It’s Lyme Disease Season!
By Dr. Greg Fors, DC / Board-certified Neurologist
Spring is
finally here and so is a tick season which means Lyme disease becomes a
concern for all of us. The symptoms of Lyme disease can show up with a
bang or progress very slowly, innocuously and cause a great deal of
confusion. Commonly the initial symptoms are flu like with fever,
headache, nausea, muscle ache and a stiff neck. Many do not get these
early symptoms and months later their first signs may be
tingling/numbness, muscle weakness, tremors/tics, optic disturbances,
memory deficiency, psychiatric presentations, or other neurologic
disorders. Furthermore, in the nymph stage the ticks are as small as the
period at the end of the sentence.
Therefore, many individuals who are infected write it off as flu
unless they get the very classic bull’s-eye a rash in an easy to find
area. But the classic bull’s-eye rash only occurs or is found in about
one third of the diagnosed cases. Many also believe that the ticket
needs to be attached for 1 to 2 days for the bacteria to be transmitted.
However, as a person scratches, brushes up against things, or rolls
over in sleep the tick can be compressed, causing it to expel its
contents into the victim in less time.
When Lyme disease is not identified or properly treated in the
early stages, symptoms may creep into ones life over months or even
years. They may wax and wane, even go to remission only to come out
years later when the individual is under a great deal of metabolic
stress.
Negative lab results mean very little, for lab tests are extremely
unreliable in the diagnosis of Lyme disease with its many co-infections.
Many Lyme patients are finally diagnosed because of chronic symptoms
such as arthritis, autoimmune disorders, fibromyalgia and chronic
fatigue syndrome. Individuals may also suffer with thyroid symptoms that
do not respond well to thyroid medication. The number one cause of
thyroid problems in the US today is Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis, an
autoimmune condition that occurs when your immune system attacks and
destroys healthy tissue. A chronic infection such as Lyme disease is a
common reason for the immune system to become over active and attack the
thyroid as well as other tissues. The list of associated disorders is
nearly endless.
Lyme disease detection is extremely difficult even in the chronic
cases. Commonly used antibody tests can miss up to two thirds of
positively infected individuals. The ELISA test is useless in the first
month after a tick bite and may not detect past infections. The commonly
relied upon Western blot test is nearly as ineffective with only 44%
sensitivity. In one study of children known to have Lyme disease the
Western blot test was only able to identify 3 out of 10 cases of Lyme
disease.
Personally as a doctor I take a very broad view of what Lyme
disease actually is. It is traditionally defined as an acute infectious
illness caused by the bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi, however in its
chronic form it involves so much more. In chronic Lyme disease other
factors take on more significance, such as immune dysfunction,
co-infections, metabolic and hormonal imbalances and auto immune
responses such as Hashimoto's thyroiditis. This is what makes this
disorder so difficult for the general practitioner to understand and
properly treat.
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