Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Opossums Are Our Best Defense Against Lyme Disease



Next time you see an Opossum, try not to hit it!





Opossums attract and kill thousands of ticks per acre, per week, making them one of our best allies in stopping the spread of Lyme Disease.

https://returntonow.net/2019/01/27/study-opossums-are-our-best-defense-against-lyme-disease-killing-5000-ticks-per-week-each/

Opossums attract and then kill thousands of ticks per acre, per week, making them one of our best allies in stopping the spread of Lyme disease, researchers say.
A study compared squirrels, mice and opossums, which all eat ticks, and found opossums were the most effective exterminators.
Ticks favor opossums twice as much as the other rodents, the researchers, from Syracuse University, found.
Fortunately, for humans, possums are also the most effective at killing the disease-carrying pests.
Opossums kill almost every tick that occupies them, the study found. A single opossum kills over 5500 ticks per week.
“Opossums are extraordinarily good groomers it turns out – we never would have thought that ahead of time – but they kill the vast majority – more than 95% percent of the ticks that try to feed on them,” disease ecologist Rick Ostfeld explained.
“So these opossums are walking around the forest floor, hoovering up ticks right and left, killing over 90% of these things, and so they are really protecting our health.”
Worldwide, more than 1.3 million people die each year of infectious diseases transmitted by a vector, such as a mosquito, sand fly or tick, according to the .
Vector-borne diseases also inflict heavy tolls on crops, livestock and wildlife, the study’s authors wrote.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

Lyme Infected Ticks in Urban Parks


Lyme Disease Now a Threat in City Parks
From Healthday News, May 15, 2019:
By Steven Reinberg
As deer populations have exploded across America, moving from forests to suburbs to urban parks, they have brought the threat of Lyme disease to millions of city dwellers, a new study finds.



In fact, the deer tick that spreads Lyme disease is as prevalent in many New York City parks as it is in areas known to be endemic for the bacterial disease, such as Connecticut and other states in the Northeast.
…That means people have the same risk of getting Lyme disease in some city parks as they do in suburban and rural landscapes. 
"Where deer are able to survive and thrive, we expect to see ticks -- and we did," said lead researcher Meredith Van Acker. She is a graduate student in the department of ecology, evolution and environmental biology at Columbia University in New York City.
"What was surprising was that although tick populations in these parks increased in the recent past, we see the same level of infection in these urban tick populations as we do in endemic areas," she said.
Lyme disease is caused by bacteria called Borrelia burgdorferi, and is transmitted by the bite of the tiny black-legged tick -- also known as the deer tick. These ticks are about the size of a poppy seed.



Deer don't infect ticks with the bacteria that causes Lyme. Rather, birds and small mammals are the culprit, Van Acker explained. The deer simply provide the tick with a home to breed and grow.
Symptoms of Lyme disease include fever, headache, fatigue and a bullseye skin rash. If not treated, the infection can spread to joints, the heart and nervous system, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Human risk for getting Lyme disease depends on the abundance of deer ticks, as well as deer and mice, which are part of the ticks' life cycle.
For the study, Van Acker and her colleagues sampled ticks in 24 parks in the five boroughs of New York City.
The researchers found deer ticks that carried the Lyme bacteria in parks that were accessible to deer, particularly those in the Bronx and Staten Island.
No deer ticks were found in Manhattan's Central Park, which is cut off from deer, Van Acker noted.
Infected ticks were mostly found in forested parks with vegetation around the edges and connected to each other.
By extrapolating their data, the investigators found that the deer tick population in these parks is as dense as it is in areas where Lyme disease is common.
Van Acker suspects that other diseases carried by the deer tick are also present in parks populated by deer. Her next study will try to find out what other tick-borne diseases lurk in city parks.
Dr. Marc Siegel, a professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City, said, "There's a lot more Lyme disease coming from non-rural areas, especially Staten Island."
Siegel noted that the Lyme rash only occurs in 60% of patients. He looks for symptoms such as fatigue and muscle aches.
"If I have a patient with fatigue and muscle aches who has trouble concentrating, and I do a Lyme test which is not conclusive, I consider treating them," he said.
Treatment is a round of antibiotics to knock the disease out.
"I tend to over treat Lyme," Siegel said. "If I think it's Lyme, I give you four weeks of antibiotics. Treatment is usually 10 days to two weeks. I like four weeks because Lyme can recur," he said.
The best way to not get Lyme disease is to take precautions. These include wearing long pants tucked into your socks and using an insect repellent containing DEET and staying on trails, according to Lorraine Johnson, the CEO of LymeDisease.org.
Also, you should check yourself for ticks when you get home. "The best way to do that is to take a shower and feel your skin, because these ticks are really small," Johnson said.
The report was published in the June issue of the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.
More information
Visit the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for more on Lyme disease.
SOURCES: Meredith VanAcker, graduate student, department of ecology, evolution and environmental biology, Columbia University, New York City; Marc Siegel, M.D., professor, medicine, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York City; Lorraine Johnson, CEO, LymeDisease.org, San Ramon, Calif.; June 2019, Emerging Infectious Diseases

Monday, May 13, 2019

“Bitten: The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons”



https://www.lymedisease.org/lyme-disease-bitten-bioweapons/



Bitten: The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons” is a wake-up call. It’s time to stop business as usual and prioritize the Lyme disease epidemic.
Helping those who currently suffer and protecting coming generations both depend on it.
What also depends on it: the ability to heal the “open wound” of how Lyme disease has been treated, untreated, and mistreated, for far too long.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While on vacation on Martha’s Vineyard, Kris Newby was bitten by an unseen tick. That one bite changed her life forever, pulling her into the abyss of a devastating illness that took ten doctors to diagnose and years to recover: Newby had become one of the 300,000 Americans who are afflicted with Lyme disease each year.
As a science writer, she was driven to understand why this disease is so misunderstood, and its patients so mistreated. This quest led her to Willy Burgdorfer, the Lyme microbe’s discoverer, who revealed that he had developed bug-borne bioweapons during the Cold War, and believed that the Lyme epidemic was started by a military experiment gone wrong.

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Kris Kristofferson and Lyme's Disease

Below s a great link to Kris's story



http://whatislyme.com/kris-kristofferson-and-lyme-disease/




Here are great links for more information:

https://www.lymedisease.org/mylymedata-lyme-disease-research-videos/

https://www.lymedisease.org/lyme-times-lyme-disease-journal/




What if you never got bit by a tick? Can Lyme's disease be transmitted by sexual contact?
This news to me as of 2019, but if this is true the dynamics of transmission are staggering!
/https://www.lymedisease.org/lyme-sexual-transmission-2/

Saturday, July 8, 2017

An Accurate Diagnosis of Lyme's Disease

Diagnosing and Surviving Lyme's Disease






Fortunately for me, when I was bit by a tick and contracted Lyme's disease in July, 1989, I witnessed the tick attached to my skin. Most notable at the time was the huge whelp(about 2" in diameter and 1/8 " thick). Bear in mind I am a swamp tour guide, a wounded deer blood tracker and I live in Louisiana. I am a hunter and a fisherman and ticks and insect bites are common. So I do not generally react to ticks or mosquito bites by whelping the way most people do. I guess I get a lot of bites and my body is immune. But the whelp produced by this tick bite in 1989 was large and thick and I had never seen anything short of a snake bite to produce such a large and rapid development.




The next thing I noticed some days later was a "rash" or reddish discoloration of my skin in a circle around the outer edges of where the whelp was. In the center of that was a red dot where the tick bite occurred. Hence a bull's eye rash.


Two weeks later, I began to experience flu like symptoms. But not like any flu I had ever had. That is just the closest thing to it, I ever experienced. Here it was August 1st in deep south Louisiana and I was putting on long pants and a sweat shirt to warm up! This was my first sign that something was very wrong with me.

                                             My houseboat under construction in 1986


At the time I was in the Atchafalaya Basin Swamp at my houseboat, and about an hour away from my family and friends. Assuming that my health was in jeopardy, I decided to get into my truck and drive the hour to Lafayette needed to be close to family and friends. Little did I know what was about to happen to me would put me through hell for the next 8 days and alter the course of my life for decades to come.

                                          My houseboat circa 1993 @ Grand Avoille Cove


Arriving in Lafayette, I advised my girlfriend of my condition and I then went onto the back porch and sat on the steps in the 90 degree sun to warm up. In a matter of minutes, my heart rate doubled to about 120 beats a minute. I was starting to warm up! So I went inside and got into a tub of cool water to soak and cool off. From that point on if I was exposed to direct sunlight, my heart rate doubled. Being a naturopath, I began to use herb teas and nutritional supplements to boost my immune system. Nothing worked.


After 8 days, I decided to go to the hospital. I checked into the University Medical Center and was diagnosed with a fever of 'unknown origin' and prescribed an antibiotic. I took one pill and went to bed that night. I awoke with no fever, and no symptoms what so ever, except I was very weak. End of story, right? Wrong! I lived with a bacteria in my brain for 8 years before I was cured, and bear in mind, I am a tough outdoorsman.






About a month or so later, a hunting buddy/friend of mine gave me an article from a Louisiana Sportsman magazine about Lyme's disease. It precisely mapped out my symptoms and progression to the letter. I went to the hospital and notified them that based upon my research, I was certain that I had Lyme's disease and I wanted them to put it into my medical record. They said that they could not because 'they' didn't diagnose it. Thus began the ordeal of official medical denial that ran for nearly 8 years before I at a point of near death, researched and cured myself with antibiotics in 1997.


500mg of tetracycline hydrocloride for four months and I was cured in 1997

At the time I contracted the disease, I was living on my houseboat in the Basin and doing swamp tours part time. I had suffered a back injury in 1986 and assumed that the symptoms I was suffering were the result of or a progression of the back injury.





In august of 1992 Hurricane Andrew roared through South Louisiana and the eye passed over Charenton where my houseboat was parked. I built my houseboat with hurricanes in mind and it stood the test. The worst that happened to it was it got a good pressure washing. But everything I had on land was destroyed. With the typical positive attitude that I operate in I resolved to put everything in order in a few weeks. Yah, right!






It was following Hurricane Andrew that I first noticed that I was suffering from mental organizational dysfunction. and maybe it was a combination of post traumatic stress syndrome and depression, along with Lyme's disease, but I began to notice something was not right. I was not the same person I used to be.



Here I am today, healthy and in my 60's


As fate would have it about 1995, I was doing a swamp tour for a lady from Connecticut and I was sharing my story about the recovery of Hurricane Andrew with her, and she commented that it sounded like I had Lyme's disease. I replied "No, I had that but got cured". She asked how did I know I had Lyme's disease.




When I shared my experiences with her, it was her who advised me that it sounded like I was suffering from'Late' Lyme's Disease, and was actually never fully cured.




I didn't take her seriously at first but she put me in touch with the Lyme's Disease Foundation and they sent me literature and I spoke with them over the course of several years and eventually, because of that one lady from Lyme, Connecticut, I was eventually cured. Sorry to say the three local doctors I called upon all failed to diagnose, treat and get any credit for curing me! 



Below s a great link to Kris Kristofferson's Lyme's Disease story





What if you never got bit by a tick? 
Can Lyme's disease be transmitted by sexual contact?


My Story

In August of 1989, I was bit by a tick, and then had a 3" diameter whelp, and a bulls eye rash.

Two weeks later, I began to experience flu like conditions, with a fluctuating fever as high as 104 farenheit, but the worst part was if I went into the direct sunlight, my heart beat rate doubled in frequency.

I have never been one to run to doctors for anything and tried various home remedies for about a week and finally went into an emergency room at the hospital. There I was diagnosed with a fever of 'unknown origin' and released with a prescription of antibiotics for 10 days. I took one pill that night and woke up feeling completely healed the next day.

From that point forward however, I suffered from short term memory loss, and loss of short term memory(2 different things). Also insomnia, severe chronic fatigue, depression, head aches, back aches, knee and elbow joint pain, and would wake up every morning about 3AM completely exhausted and couldn't go back sleep.

After about 7 years into this ordeal, and after several doctors prescribing sleep aids and anti-depressants, one of which was the foremost physician for the treatment of contagious diseases in Louisiana, and none would give me antibiotics, I decided to treat this obvious case of Lyme's disease myself.

I had been communicating with the Lyme's Disease Foundation at the University of New York in Stoney Brook, and they had sent me a clinical update for physicians regarding the diagnosis and treatment of 'late' Lyme's disease. To make a long story short, after studying the information I got from the Lyme's Disease Foundation, and suffering for 8 years without any kind of effective diagnosis or treatment, I administered 500 mgs of tetracycline hydrocloride for 4 months and I was cured, with no relapses, and it never came back.

I am convinced that what I went through would have killed most people, and I would not be alive today if I had not taken my health and treatment into my own hands and cured myself. Sorry to say, but the depression was more a result of the doctors not taking me serious when I walked in and advised them that I had late Lyme's Disease. The doctors seemed to resent my walking in and 'telling them what was wrong with me. I was more mentally disturbed by the doctors refusing to prescribe antibiotics, than the bacteria that was living in my brain and spinal fluid.

So, I hope if you are suffering from what has been diagnosed as MS, Alzheimer's or an auto-immune disease that you will consider researching Lyme's disease as a possibility.

Here is something I just discovered is the possibility that it can be sexually transmitted:

https://www.lymedisease.org/lyme-sexual-transmission-2/

One physician has even proposed that although there is no statistics presently, he predicts that Lyme's disease may be a bigger epidemic than Aids.

Here is a great resource for more info:
https://www.lymedisease.org/lyme-times-lyme-disease-journal/


Lyme disease is much more common than previously thought, with over 400,000 new cases diagnosed each year in the United States.
That makes Lyme disease in this country about twice as common as annual new cases of breast cancer and four times more common than annual new cases of HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and syphilis combined.https://www.lymedisease.org/lyme-disease-genital-lesion/