Showing posts with label Autism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autism. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 February 2019

LYME DISEASE AN EASY WAY TO DESTROY YOUR BRAIN

Lyme Disease and Dementia, Alzheimer, Parkinson, Autism, an Easy Way to Destroy your Brain

DR. JOSE LAPENTA 
Lapenta JM

Abstract
Lyme disease or Chronic Erythema Migrans whose first clinical description was made by Afzelius in 1908, and its causative agent the spirochete Borrelia Burgdorferi was discovered 73 years later by Willy Burgorfer in 1981. Lyme disease is spread by a tick bite of the family Ixodidae, Ixodes scapularis and many others. Among the numerous species described, Borrelia Burgdorferi is disseminated mainly in the United States, Borrelia garinii and Borrelia Afzelii in Europe and Asia. In addition to producing skin lesions in infected people, and multi-organ side effects, the spirochete is able to reach the human brain and could produce dementia, Alzheimer, Parkinson and Autism. In this investigation we will make a chronological description of the events that lead to neuronal involvement. Just as the spirochete of syphilis, Treponema pallidum, produces neurosyphilis in its tertiary stage, also the Borrelia is able to reach the brain, and produce collateral damage, a term called neuroborreliosis, and among its most lethal effects may cause dementia, Alzheimer, Parkinson and Autism and hence the so-called post-treatment syndrome of Lyme disease.



This is an excellent article worth reading in full. It documents the history of Lyme discovery and research with very useful links to published papers.
Conclusion

• Lyme “neuroborreliosis” was not born in the 80s when it began to be mentioned in scientific studies after its causative agent, the Borrelia Burgdorferi was discovered by Willy Burgoderfer in 1981 and its presence in the human brain was later confirmed. He was born in 1922 when the French Garin and Bujadoux described for the first time the meningoradiculitis lymphocytic with its neurological manifestations.
• We demonstrate chronologically and scientifically that Borrelia Burgdorferi and its species can conquer the human brain and produce dementia, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and Autism.
• Unlike Treponema pallidum, which only in the tertiary stage of syphilis is when it produces dementia (neurosyphilis); Borrelia Burgdorferi (Lyme) in its secondary and tertiary stage produces neuropsychiatric manifestations (neuroborreliosis).
• Lyme disease can present as pure neurological forms, without the presence of Erythema Chronicum Migrans (ECM); this fact is what in many cases makes the diagnosis difficult.
• Several highly specific diagnostic tests appeared to detect Borrelia Burgdorferi, even surpassing those proposed by the CDC.
• The World Health Organization(WHO) recognized the code “Lyme Neuroborreliosis”, “Dementia due to Lyme” this year of 2018 in the ICD-11 and the “demyelination of the central nervous system due to Lyme borreliosis”
• Clinical diseases not recognized: “Alzheimer due to Lyme”, “Parkinson due to Lyme”, but assuming that “dementia” is a common symptom of Alzheimer’s, its tacit recognition is understood; like the case of Parkinson’s, because the demyelination of the central nervous system and the chronic infection of the brain by Borrelia species can cause symptoms of Parkinsonism. Also the “Autism due to Lyme” was not recognized but like the previously described, it is supposed to be included in the term “neuroborreliosis due to Lyme”
• The Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS), was not recognized by the WHO; it was extensively reviewed in this research and which was described more than 20 years ago, will be the subject of a forthcoming investigation.
• Finally, the Lyme disease, now it is not only a dermatological disease, is a neuropsychiatric illness that can easy destroy your brain, if it is not detected and treated at time.

Comments
  If we include Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease and Autism within the spectrum “Lyme neuroborreliosis” code, only Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS) will be left out in this investigation.

Tuesday, 10 March 2015

DR JUDY MIKOVITS - INFECTIOUS PATHOGENS AND THEIR ROLE IN CHRONIC DISEASE



Dr Judy Mikovits signing PLAGUE - 'One Scientist's Intrepid Search for the Truth about Human Retroviruses and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), Autism and other chronic Diseases'

On Sunday 8th March AONM - Academy of Nutritional Medicine held a conference - Lifting the Veil -Infectious Pathogens & Their Role in Chronic Disease.

From AONM website - 'On Sunday March 8th 2015, the Academy of Nutritional Medicine (AONM) is holding a ground-breaking conference led by top specialists from around the world, all of them renowned for their expertise on infectious pathogens and chronic disease.

The specialists’ combined approaches are revolutionary, and raise serious questions about how and why it is that treatments that are insisted upon by mainstream medicine do not effectively deal with the root causes of certain conditions.' go to the website for further information http://www.aonm.org/lifting-the-veil.html

This was an excellent and very interesting conference especially so for me as it brought together International experts in a variety of fields giving the audience much thought provoking information.

All the detailed presentations moved along at a fast pace making it only possible for rudimentary note taking. I understand there will be a DVD available through AONM.

It was a great treat for me to meet Dr Judy Mikovits, having followed, on line, events unfolding over her research with XMRV a retrovirus and possible connections to patients with ME/CFS. 

I recently read Plague, by Kent Heckenlively and Judy Mikovits -  available on Amazon

A gripping story of research controversies, something many in the Lyme, Autism and ME/CFS communities are already well aware of, but perhaps not to the lengths Judy was subjected to. A thought provoking, sobering and perhaps scary read, but something I recommend everyone read.

Judy's excellent presentations will be available on the DVD but she has already posted similar on the website which she shares with Dr Ruscetti 

Professor Malcolm Hooper Introduced the meeting with his speech - Looking for clarity and Understanding on Chronic Syndromes of Unknown Origins giving a brief history of the troubles ME/CFS, Gulf War and Multiple Chemical Syndrome patients have endured over many years.

Professor Puri treated us to two presentations one Lyme Disease including Cardiovascular, Urological and Neuropsychiatric Sequelae and the other Autism - gut infection and Fibromyalgia research news.

Dr Armin Schwarzbach shared his knowledge of Multiple infections by Borrelia burgdorferi and other tick borne pathogens - symptoms, diagnostic tests and consequences for therapy.

Dr Philip Keilman discussed Natural Therapeutic Interventions for Patients with Chronic Infection.

Thank you to AONM for having organised such an interesting and successful event.


Tuesday, 21 October 2014

BORRELIOSIS - LYME DISEASE'S KNOWN INVOLVEMENT WITH MENTAL HEALTH


Scientists and physicians across the world have discovered that the growing numbers of people with mental illness and diseases of the nervous system are being cured or improved by treatment with antibiotics. In other words, it is now known that bacteria can make you mentally ill as well as physically ill!

From Croatia to California, from Sweden to Sicily, conditions such as Schizophrenia and Multiple Sclerosis, even Alzheimer's disease and Stroke, are being found to have common to all one of the most insidiously infective bacteria on the planet, namely Borrelia.

This organism is similar to the bacterium that causes Syphilis, which was once the major cause of mental ill health before the days of penicillin. Both bacteria are large and spiral in shape, but Borrelia is turning out to be far worse than its cousin. Syphilis could be detected fairly easily and then killed with antibiotics, but Borrelia is harder to find, and then it is even more difficult to eradicate. Because it causes such a wide range of symptoms, from mild 'flu-like fever to a rapid onset of psychosis, or from strange rashes to sudden heart-block, this nasty bacterium has spread without most of us realising it, around the world, in what is now being called a pandemic.

Perhaps its most miserable victims are those with hallucinations, panic disorders, manic depressive illness and ADHD, as well as those with the labels of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis; for although the latter two conditions are recognised to be of a bacterial / viral cause by the World Health Organisation, the British medical establishment employees predominantly psychological intervention alone. Imagine being confined to a secure mental hospital, or treated with powerful antipsychotic drugs, or living for decades struggling to maintain normal memory and behaviour patterns,when all along there has been an infection secretly living in your brain and nerves. This bacterium may sometimes be the cause of anorexia, while in some of its victims it has been known to cause episodes of uncontrollable rage.

Other bacteria and viruses can wreak similar havoc: some of the ones that live harmlessly in our throats and on our skin are also able to invade our brains. Doctors and scientists are quite ready to acknowledge and search for things like HIV, Streptococcus and Herpes.But it is only recently that they are becoming aware that the Borrelia bug, one of the hardest to positively identify because of its so-called "stealth " behaviour, must be high on the list for diagnosis.
European countries such as Austria, Germany, Holland and France, have alerted their GPs and specialists to the growing problem of Borrelia. Germany has twice polled every doctor in the country to determine the probable infection rate, and has found that it has doubled in the last 10 years. The Dutch have carried out similar surveys. In Austria, every GP's waiting room has warning signs about Borreliosis.The disease is being spread by ticks that are carried on birds, on wild animals and on pets such as cats and dogs, even on horses. It has been found inside the stomachs of biting flies such as horseflies and cleggs and also in mosquitoes and mites.

We present here several medical studies published in recent literature,which link mental illness and brain disease to known Borreliosis infection. There were few to be found that had been carried out in Britain; those quoted here are from the rest of Europe and the United States.

a)In a controlled study undertaken at Columbia University Department of Psychiatry, 20 children were examined following known infection of Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), and were found to have significantly more psychiatric and cognitive difficulties. Their cognitive abilities were found to be below that of 20 matched healthy control subjects,even taking into account any effects due to anxiety, depression and fatigue during education. The study also discussed the long-term effects of the children’s infection with Borrelia, which had brought about neuropsychiatric disturbances and caused significant psychosocial and academic impairment.

b)An elderly lady treated at the Emperor Franz Josef hospital, Vienna,was initially admitted with suspected Motor Neuron Disease. Testing of fluid from her spinal column indicated the presence of Bb.Following antibiotic treatment, improvement was seen in the patient’s clinical symptoms, and further testing of spinal fluid demonstrated a positive response to the antibiotic treatment. The preliminary diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) was revised to one of chronic neuroborreliosis, the term given to infection of the central nervous system (CNS) by Bb.

c) A 64-year old woman was admitted to the psychiatric ward of the Sophia Ziekenhuisat Zwolle, in Holland. She was suffering from psychosis, with visual hallucinations, disorientation in time and space, and associative thinking. Psychotropic drugs failed to produce any improvement in her condition and further, neurological, symptoms developed. A lumbar puncture revealed the presence of Borrelia burgdorferi and after treatment with penicillin all of her psychiatric and neurological symptoms were resolved. From the history, which the woman was then able to communicate, it appeared she had been bitten by ticks. Her husband, aged 66, passed through a similar episode of disease

d)In a comparative study carried out at the Prague Psychiatric Center,the blood of 926 psychiatric patients and that of 884 healthy control subjects was screened for four different types of antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi. Of 499 matched pairs (meaning of similar age and gender but from patient and control group respectively) 166 (33%)of the psychiatric patients and 94 (19%) of the healthy comparison subjects were seropositive in at least one of the four test assays for Bb. This study supports the hypothesis that there is an association between an infection of Borrelia burgdorferi and psychiatric morbidity.

e)It has been well documented in numerous published medical studies of Borrelia's ability to cause many recognized personality disorder sand forms of depression; such as anxiety, depression, confusion,aggressive behaviour, mild to moderate cognitive deficits,fatigue,memory loss, and irritability. As such, the American Psychiatric Associations recommends that specialist doctors and counselors alike should seek to rule out Borreliosis as a possible differential diagnosis before commencing with any form of psychological intervention.

f)At the University of Rostock in Germany, a 42-year old female patient presented with schizophrenia-like symptoms but a complete lack of neurological signs. A brain scan and investigation of the spinal fluid led to the diagnosis of Lyme disease. There was complete relief of symptoms after antimicrobial therapy.

g)In a study of patients at a Boston, MA, hospital, scientists looked at patients with a history of Lyme disease who had been treated with short courses of antibiotics. As well as many physical symptoms, such as musculoskeletal impairment, the Lyme sufferers were found to have highly significant deficits in concentration and memory. Those who had received treatment early in the course of the illness had less long-term impairment.

h)At the Kanazawa University School of Medicine in Japan, a 36-year old woman with severe chronic Encephalomyelopathy was shown to have a very high level of antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi. She showed severe cerebellar ataxia (walking and balance difficulties due to disease in the cerebellum) and profound mental deterioration. The disease had probably been acquired while she had been in the USA. The autopsy 4 years later showed the presence of spirochaetes throughout the brain and spinal cord, which together with the antibody evidence,demonstrated that the Lyme bacteria had caused this encephalitic form of neuroborreliosis.

i)Dr B. A. Fallon and his team at Columbia University Medical Centre in New York have done extensive studies on both adults and children with Lyme disease. They describe numerous psychiatric and neurological presentations of the disease, and show that it can mimic attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression and multiple sclerosis. In another study, the same team found panic disorder and mania could be caused by Borrelial infection.  

j)Scientists from Vancouver, Canada, and Lausanne, Switzerland,recently looked at post-mortem brain tissue samples from 14 patients who had had Alzheimer’s disease and compared them with 13 controls.All of the Alzheimer’s brains had infection with Borrelia-type organisms, compared to none of the controls. From 3 of the Alzheimer’s cases, they were able to carry out genetic and molecular analyses of these spirochaetes to prove beyond a doubt that they were Borrelia.

k)Following the detailed statistical analysis of all published literature on schizophrenia, (with the criterion that each study had to have detailed histories for at least 3000 patients), Swiss scientist Dr Mark Fritzsche was able to demonstrate that: "globally there is a striking correlation between seasonal and geographical clusters of both Multiple Sclerosis and Schizophrenia with the worldwide distribution of the Lyme bacteria." Yearly birth-excesses of such illnesses were found to mirror, with an intervening nine-month period, both the geographical and seasonal patterns of various types of Ixodes tick. He also went on to further state “In addition to known acute infections, no other disease exhibits equally marked epidemiological clusters by season and locality, nurturing the hope that prevention might ultimately be attainable.”

l)Chronic fatigue syndrome has been found to be associated with infection by Borrelia. A study by the Department of Neurology at the University Hospital of Saarland in Homburg, Germany, investigated blood samples from 1,156 healthy young males, without knowing which ones were suffering from CFS. They saw a significant number with CFS sufferers who had Borrelia antibodies even though there were no other signs of borreliosis symptoms. They state that antibiotic therapy should be considered in patients with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome who show positive Borrelia serology.

m)Dr R. C. Bransfield in New Jersey, has found a significant number of Lyme patients exhibit aggression. Patients were described with decreased frustration tolerance, irritability, and some episodes of explosive anger which he terms “Lyme rage”. In relatively rare cases, there was uncontrollable rage, decreased empathy,suicidal tendencies, suicide, homicidal tendencies, interpersonal aggressiveness, homicide and predatory aggression.

The World Health Organisation has warned that mental illness appears to be increasing globally, and that depression will soon become the second biggest cause of disease on the planet. In Britain, it is estimated that new-onset psychoses have reached the annual level of 30 per 100,000 of the population. According to recent announcements,although there are at present about 900 consultant psychiatrists employed in the UK, with 400 posts vacant, there are plans to recruit 7,500 new psychiatrists in the next 5 years, a massive 5-fold increase.

The European Committee for Action on Lyme Borreliosis (EUCALB) has published epidemiological studies showing that there is a serious problem with tick-borne Borreliosis in Europe. For example, the UK’s nearest neighbour, Holland, has found 73 cases per 100,000 of the population per year, with an unknown number of missed diagnoses. The published figures for England, Ireland and Wales appear to be nearly2 orders of magnitude lower than this, with only 0.3 cases per 100,000. Are cases of Lyme disease / Borreliosis not being found in Britain because it is still regarded as a rare disease in this country? Or do we genuinely have the lowest incidence in the world? Diagnosis of borreliosis is difficult, with tests for antibodies to the bacteria being the subject of great controversy at present. If a consultant has to look at a suspected case of the disease and believes it to be rare, and blood tests are unreliable, then the diagnosis will be biased, quite understandably, towards the patient having some other condition.

It is hoped that health professionals at all levels, and in all disciplines, will come to realise that Human Borreliosis is the fastest-growing, most prevalent zoonotic disease in the world, and has been called a modern pandemic by several authors, including epidemiologists, rheumatologists, neurologists and infectious disease experts. There seems to be little awareness in the UK at present about this situation, but we urge that it be recognised sooner rather than later, in the hope that both mental and physical illnesses due to Borrelia are successfully diagnosed and treated.

References

a) A Controlled Study of Cognitive Deficits in Children
with Chronic Lyme disease.
Tager, F.A., Fallon, B.A., Keilp, J.,Rissenberg, M., Jones, C.R.,
Liebowitz,M.R.
JNeuropsychiatry Clin. Neurosci. 2001; Fall; 13(4): 500-7.

b) ALS-Like Sequelae in Chronic Neuroborreliosis.
Hansel,Y., Ackerl, M., Stanek, G.
Wien. Med. Wochenschr. 1995; 145(7-8):186-8.

c) Lyme Psychosis.
vanden Bergen, H.A., Smith, J.P., van der Zwan, A.
Ned.Tijdschr. Geneeskd. 1993; 137(41): 2098-100.

d) Higher Prevalence of Antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi in Psychiatric Patients than in Healthy Subjects.
Hajek, T., Paskova, B.,Janovska, D., Bahbouh, R., Hajek, P., Libiger, J., Hoschl, C.
Am.J. Psychiatry 2002; 159(2): 297-301.

e) Highlights of the 2000 Institute on Psychiatric Services
Guardiano,J.J., von Brook, P.
Jan.2001, 52(1): 37-42.

f) Borrelia burgdorferi Central Nervous System Infection
Presenting as Organic Psychiatric Disorder.
Hess,A., Buchmann, J., Zettel, U.K., et al.
Biol.Psychiatry 1999; 45(6): 795.

g) The Long-term Clinical Outcomes of Lyme disease. A Population-based Retrospective Cohort Study.
Shadick,N.A., Phillips, C.B., Logigian, E.L., Steere, A.C. et al.
Ann.Intern. Med. 1994; 121(8): 560-7.

h) Borrelia burgdorferi Seropositive Chronic Encephalomyelopathy: Lyme Neuroborreliosis? An Autopsied Report.
Kobayashi, K., Mizukoshi,C., Aoki, T., Muramori, F.et al.
Dement. Geriatr. Cogn. Disord.1997; 8(6): 384-90.

i) (1) Late Stage Neuropsychiatric Lyme Borreliosis.
Fallon,B.A., Schwartzburg, M., Bransfield, R., Zimmerman, B. et al.
Psychosomatics1995; 36(3): 295-300
(2) Functional Brain Imaging and Neuropsychological Testing in Lyme Disease.
Fallon,B.A., Das, S., Plutchok, J.J., Tager, F. et al.
Clin.Infect. Dis. 1997; Suppl.1: 557-63.

j) Borrelia burgdorferi Persists in the Brain in Chronic Lyme
Neuroborreliosis and may be associated with Alzheimer disease.
Miklossy,J., Khalili, K., Gern, L., Ericson, R.L., et al.
J.Alzheimer’s Dis. 2004; 6(6): 639-649.

k) (1) Chronic Lyme Borreliosis at the root of Multiple Sclerosis - is a cure with
Antibiotics attainable?
Fritzsche,M.
MedHypotheses 2005; 64(3): 438-48.
(2)Geographical and Seasonal Correlation of Multiple Sclerosis to Sporadic
Schizophrenia.
Fritzsche,M.
Int.J. Health Geog. 2002; 1: 5.

l) Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in Patients with Lyme Borreliosis.
Treib,J., Grauer, M.T., Haas, A., Langenbach, J. et al.
Eur.Neurol. 2000;  43(2): 107-9.

m) Aggression& Lyme disease.
Bransfield,R.C.
14th International Scientific Conference on Lyme Disease and other Tick-borne Disorders.April 22-23, 2001, Hartford, Connecticut.

Sunday, 24 August 2014

AUTISM, VACCINATION, MMR, FRAUD AND SOME LYME DISEASE INFORMATION

This is copied from Dr Robert Bransfield's Facebook page but much of the content is being shared on Facebook from many sources.

CDC Fraud Exposed
The trade marked phrase of the CDC is “Saving Lives, Protecting People” however failures within the CDC have resulted in a number of major failures such as biohazard lab failures, the high titer Edmonston-Zagreb measles vaccine studies and the financially biased and scientifically unsound reliance upon the poor quality two tiered Lyme disease testing.
A recent peer reviewed article by BS Hooker demonstrates the concerns about the MMR vaccine noted by Andrew Wakefield had scientific validity and the attempts to discredit him had not scientific merit. The article is called: Measles-mumps-rubella vaccination timing and autism among young African American boys: a reanalysis of CDC data and is posted on MedLine at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25114790 A vide expanding upon the issues is at:http://vimeo.com/user5503203/review/103711143/91f7d3d4d8 Since the video has been released it has started a firestorm of controversy:http://www.foiacentre.com/news-MMR-070305_2.htmlhttp://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2014/08/22/breaking-cdc-whistleblower-thompson-in-grave-danger-now/ We need better safeguards to prevent current CEDC fraud. It currently exists in regard to Lyme disease and a thorough investigation is needed.
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I copy the NIH study below
Transl Neurodegener. 2014 Aug 8;3:16. doi: 10.1186/2047-9158-3-16. eCollection 2014.

Measles-mumps-rubella vaccination timing and autism among young african american boys: a reanalysis of CDC data.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

A significant number of children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder suffer a loss of previously-acquired skills, suggesting neurodegeneration or a type of progressive encephalopathy with an etiological basis occurring after birth. The purpose of this study is to investigate the effectof the age at which children got their first Measles-Mumps-Rubella (MMR) vaccine on autism incidence. This is a reanalysis of the data set, obtained from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Protection (CDC), used for the Destefano et al. 2004 publication on the timing of the first MMR vaccine and autism diagnoses.

METHODS:

The author embarked on the present study to evaluate whether a relationship exists between child age when the first MMR vaccine was administered among cases diagnosed with autism and controls born between 1986 through 1993 among school children in metropolitan Atlanta. The Pearson's chi-squared method was used to assess relative risks of receiving an autism diagnosis within the total cohort as well as among different race and gender categories.

RESULTS:

When comparing cases and controls receiving their first MMR vaccine before and after 36 months of age, there was a statistically significant increase in autism cases specifically among African American males who received the first MMR prior to 36 months of age. Relative risks for males in general and African American males were 1.69 (p=0.0138) and 3.36 (p=0.0019), respectively. Additionally, African American males showed an odds ratio of 1.73 (p=0.0200) for autism cases in children receiving their first MMR vaccine prior to 24 months of age versus 24 months of age and thereafter.

CONCLUSIONS:

The present study provides new epidemiologic evidence showing that African American males receiving the MMR vaccine prior to 24 months of age or 36 months of age are more likely to receive an autism diagnosis.

KEYWORDS:

Autism; Measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine 

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Just recently this was published 

Med Hypotheses. 2014 Jun 16. pii: S0306-9877(14)00233-3. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2014.06.005. [Epub ahead of print]

Divergent opinions of proper Lyme disease diagnosis and implications for children co-morbid with autism spectrum disorder.

Abstract

This paper proposes that some children with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in the United States have undiagnosed Lyme disease and different testing criteria used by commercial laboratories may be producing false negative results. Two testing protocols will be evaluated; first, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Infectious Disease Society of America (IDSA) approved two-tiered Enzyme Immunoassay (EIA) or Immunofluorescence Assay (IFA) followed by an IgM and/or IgG Western Blot test. Second, a clinical diagnosis (flu like symptoms, joint pain, fatigue, neurological symptoms, etc.) possibly followed by a Western Blot with a broader criteria for positive bands [1]. The hypothesis proposes that the former criteria may be producing false negative results for some individuals diagnosed with an ASD. Through an online survey parents of 48 children who have a diagnosis of an ASD and have been diagnosed with Lyme disease were asked to fill out the Autism Treatment Evaluation Checklist (ATEC) before they started antibiotic therapy and after treatment. Of the 48 parents surveyed 45 of them (94%) indicated their child initially tested negative using the two-tiered CDC/IDSA approved test. The parents sought a second physician who diagnosed their child with Lyme disease using the wider range of Western Blot bands. The children were treated with antibiotics and their scores on the ATEC improved. Anecdotal data indicated that some of the children achieved previously unattained developmental milestones after antibiotic therapy began. Protein bands OSP-A and/or OSP-B (Western Blot band 31) and (Western Blot band 34) were found in 44 of 48 patients. These two bands are so specific to Borrelia burgdorferi that they were targeted for use in vaccine trials, yet are not included in the IDSA interpretation of the Western Blot.
Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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and also interesting to hear Dr Jones Interview where he also discusses Lyme and Vaccination  in Autistic children too long to copy

Sunday, 2 December 2012

AUTISM - LYME DISEASE - ANTIBIOTICS

At the 2012 ILADS conference Mason Kuhn did a most excellent presentation 


Scientific Support for the Effectiveness of Treating Children Comorbid with Lyme Disease and Autism Spectrum Disorder
Mason Kuhn, MS & Robert C. Bransfield, MD

A preview and his slide show can be seen on the ILADS website here a further livestream event will be held for Europe on Saturday 8th December and 9th December details here  
Mason's wife has started a blog of their son's journey - Our Lyme Autism Journey here with links to the published research from her husband Mason Kuhn and Dr Bransfield.

My simple summary of his presentation
Child A  normal until 18 months 
loss of all vocabulary, hand flapping - diagnosed with Autism
about  a year later Mother with CFS diagnosis of many years gets diagnosed with Lyme Disease - Child A also gets diagnosed with Lyme Disease ( Dr Alan MacDonald has done studies and found Lyme Disease (Borrelia) in aborted fetus and also umbilical chord)
Amoxycillin antibiotics given to Child A within 10 days vocabulary returned and hand flapping ceased - other antibiotics were given later.

Someone in the audience asked the question about vaccination - I think the answer was that it was after his MMR vaccine that his Autism began.

My comments
There is quite a high incidents of mothers with CFS who have children with Autism.
Samuel Shor has published research about cases of CFS who actually have Lyme Disease - he also presents at ILADS conference on his CFS/Lyme research but there is a post on this blog to another presentation from Samuel Shor here
It is recognised that Lyme Disease can remain in our system for many years and then something can affect our immune system and act as a trigger so the patient becomes ill.
Testing for Lyme Disease is problematic
The true incidents of Lyme disease in the population is still not known - here in the UK several research papers suggest that it is likely far more than thought - some of these papers are mentioned on this blog. Health Protection Agency (HPA) recognise the true incidents is greater than those with positive serology and some experts suggest it could be 10x the numbers HPA collect. 

I have posted previously about Treating Autism with antibiotics a study in France here 
Prof Montagnier is taking an interest in this field earlier posts here and here
Dr Jones US has treated many children over many years with Lyme Induced Autism here
Dr Bhakta a Dan practitioner is also finding children with Autism respond to antibiotics  here

Sunday, 14 October 2012

CHRONIC OR LATE LYME DISEASE

The Open Neurology Journal

The previous post came from the above link here

Also included are the following with links to the full papers.

Chronic or Late Lyme Neuroborreliosis: Present and Future 
Judith Miklossy*, Samuel Donta, Kurt Mueller, Oliver Nolte and George Perry 
Alzheimer Research Center,
 Prevention Alzheimer International Foundation, 1921 Martigny-Croix, CP 16, Switzerland
This special issue gives a framework of an international effort, to critically and constructively overview the clinical
and pathological aspects of Lyme neuroborreliosis and show directions for future practice and research.
The issue in the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme neuroorreliosis is assessed followed by a comprehensive analysis
of the involvement of connective tissue and associated clinical manifestations. A critical review shows that both the
meningovascular and meningoencephalitic forms, which define chronic or late neurosyphilis also occur in Lyme
neuroborreliosis. Clinical and pathological confir-mation of these tertiary forms and detection of Borrelia burgdorferi in association with tertiary brain lesions were reported by many authors. These observations indicate that similarly to Treponema pallidum, Borrelia burgdorferi infection is directly involved in the late or chronic manifestations of Lyme neuroborreliosis. Chronic or late Lyme neuroborreliosis both refer to tertiary neuroborreliosis, therefore, the use of these terms as different entities is not justified and may lead to
confusion. 


A critical assessment of clinical trials will guide the design of future clinical studies and a detailed analysis of various factors influencing PCR detection of Borrelia specific DNA would be precious to improve the sensitivity of this potentially important diagnostic tool.
*Address correspondence to this author at the International Alzheimer Research Center, Alzheimer Prevention Foundation, 1921 Martigny-Croix, CP
16, Switzerland; Tel: + 41 27 722 0652, +41 79 207 4442;
E-mail: judithmiklossy@bluewin.ch
An update on the virulence determinants of Borrelia burgdorferi and the pathomechanisms involved in Lyme disease is discussed followed by a review showing the importance of co-infections in the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease.
Evidence for an infectious origin of various neuropsychiatric symptoms of tick-borne diseases and various psychiatric disorders are also discussed. The involvement of immune system reactions, chronic inflammation, genetic and environmental factors are also considered. Finally an update on the perspectives on Lyme Borreliosis in Canada closes the special issue.
The majority of authors are internationally recognized neurologists and scientists with extensive experience and
complementary expertise in clinical and/or basic research on Lyme disease. The exchange of knowledge at an international level and between experts in various branches of medicine and in basic research is the way to advance faster in this new, promising and important field of medicine. The aim of this special issue is to contribute to this process. This approach motivated the authors at the annual meeting of the German Borreliosis Society (Deutsche Borreliose-Gesellschaft, DBG) in 2011 at Wuppertal, Germany to initiate and realize this special issue.
This issue is dedicated to the memory of Mark A. Smith whose untimely death has left a void for those looking to
novel ideas to solve chronic diseases.



A Reappraisal of the U.S. Clinical Trials of Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome, 2012; 6: Pp. 79-87
Brian A. Fallon, Eva Petkova, John G. Keilp and Carolyn B. Britton
Published Date: (
05 October, 2012)

Four federally funded randomized placebo-controlled treatment trials of post-treatment Lyme syndrome in the United States have been conducted. Most international treatment guidelines summarize these trials as having shown no acute or sustained benefit to repeated antibiotic therapy. The goal of this paper is to determine whether this summary con-clusion is supported by the evidence.

Methods: The methods and results of the 4 U.S. treatment trials are described and their critiques evaluated.

Results: 2 of the 4 U.S. treatment trials demonstrated efficacy of IV ceftriaxone on primary and/or secondary outcome measures.

Conclusions: Future treatment guidelines should clarify that efficacy of IV ceftriaxone for post-treatment Lyme fatigue was demonstrated in one RCT and supported by a second RCT, but that its use was not recommended primarily due to adverse events stemming from the IV route of treatment. While repeated IV antibiotic therapy can be effective, safer modes of delivery are needed.



The Psychoimmunology of Lyme/Tick-Borne Diseases and its Association with Neuropsychiatric Symptoms, 2012; 6: Pp. 88-93
Robert C. Bransfield
Published Date: (05 October, 2012)

Disease progression of neuropsychiatric symptoms in Lyme/tick-borne diseases can be better understood by greater attention to psychoimmunology. Although there are multip
le contributors that provoke and weaken the immune system, infections and persistent infections are significant causes of pathological immune reactions. Immune mediated effects are a significant contributor to the pathophysiological processes and disease progression. These immune effects include persistent inflammation with cytokine effects and molecular mimicry and both of these mechanisms may be present at the same time in persistent infections. Sickness syndrome associated with interferon treatment and autoimmune limbic encephalopathies are models to understand inflammatory and molecular mimicry effects upon neuropsychiatric symptoms. Progressive inflammatory reactions have been proposed as a model to explain disease progression in depression, psychosis, dementia, epilepsy, autism and other mental illnesses and pathophysiological changes have been associated with oxidative stress, excitotoxicity, changes in homocysteine metabolism and altered tryptophan catabolism. Lyme disease has been associated with the proinflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-8, IL-12, IL-18 and interferon-gamma, the chemokines CXCL12 and CXCL13 and increased levels proinflammatory lipoproteins. Borrelia burgdorferi surface glycolipids and flagella antibodies appear to elicit anti-neuronal antibodies and anti-neuronal antibodies and Borrelia burgdorferi lipoproteins can disseminate from the periphery to inflame the brain. Autism spectrum disorders associated with Lyme/tick-borne diseases may be mediated by a combination of inflammatory and molecular mimicry mechanisms. Greater interaction is needed between infectious disease specialists, immunologists and psychiatrists to benefit from this awareness and to further understand these mechanisms.



The Lymphocyte Transformation Test for Borrelia Detects Active Lyme Borreliosis and Verifies Effective Antibiotic Treatment, 2012; 6: Pp. 104-112
Volker von Baehr, Cornelia Doebis, Hans-
Dieter Volk, Rüdiger von Baehr
Published Date: (05 October, 2012)

Borrelia-specific antibodies are not detectable until several weeks after infection and even if they are present, they are no proof of an active infection. Since the sensitivity of culture and PCR for the diagnosis or exclusion of borreliosis is too low, a method is required that detects an active Borrelia infection as early as possible. For this purpose, a lymphocyte transformation test (LTT) using lysate antigens of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto, Borrelia afzelii and Borrelia garinii and recombinant OspC was developed and validated through investigations of seronegative and seropositive healthy individuals as well as of seropositive patients with clinically manifested borreliosis. The sensitivity of the LTT in clinical borreliosis before antibiotic treatment was determined as 89,4% while the specificity was 98,7%. In 1480 patients with clinically suspected borreliosis, results from serology and LTT were comparable in 79.8% of cases. 18% were serologically positive and LTT-negative. These were mainly patients with borreliosis after antibiotic therapy. 2.2% showed a negative serology and a positive LTT result. Half of them had an early erythema migrans. Following antibiotic treatment, the LTT became negative or borderline in patients with early manifestations of borreliosis, whereas in patients with late symptoms, it showed a regression while still remaining positive. Therefore, we propose the follow-up monitoring of disseminated Borrelia infections as the main indication for the Borrelia-LTT.



Diagnosis of Infectious or Inflammatory Psychosyndromes, 2012; 6: Pp. 113-118
Karl Bechter
Published Date: (05 October, 2012)

Before an outline of the process of diagnosis and differential diagnosis in infectious and/or inflammatory psy-chosyndromes is given, a more general overview onto the approach to organic psychosyndromes seems useful, b
ecause in both entities similar principles of causality conclusion are applied. Correlation does not demonstrate causality. Therefore the principles and consensus recommendations, and limitations of causal inference to categorize psychosyndromes as be-ing ‘organic’, is to be discussed in detail.



How do Lyme Borrelia Organisms Cause Disease? The Quest for Virulence Determinants#, 2012; 6: Pp. 119-123
Steven J. Norris
Published Date: (05 October, 2012)

Lyme disease Borrelia are invasive, nontoxigenic, persistent pathogens, and little is known about their mechanisms of pathogenesis. In our laboratory, a signature-tagged mutagenesis (STM
) library of over 4,000 Borrelia burgdorferi transposon mutants has been constructed and is being screened for infectivity in mice. In this manner, a global view of the virulence determinants (factors required for full infectivity) is being developed. Additionally, the mechanisms of immune evasion involving the VMP-like system (vls) are under analysis, and cryo-electron microscopy is providing a detailed view of the three-dimensional structure of B. burgdorferi. These approaches will contribute to the improved understanding of how Lyme disease Borrelia cause disease.



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