Monday, July 30, 2012

My Plasma Donation for a Lyme Research Study

See that yellow canister to the left?
Thats MY PLASMA! Already separated from my blood. 

Thought I would give you an update on things. I recently participated in a Research Study - This company is doing research on patients with Lupus, Hepatitis, other Diseases and ALSO Lyme Disease! I was given a full medical exam, my veins were checked (I have big juicy veins so thankfully it's never been a problem doing blood draws or having my IV antibiotic treatments) and was given the Green Light for the next step - to donate plasma. What an experience. It's sort of like kidney dialysis - you are hooked up to a machine, they take your blood out thru an IV, the machine separates the plasma, and then  your blood is put BACK into you. The only "strange feeling" part was when they put some saline? back into me - it was freezing cold from the inside out. I could have had 10 blankets on top of me but it wouldn't have helped, because I was cold from the inside out! 

Anyway, they also took blood to see if I have an IgM (current) Lyme infection versus an IgG (past exposure). Basically your antibodies will show a positive IgM if they are fighting a current infection. This is what the research scientists want to work with. They also want to look at my plasma and decide whether I'm a viable candidate for the study. I would be compensated for my plasma, so I'll find out in about a week if I "pass" the test.

My very nice tech looking on - she was quite good and I barely
felt the needle going in! That's the sign of a good tech!
I'm including some pictures I had the rep take of me - I know, I look awfully CHIPPER in these photos - but that's just me. I just had a thought - they should use my pictures in their brochures since I look so HAPPY!Maybe it would make people feel less anxious about going thru this process! (smile) Hmmm...I should tell them about this great idea of mine! :)

(Also....Some patients DO report a "Euphoric" feeling when they donate plasma - maybe that's why I'm so "happy" looking! 

Will keep you posted - I DO hope that I'm a viable candidate - this would be a great way to help other Lyme patients if I could participate in this study. 

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

New York Times Article: When Lyme invades the brain and spinal system

Please note: This article is over 15 years old, but I found it quite interesting and wanted to share this on my blog. I was recently told I have spinal stenosis (my Lyme arthritis symptoms are worsening 2 years and 6 months later) and I came across this article under the search "Lyme and Spinal Stenosis" 




Personal Health; When Lyme invades the brain and spinal system.

By Jane E. Brody
Published: February 15, 1995
A YOUNG woman, whose doctor declined to identify her, thought she was going crazy. Suddenly, this once perfectly healthy college freshman developed severe anxiety, panic attacks, insomnia and loss of appetite.
A doctor and a psychologist at her college's health service recommended rest for what they thought were problems in adjusting to being away from home. Forced to take a medical leave, she underwent an extensive examination that showed no abnormalities except one: evidence in her spinal fluid of infection by the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, which causes Lyme disease. Only then did she recall having had a circular rash characteristic of Lyme disease months earlier, followed by a brief bout of headaches and unusual fatigue. At the time, she did not take these symptoms seriously and did not seek medical attention.
The young woman's case is among dozens reported in which the Lyme spirochete was the apparent cause of a wide range of psychiatric and neurological problems. Three months after receiving a six-week course of intravenous antibiotics to eradicate the spirochete, the woman felt better. But a year later more therapy was needed when the anxiety and panic attacks returned, along with musical hallucinations, deja vu experiences and obsessional thoughts.
Although such extreme cases are rare, neurological problems resulting from Lyme disease are more common than realized by most doctors, who tend to look for the more characteristic arthritic conditions associated with the disease. Nervous System Attack
When Lyme disease is promptly recognized and properly treated, the overwhelming majority of patients recover uneventfully. But often the initial sign of a bite by a Lyme-infected tick, a red circular rash that clears in the center, is not recognized. Only when more severe symptoms develop weeks or months later are a diagnosis and treatment pursued.
Meanwhile, within weeks of entering the body, the spirochete, a bacterium that resembles the organism that causes syphilis, can invade the brain and spinal cord. At first, patients may develop meningitis, encephalitis or problems like pain or loss of sensation stemming from an attack on the nerves that emanate from the brain or spinal cord. But as with syphilis, months or years may pass before the late signs of a neurological infection appear.
Once inside the central nervous system, the organism can wreak all kinds of havoc, from memory problems, moodiness and depression to hallucinations, panic attacks, paranoia, manic depression, seizures and even dementia. Memory problems are the most common sign of a brain infection. When the organism invades spinal nerves, patients may develop numbness and tingling in fingers and toes and pain radiating to the front of the body.
In rare cases, the spirochete may mount an attack on the protective sheath of nerves, resulting in spastic muscle weakness in the extremities that resembles multiple sclerosis, said Dr. Allen C. Steere of Tufts-New England Medical Center in Boston. Dr. Steere first recognized Lyme disease as a distinct disorder in 1975 and soon realized that it could cause neurological problems.
Dr. Brian Fallon, a psychiatrist at the State Psychiatric Institute in New York, recently reviewed the neuropsychiatric aspects of Lyme disease in The American Journal of Psychiatry, in the hope of prompting his colleagues to consider the possibility of this infection when examining patients who might have been exposed to Lyme-infected ticks.
In Europe, where the disease is called borreliosis, patients commonly develop neuropsychiatric symptoms after being infected by the same spirochete that causes Lyme disease, Dr. Fallon said. But in this country, arthritic symptoms are most common and many doctors still do not appreciate the threat to the nervous system.
Dr. Fallon said that up to 40 percent of patients with Lyme disease developed some involvement of the nervous system affecting either the extremities or the central nervous system. He told of a 47-year-old man who experienced depression and memory problems as his main signs of Lyme disease, symptoms that responded well to intravenous antibiotics. The symptoms recurred five months later, but he was not treated a second time. He developed a type of dementia that required hospitalization and died a few years later. An autopsy found Lyme spirochetes in a degenerated part of his brain.
Children can also develop a neurological form of Lyme disease that often shows up as behavioral or emotional disturbances. Such children may become moody, lose interest in play and do poorly in school. Among 16 children in Westchester County, N.Y., who contracted Lyme disease, 15 whose infections were identified and treated within the first month were doing very well, Dr. Fallon said. But one child, in whom the disease was not diagnosed until four months after he was thought to have been infected, has suffered for five years with arthritis, headaches, depression and memory problems.
Studies by Dr. Steere and others of patients with neurological signs of Lyme disease have revealed inadequate blood flow through particular areas of the brain. Dr. Steere also said that after an attack of Lyme disease, patients might develop pain or fatigue syndromes that resemble fibromyalgia or chronic fatigue syndrome. Diagnosis Problems
To be sure, extreme incapacitating effects of a Lyme infection are rare. But even the more subtle effects like depressed mood, memory problems and word-finding difficulties can be devastating to those who are afflicted.
Such patients commonly receive the wrong diagnosis or inappropriate treatment. Often they are shunted from one doctor to another. In addition to blood tests for antibodies to the spirochete, diagnosis of neurological Lyme disease may require a spinal tap, an electroencephalogram (EEG), magnetic resonance imaging (M.R.I.), standard neuropsychological tests (for example, for memory, word association and depression) and a carefully taken health history.
Even after a correct diagnosis is made and a long course of intravenous antibiotics is administered, the organism may not be eradicated from its sanctuary in the brain. Repeated courses of this costly therapy are typically needed, but many insurance companies balk at paying for them because the treatments are still considered experimental.
Sometimes the treatment itself can cause a flare-up of Lyme disease, producing both physical and neuropsychiatric symptoms. But most often, when the presence of a Lyme infection can be established, treatment with intravenous antibiotics for four to six weeks results in a distinct improvement. But Dr. Steere, who uses ceftriaxone, which is sold as Rocephin, noted that patients typically must wait three to six months to see signs of gradual improvement and may never recover 100 percent.

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Great news!
LymeTap is once again accepting applications for reimbursement of Lyme Tests up to 75% if you meet eligibility requirements. For more information and to download their application, go to: Lyme Tap Site

(www.lymetap.com)




Lyme Victims Depend on Each Other (Martha's Vineyard Support Group)

LYME VICTIMS DEPEND ON EACH OTHER
By OLIVIA HULL

support group
Lyme disease support group offers sympathetic ears and educated referrals to doctors.
Kristen Kusama-Hinte arrived on-Island in early June. A couple of weeks later, her son had a fever. She tended to him, sleeping on the floor by his side. She checked her own and discovered a 100-degree temperature and didn’t pay much attention. She got a stiff neck and again didn’t pay much heed. When a terrible headache hit, she knew something was wrong.
She thought she was being assaulted by a horrific flu, until part of her face became paralyzed. “I was completely immobile,” she recalled. “All I could do was moan and groan.” The pain, she said, was worse than two bouts of natural home births. When she noticed a small rash on her arm, she finally went to the clinic and was diagnosed with acute Lyme disease. She was treated with the antibiotic Doxycycline, and symptoms subsided, but her doctor wouldn’t answer her most pressing question, “Am I cured?” “She kept saying, ‘You got the Lyme and you’re treating it,’” she said. “I wanted to know I was not dealing with a chronic disease.”
There is a continuing debate over the existence of chronic Lyme. But people like Sue Rhuby of West Tisbury say it is real, something they live with every day. Ms. Rhuby is a member of the Lyme Disease Support Group on the Vineyard. She was first diagnosed with chronic Lyme in 2010, but she had been feeling its effects for seven years. In the meantime, amidst a host of aches and pains, including a “chisel in my back” feeling that caused her to visit the chiropractor three times a week, sometimes three times a day, she was diagnosed with lupus. But she’s now confident she’d been suffering from Lyme all along. In the absence of doctors with answers, she has taken responsibility for her own health. “You have to educate yourself about the problem you have,” she said. “It’s your body, and you know your body best.”

Enid haller
Phoenix Becker is an organizer of the support group.
The support group, headed by Enid Haller, a PhD in clinical psychology, provides information and emotional support to its 150 members. For most, after experiencing the effects of a particularly isolating disease, the support group helps them feel heard.
“I think it feels really good for people to talk to other members of the group and feel heard,” said Phoenix Becker, one of the support group’s organizers.
As group members told their stories Wednesday night in West Tisbury, their voices were met with understanding groans of solidarity. They discussed doctors, treatments, anxiety, depression, misdiagnosis. “I feel like I have been run over by a fatigue bus,” a woman from Danvers said, and everyone agreed it’s a good way to put it. As Nick entered the room, he dragged his feet. “I’m doing the Lyme shuffle,” he said, and everyone laughed. The crocs, work boots, hiking boots, Tevas and leather sandals identify them as people from different sectors of society — but the isolating experiences they’ve shared bring them together. They agree on many things—that pain is worst in the morning, for example. But they disagree over whether it’s okay to resort to painkillers. They avoid hospital-bashing for the most part, but sometimes they can’t resist: They feel ignored and unheard by the medical establishment.
Twenty-one members came to the meeting. The group functions much like a referral service. A new group member presents her case, eliciting audible compassion of the people sitting around her, and Ms. Haller suggests a next step. She’s done her research, aided by Ms. Becker, so rarely does a treatment come up that she hasn’t heard of. She keeps a short list of doctors whom she refers to as “Lyme-literate”—the majority of whom do not accept standard insurance plans, but against the doctors who take advantage of people’s desperation. “I don’t mean to call them quacks or whatever,” she said. “But it’s important for people to hear in the group that you have to be careful. Some charge a lot of money.”

Sam Hiser
Sam Hiser.
But Ms. Haller also acknowledges that some treatments work for some people and not others. Her endorsements are based on the personal experiences of support group members. “We have taken it into our own hands to find our way through the medical system,” she says. Ms. Haller also offers to look at group members’ test results, because she believes some doctors aren’t adequately equipped to read the tests.
Many support group members’ mistrust in medical doctors has prompted them to take on their own illness. Some say they feel they are being forced to doubt their perception of their body. John Casey, of Oak Bluffs, has experienced intense cramping in his hands and feet, joint soreness, and short-term memory loss, among other symptoms, for more than a decade. He saw many doctors over the years, but said none had a clear idea of what caused his pain. One diagnosed him with psychosomatic illness, another said it was fibromyalgia. Finally, he said, they just treated him for the pain. He took vicodin, oxycontin and oxycodon, and finally, methadone. But everything changed when he met Ms. Haller. “In about seven minutes of talking to Enid, she said, ‘John, you probably have Lyme,’” he recalled. “That’s how quickly she got to the heart of it.” He sent for the $470 panel Igenex test and it came back positive for Lyme. After several months of antibiotics, a recent relapse caused him to seek other options. He now takes carnivora, a Venus flytrap extract that is intended to excite the immune system. But he’s still in pain, and still relies on methadone to lead a normal life. When he wakes up, his entire body is in pain, he said.
Ms. Becker got sick with what she suspects is Lyme when she was eight years old, in August of 1988. As a child growing up on the Island, she enjoyed playing in the woods and picking wild blueberries. But when she got sick, she stopped participating in after-school sports, due to fatigue, and was taunted by friends. People also criticized her parents, blaming them for Phoenix’s condition.
She struggled for two decades to get a diagnosis that fit her symptoms. “It seemed like every doctor I saw didn’t think there was anything wrong with me,” she said. For a while, doctors insisted she had rheumatoid arthritis, but every test she took came back negative. Doctors also suggested it might be multiple sclerosis, or blamed symptoms on her Type 1 diabetes. Now she sees a neurologist who treats what the doctor calls Lyme with an extended regimen of intravenous antibiotics — she’s been on Rocephin for over a year. “Within a couple of days of starting it, my family could really tell a difference in me,” she said. “I was speaking a lot faster and my gait really improved.”

Jay Boden
Jay Boden.
Due to its prevalence on the Island, many of those who believe they suffer from lasting effects of a tick bite say that Islanders’ (and visitors’) approach to Lyme must change. “It requires a real shift in thinking,” Ms. Becker said. “A lot of people think they love nature, want to spend time in nature, feel like nature would never hurt them. When they get bitten by a tick, it really shakes their reality.”
Much of the information shared at the support group regards preventative measures. They discuss strategies like putting up mesh fencing to enclose their yards, using DEET and keeping their lawn mowed. “I don’t care what they spray,” said a man whose biggest concern is protecting his three-year-old daughter. “It could be agent orange,” he said, as long as it protects his family against Lyme.

But even after dealing with what they think is Lyme for decades, patients like Ms. Becker remain hopeful about their prognosis.
“It’s important for people to know that they can get better from Lyme,” said Ms. Becker. “A lot of people give up on getting better but it takes patience and persistence to get better. It can take a couple of years of treatment to make a full recovery.”
“Everyone thinks we’re nuts, by the way,” Ms. Haller said, nearing the end of the three hour meeting. “I prefer to say we think out of the box.”
The Lyme Disease Support Group is held at Howes House in West Tisbury at 6:30 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month.

Full article can be found at:  Martha's Vineyard Gazette - Lyme Support group article

Monday, July 9, 2012

How to Deal with Candida OR Lyme Toxin Die-Off


What is Candida Die-Off?

Note: Some of these I've tried, and some of them I haven't. I've tried to put my own little notes next to the ones that I think are the best! - B) 

  • What is Die-Off?
    Learn how your Candida treatment could result in a Die-Off reaction, and how to recognize the symptoms of Candida Die-Off.

Supplements to help with Die-Off

  • Vitamin C
    Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) restores your adrenal function and helps to boost your immune system.
  • Milk Thistle
    This herb contains a compound that helps to repair damaged liver cells and protect them from the toxins released in Die-Off. (This is one of the supplements I would recommend more than anything else. It helps your liver process toxins (because remember, EVERYTHING has to go thru your liver first! - I take Milk Thistle EVERY DAY! - B) 
  • Swedish Bitters
    Swedish Bitters are an excellent digestive support. They also help to regulate your stomach acidity and support your liver function.
    (Have actually never tried these so let me know if they work! - B) 
  • Detox Drops
    Detox Drops is a supplement that promotes the healthy functioning of your liver and the elimination of toxins from your body.

Other ways to reduce your Die-Off symptoms

  • Alternative Detox Methods
    This page summarizes the different alternative detox methods that you can try. The pages below go into more detail.
  • Skin Brushing
    Your skin is responsible for up to 15% of toxin elimination. Skin brushing enhances this process and improves your circulation too.
    (I HIGHLY recommend this method of detoxing - I've done this myself and it really DOES work! - B) 
  • Contrast showers
    Contrast showers boost your lymphatic system and improve your circulation. They have long been used as an alternative remedy for the common cold. (Note: I'm not familiar with  contrast showers so when I try it out, I'll give you my opinion! - B) 
  • Exercise and Candida
    The right amount of exercise can improve your body's defenses against Candida. Don't over-do it though as this can weaken your adrenals.
  • Rebounding (aka Mini Trampolines) - This is an excellent way to get your lymphatic system pumping - An interesting thing I learned about this. Your blood is pumped thru your body through that wonderful organ called your HEART, unfortunately, the lymphatic system doesn't HAVE a pump - so it relies on YOU to exercise, preferably in an up and down movement like on a mini trampoline (aka rebounding) - or you could go up and down the stairs if you are able to! -B) 
  • Sauna
    Sauna improves circulation and helps you flush out toxins through sweating. This page tells you what type of sauna works best. (Note: Infrared (FIR) Saunas are one of the BEST ways to detox and you can buy a portable one for as little as $180. I have one and it helps you work up a sweat using dry heat versus a traditional steam sauna - B) 

Also: Just a few things that my Lyme friends have learned thru trial and error - the following items can help take the edge off when your body is "Herxing" - when you have toxins being released thru your body, it can make you feel REALLY sick! For some reason, don't ask me why, Alka Seltzer Gold and/or Benadryl can take the edge off when you're feeling the effects of bacterial load die off. I always keep some on hand!  

Also - the article above did not mention EPSOM SALT BATHS. If you're up to it (sometimes I'm just too tired to do it! but if you CAN, it can REALLY help draw out toxins from your body. You can buy a big bag of Epsom Salts at a drugstore like CVS for less than 10$ - B) 

What is Lyme? Where to Start for Newbies

Just wanted to share this link with anyone who has been newly diagnosed with Lyme Disease or thinks that they may have LD. There is a wealth of information on this site - they do a great job in posting some great resources for Lyme patients. This page in particular is good for people who are just starting out and need to know "Where do I start"? 
http://whatislyme.com/where-to-start-lyme-info-for-newbies/