Robert Mozeyeni, MD: Unraveling the Mystery of Bartonellosis, Townsend Letter, July 2015 – http://www.townsendletter.com/July2015/bartonellosis0715.html
5. Mascarelli, Maggi, Hopkins, Mozayeni, Trull, Bradley, Hogarty, and Breitschwerdt, Bartonella henselae infection in a family experiencing neurological and neurocognitive abnormalities after woodlouse spider bites, Parasites & Vectors, 2013, 6:98
6. Edward Bealmear Breitswerdt, DMV, Bartonellosis: One Health Perspective for an Emerging Infectious Disease, ILAR Journal, 2014, 55(1), p. 46-58 – http://ilarjournal.oxfordjournals.org/content/55/1/46.full
7. Buhner S H, Healing Lyme Disease Coinfections, Healing Arts Press, Copyright 20138. Jawetz, Melnick, Adelberg, Medical Microbiology, 24th edition, Lange/McGraw-Hill, 20079. Beers, Berkhoff, ed, The Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy, 17th edition, Merck & Co, 1999
8. SV Fernandez, L Aburto, R Maggi, EB Breitschwerdt and M Cristofanilli
Cancer Res December 15 2012 (72) (24 Supplement) P3-10-03; doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.SABCS12-P3-10-03
9. Xiao Ma, Jacob Leone, Sunjya Schweig, Ying Zhang. bioRxiv 2020.08.19.256768; doi: 10.1101/2020.08.19.256768
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**Comment**
A few things:
  1. Bartonella has caused other psychological issues besides rage and anxiety:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/03/21/bartonella-sudden-onset-adolescent-schizophrenia-a-case-study/
  2. Immunocompetent people can have Bartonella:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/08/12/bartonella-american-academy-of-pediatrics/
  3. For far too long we’ve been told only people with severely compromised immune systems get Bartonella and that a healthy immune system will wipe it out:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/24/human-bartonellosis-an-underappreciated-public-health-problem/
  4. Personally, I’ve used every single herb listed within this article.  I have found the combination of rifampin and clarithromycin to be THE most effective treatment for Bartonella.  After years of treatment both my husband and I have been able to maintain with Berberine:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/05/05/good-news-for-bartonella-patients-identification-of-fda-approved-drugs-with-higher-activity-than-current-front-line-drugs/, https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/07/16/benefits-of-berberine-against-chronic-disease/, https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/05/study-shows-berberine-induces-cell-death-in-leukemia/
  5. Some are saying Disulfiram may have action also on Bartonella.  It also reduces inflammation:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/01/study-shows-dsm-works-for-lyme-reduces-inflammatory-markers-antibody-titers/

Tips & Resources for Living in the Present During Challenging Times

https://globallymealliance.org/living-in-the-present-while-worrying-about-the-future/

MyLymeLife_2-38

by Jennifer Crystal

TIPS AND RESOURCES FOR LIVING IN THE PRESENT DURING CHALLENGING TIMES.

As schools resume and cooler weather rolls in, the country is bracing for a possible second wave of COVID-19. The U.S. death toll recently surpassed 200,000, and the last two weeks have seen an increase of cases in many areas. With concerns about what fall and winter will bring, especially as we move into flu season, it can be hard to stay grounded in the present.

Lyme patients know this conundrum all too well. Late-stage tick-borne illnesses end to follow a relapsing pattern: patients have good days and bad days, sometimes good months and bad months. When we’re feeling well, we have a hard time trusting and enjoying that health, because we know the other shoe could drop at any moment. We, too, are always bracing for another wave.

Not only is it hard to stay present when you’re worried about the future, but it can be difficult to enjoy the present when it itself is difficult. The pandemic has people at their wit’s end trying to negotiate working from home with homeschooling, isolating from loved ones, and worrying about illness and finances. In acute phases of Lyme and other tick-borne illnesses, patients also feel at their wit’s end as they deal with crushing fatigue, joint aches, migraines, and neurological symptoms. In both cases, the suffering can be so intense that people wish they could escape to a better time in the past or future.

While escapism has its merits, it’s important that we accept our current situation(s) and find ways to live presently. Why? Because no matter how bleak the present is, it’s all we are guaranteed. Whether we’re healthy or ill, living in a pandemic or not, none of us know what tomorrow will bring. Therefore, we can’t let the present pass us by.

What I’ve learned from living with tick-borne illnesses for over 20 years, from battling long-haul COVID-19, and from sometimes wanting to escape from both, is this: the best way to stay present is to prepare for the future. Our anxieties are valid and have their place. Acknowledging them can help us prepare for the worst, and that can then allow us to live more fully in the present.

What does preparation look like in practice? During COVID-19, we can wear face masks, following social distancing protocols, wash our hands, and create contingency plans for school and work. While these steps don’t guarantee we won’t get COVID-19, they do lower our risk. Contingency plans give us safety nets.

During periods of remission from tick-borne illness, we can stay on maintenance medication or supplements, continue with adjunct therapies, exercise, eat well, follow good sleep hygiene, and try to keep stress levels down. If we’re in remission or even if we have recovered completely, we can continue to Be Tick AWARE™, taking precautions like wearing repellent, doing tick checks, and staying on cleared paths so as not to get re-infected. We can make sure we have a good support system—doctors, caregivers, resources. As with COVID-19 precautions, these steps won’t make us immune to another tick bite or relapse, but they do lower the risk.

Once we’re prepared for the future, we can live more freely in the present. Even in trying times, there are ways to enjoy ourselves, and ways to reduce stress. In my post “What Lyme Patients Can Teach Us About the New Normal”, I outline some ideas for managing school and work this fall. In my post “Adding Joy and Pleasure to Life, No Matter When”, I talk about enjoying small moments and activities while we wait for health, for bigger moments and activities to be possible, for better days. Even in a pandemic, families can create fun rituals like weekly movie or game nights. Even in the throes of illness, Lyme patients can enjoy a friend’s visit, laugh over just five minutes of a silly movie, or give themselves an at-home spa treatment.

And while we enjoy the present, there’s certainly no danger in hoping for a brighter future, even visualizing it. Sometimes just the idea of hope is enough.

One difference between battling Lyme and living through a pandemic is that we are all experiencing the latter together. We have similar fears. We have similar hopes. And we can find ways to enjoy the present, together. As I’ve said before, there is comfort in that solidarity.

Related Posts:

Corona With a Twist of Lyme: Part 4
What Lyme Patients Can Teach Us About the New Normal
Adding Joy and Pleasure to Life, No Matter When
The Idea of Hope


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**

While I’m all about preparing for the future and living in the present, there are numerous inaccuracies in this article that require addressing:

To help alleviate the fear-mongering that is pervasive, the best most productive thing you can do is bolster your immune system. This action will help you no matter what comes down the pike and will give you peace of mind. 

For more:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/10/13/bartonella-how-to-protect-yourself-from-this-stealthy-intruder/  While this article is about Bartonella, the steps to protect yourself from one invader is true for another.

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/04/04/the-importance-of-gut-health-to-healing-from-chronic-illnesses-podcast-dr-jill-carnahan/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/01/08/wahls-protocol-impact-of-diet-nutrition-in-ms-other-neurological-diseases/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/07/13/nutritional-supplements-for-covid-19-prophylaxis-and-symptom-de-escalation/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/06/15/the-functional-medicine-approach-to-covid-19-virus-specific-nutraceutical-botanical-agents/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/06/14/potential-interventions-for-novel-coronavirus-in-china-a-systematic-review/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/08/09/international-panel-of-medical-experts-urges-u-s-government-to-stop-ignoring-intravenous-vitamin-c-as-a-promising-option-to-treat-covid-19/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/09/14/nebulized-peroxide-covid/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/06/02/successful-covid-19-critical-care-stonewalled-by-cdc/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/06/26/math-protocol-shows-profound-impact-on-survival-from-covid-19/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/09/24/studies-show-proper-levels-of-vitamin-d-slashes-risk-of-covid-as-does-gargling-with-iodine-vaccine-not-needed/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2020/09/08/finally-confirmed-vitamin-d-nearly-abolishes-icu-risk-in-covid-19/

As you can see, there is much you can do to make yourself a tough target.  Learn all you can about your own body and potential things you can do to bolster your immune system.  Discuss these options with your doctor and come up with a plan.  This will be a much more effective, long-lasting plan than plopping a mask on.