Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Lyme Q & A With Dr. Ross Tonight at 5 PM CST

https://events.genndi.com/register/169105139238438973/9629589511 Register here

 

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Register in link for three events in July

Join Marty Ross MD on Thursdays for a 1.5 hour Lyme disease Q&A webinar. He answers any questions you may have about Lyme.
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Next event starts in…

  • Thursday, 11 July 2019, at 5:00 PM CST
  • Thursday, 18 July 2019, at 6:00 PM CST
  • Thursday, 25 July 2019, at 6:00 PM CST

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**Comment**

Make sure you note the times listed. A mistake was made so for tonight (July 11) it will be at 5PM CST, with future times being at 6PM CST.

This is a great opportunity to ask all your questions and get feedback from an experienced practitioner.

Dr. Ross’ Youtube Channel, where you can listen to previous webinars: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2rR9VdwTEuXvrJ5tt7j6yw

Study Finds Listening to Music Can Help Regulate Mood During a Stressful Situation

https://www.psypost.org/2019/07/study-finds-listening-to-music-can-help-regulate-mood-during-a-stressful-situation

Study finds listening to music can help regulate mood during a stressful situation

New research provides evidence that listening to music can be an effective means of improving mood in times of stress. The study has been published in PLOS One.

“This study is part of a larger series of studies on the functions of music listening,” said study author Jenny Groarke, a lecturer in at Queen’s University Belfast and member of the Centre for Improving Health-Related Quality of Life.

“Almost everyone on my mum’s side of the family are musicians and music lovers. My grandad was a drummer in a Dixieland band with all his brothers and later his sons. My brother and I and many of my cousins have also sat in with the band over the years. My dad’s side of the family — not so much!”

“I was curious about the different roles music played in the lives of my close family members, and how integral music was to some — meeting so many of their everyday emotional and social needs — and yet virtually non-existent in other people’s daily lives,” Groarke said.

In the study, 80 participants completed the Trier Social Stress Task — an experimentally verified stress-inducing scenario that relies on fear of public speaking.

The participants were given 5 minutes to prepare a short speech about themselves, which they were told they would deliver at the end of the laboratory session. They were then provided with a 10 minute break.

During this break, the participants were randomly assigned to either listen to music of their choice or listen to a radio documentary on Charles Darwin. After 10 minutes, the participants completed a survey designed to assess moods before being informed they wouldn’t actually have to deliver the speech.

The researchers found that participants who listened to music of their choosing tended to rate themselves as feeling less stressed, nervous, upset, sad, and depressed.

“When feeling stressed, listening to music can help us feel better, and it may not be important to listen to something that’s classically thought of as relaxing — even your favourite Ed Sheeran or Slipknot songs can do the trick,” Groarke told PsyPost.

The study — like all research — includes some limitations. It is still unclear, for instance, if listening to personally-chosen music provides more benefits that just listening to music in general.

“Most previous studies have compared music listening to silence. But sitting in silence doing nothing is a pretty uncommon activity in everyday life, so we thought it was better to compare music to listening to a radio show,” Groarke explained.

“The radio show was chosen by us. In contrast, the people who listened to music chose their own music to listen to. To fully understand the effects that choice and control have on stress reduction we would need to compare self-chosen and researcher-chosen music with self-chosen and researcher-chosen active control conditions.”

“We took some steps in this lab study to try to resemble everyday music listening conditions (self-chosen music compared with a realistic everyday activity) but at the same time the laboratory is a fairly unnatural music listening environment. An important aim for future studies is to try to replicate these findings in naturalistic settings, in the many different situations where music listening occurs in everyday life,” Groarke said.

“This will require the application of innovative experience sampling methods (such as the MuPsych app for personal music listening on smartphones: Randall & Rickard, 2014) with large samples and robust study designs that allow us to compare the effect of music listening experiences on stress reduction with other activities in daily life that may also reduce stress.”

The study, “Listening to self-chosen music regulates induced negative affect for both younger and older adults“, was authored by Jenny M. Groarke and Michael J. Hogan.

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Happy 4th of July!

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Wisconsin Public Radio on Tick-Borne Illness Center of Excellence

Tick-Borne Illness Center

Air Date: Monday, July 1, 2019, 11:00am

Wisconsin Public Radio

There is much to learn about the diseases caused by ticks. We talk with a physician about a new Wisconsin clinic that will diagnosis and treat, but also focuses on research.

Related Links: 

Howard Young Foundation website

Info about the clinic in the Howard Young Foundation newsletter

Host(s): Larry Meiller

Guest(s): Dr. Andreas (Andy) Kogelnik

Producer(s): Jill Nadeau

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For more:  https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2019/01/11/wisconsin-tick-borne-illness-center-of-excellence/

https://madisonarealymesupportgroup.com/2018/12/16/tick-borne-illness-center-of-excellence-set-to-see-patients-in-early-2019/

https://www.howardyoungfoundation.org/Howard-Young-Foundation-In-the-News/tick-center.html

 

 

 

 

Ottawa Mom Warns Parents to Check Their Kids For Ticks After Her Toddler Is Diagnosed with Lyme Disease

https://ottawa.ctvnews.ca/ottawa-mom-warns-parents-to-check-their-kids-for-ticks-after-her-toddler-is-diagnosed-with-lyme-disease-1.4483914

Ottawa mom warns parents to check their kids for ticks after her toddler is diagnosed with Lyme disease

2-year-old Grace Willis.

2-year-old Grace Willis.

Bullseye rash on Grace's arm.

Bullseye rash on Grace’s arm.

Joanne Schnurr, CTV Ottawa 

Published Wednesday, June 26, 2019 3:48PM EDT

An Ottawa mother is warning parents to check their kids carefully for ticks after her toddler was diagnosed with Lyme disease over the weekend.

Jenny Willis believes her 2-year-old got bitten while playing in a backyard.

Willis knows more about deer ticks than she cares to; Lyme disease attacked her husband’s heart 3 years ago.  Now her daughter contracted it, confirming current research by CHEO that Lyme cases among kids is significantly on the rise.

Like the puzzle that Grace and mom Jenny Willis are working on, it took some piecing together to figure out what was wrong with the talkative 2-year-old, who was suddenly not herself at all.

“We wouldn’t have known anything was wrong with her, really,” says Willis, “unless we had seen that rash and connected the fever and vomiting to the rash and put the whole picture together.”

It was this past Saturday when Jenny Willis figured that bite on Grace’s arm was a little more concerning than they had initially thought.

“It’s a mosquito bite,” says Grace, “He bite me.”

Not a mosquito, her mom adds, but a black-legged tick carrying Lyme disease, leaving the telltale bullseye rash on Grace’s forearm. Willis says an emergency doctor at CHEO quickly diagnosed it and put Grace on antibiotics.

The question, though, is where Grace got the tick since Willis says she has only been outside at her house in Vars and at her daycare.

“It’s not anyone’s fault,” says Willis, “they don’t know.  Because Lyme is so new to Canada, doctors don’t fully understand it.  Daycare operators aren’t aware that they should check children in their care and notify parents if one of the kids gets Lyme because other parents need to know.”

It is important information to know, according to doctors at CHEO who are currently researching Lyme cases among kids in this region.

Dr. Jason Brophy is an infectious disease specialist at CHEO, “We’re seeing a fair amount of Lyme disease in kids,” he says.

Dr. Brophy worked with pediatrics resident Dr. Stephanie Zahradnik and Ottawa Public Health to look at a ten-year population-level review of the rise of Lyme disease in Eastern Ontario.

“Here at CHEO, we are doing a chart review of all the cases we’ve seen of Lyme disease over the past 10 years,” says Dr. Brophy, “to demonstrate that we are seeing increase in the rate of Lyme in children and the different varieties so people are confident we’re able to diagnosis and treat this disease.”

Their numbers show a jump in Lyme cases in adults from 6 in 2009, to 159 in 2017. In children ages 0 to 18, there were no cases reported in 2009 and 31 cases in 2017, with the bulk of cases among children ages 6 to 10.

“We’re seeing an increase in all age groups consistently throughout the years,” says Dr. Zahradnik, “6 to 10 is the commonest age of presentation in the diagnosis of Lyme but it is becoming more common in children of all ages.”

“This is a very treatable illness,” adds Dr. Brophy, “it is in the same family as syphilis and we know how to treat syphilis, too so people shouldn’t be afraid if they get Lyme disease that no one will know how to treat it.”

The Willis family knows more than they care to about Lyme disease.  Three years ago, Grace’s father Andrew was on death’s door from Lyme disease that attacked his heart. It is called Lyme carditis, a rare infection that occurs when the Lyme bacteria enters the heart and affects the heart’s electrical system.

“The doctors told me had I not brought him in that day, he’d have died that night,” recalls Willis, “In fact, at 5:00 that evening after being admitted, he went into cardiac arrest.”

So, after a trip outside to play on the swing set in the back yard, a daily tick check is now standard procedure.

“Curing Lyme is so difficult,” says Willis, as she checks between Grace’s toes and around her neck, “I mean, an ounce of prevention is worth weeks or months of the cure.”

Willis says anyone can check for ticks in your back yard.  Grab a white sheet, attach it to a stick and drag it over your grass.  Then, get a magnifying glass and start looking.    She adds that we should not assume that just because we have not heard of ticks in our neighbourhood, that they aren’t there or won’t be soon.

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**Comment**

  • Lyme in Canada is NOT RARE.

 

  • Lyme carditis is NOT RARE.

 

  • Yes, you should be very afraid of how doctors treat this.  Most are CLUELESS.