|
Part 1 of 2 (Part
2)
by D. J. Fletcher
and Tom Klaber
Millions of people who are
diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia,
Alzheimer's, chronic fatigue syndrome and other
degenerative diseases could have Lyme Disease
causing or contributing to their condition.
Forget just about everything you think you know
about Lyme disease.
It is not a rare disease, it
is epidemic. It is not just tick-borne; it can also
be transmitted by other insects, including fleas,
mosquitoes and mites -- and by human-to-human
contact.
Neither is Lyme usually
indicated by a bull's-eye rash; this is found in
only a minority of cases. And, except when it is
diagnosed at a very early stage, Lyme is rarely
cured by a simple course of antibiotics. Finally,
Lyme is not just a disease that makes you "tired and
achy" -- it can utterly destroy a person's life and
ultimately be fatal.
Lyme disease, in fact, might
be the most insidious -- and least understood --
infectious disease of our day. "If
it weren't for AIDS," says Nick Harris,
Ph.D., President of IgeneX, Inc., a research and
testing laboratory in Palo Alto, California, "Lyme
would be the number one infectious disease in the
United States and Western Europe."
Lyme disease was first
recognized in the United States in 1975, after a
mysterious outbreak of arthritis near Lyme,
Connecticut. It wasn't until 1982 that the
spirochete that causes Lyme was identified. It was
subsequently named Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb), in
honor of Willy Burgdorfer, Ph.D., a pioneer
researcher.
Many now see the disease, also
called Lyme borreliosis, as more than a simple
infection, but rather as a complex illness that can
consist of other co-infections, especially of the
parasitic pathogens Babesia and Ehrlichia.
Animal studies have shown that in less than a week
after being infected, the Lyme spirochete can be
deeply embedded inside tendons, muscles, tissue, the
heart and the brain.
"Of the more than
5,000
children I've
treated, 240 have been
born with the disease,"
says Dr. Jones, who specializes in Pediatric and
Adolescent Medicine. "Twelve children who've been
breast-fed have subsequently developed Lyme.
Bb can be transmitted
transplacentally, even with in vitro fertilization;
I've seen eight children infected in this way.
People from Asia who come to me with the classic
Lyme rash have been infected by fleas and gnats."
Gregory Bach, D.O., presented
a study on transmission via semen at the American
Psychiatric Association meeting in November, 2000.
He confirmed Bb DNA in semen using the PCR test
(Polymerase Chain Reaction).
Dr. Bach calls Bb "a brother"
to the syphilis spirochete because of their genetic
similarities. For that reason, when he treats a Lyme
patient in a relationship, he often treats the
spouse; otherwise, he says, they can just pass the
Bb back and forth, reinfecting each other.
Dr. Tang adds other avenues of
infection: "Transmission may also occur via blood
transfusion and through the bite of mosquitoes or
other insects." Dr. Cowden contends that
unpasteurized goat or cow milk can infect a person
with Bb.
Unreliable Testing
What is the reason for the
discrepancy between the government's statistics and
the experience of front-line physicians? Says Dr.
Jones, "The CDC criteria was developed only for
surveillance; it was never meant for diagnosis.
Lyme is a clinical diagnosis.
The test evidence may be used to support a clinical
diagnosis, but it doesn't prove one has Lyme. About
50% of patients I've seen have been seronegative
[blood test negative] for Lyme but meet all the
clinical criteria."
Most of the standard tests
used to detect Lyme are notoriously unreliable.
Explains Dr. Harris, "The initial thing patients
usually get is a Western Blot antibody test. This
test is not positive immediately after Bb exposure,
and only 60% or 70% of people ever show antibodies
to Bb."
Dr. Cowden favors two tests
developed respectively by Dr. Whitaker and by Lida
Mattman, Ph.D., Director of the Nelson Medical
Research Institute in Warren, Michigan. However,
both of these tests
have yet to win FDA approval for
diagnostic use.
Explains Dr. Whitaker, "We
have developed the Rapid Identification of Bb (RIBb)
test. A highly purified fluorescent antibody stain
specific for Bb is used to detect the organism. This
test provides results in 20 to 30 minutes, a key to
getting the right treatment started quickly."
Dr. Mattman's culture test
also uses a fluorescent antibody staining technique
which allows her to study live cultures under a
fluorescent microscope. "When a person is sick,"
says Dr. Mattman, "antibodies get tied up in the
tissues, in what is called an immune complex, and
are not detected in the patient's blood plasma.
So it's not that the antibody
isn't there or hasn't been produced; it just isn't
detectable. Thus, the tests which are based on
detecting antibodies give false negatives." The
tests of Drs. Whitaker and Mattman do not look for
antibodies but look for the organism, in the same
way that tuberculosis is diagnosed.
When Dr. Jones treats a Lyme
patient who's in a relationship, he often treats the
spouse as well; otherwise, he says, they can just
pass the Bb back and forth, reinfecting each other.
There are several reasons why
Lyme is so difficult to test for -- and difficult to
treat. Take, for instance, the bull's-eye rash --
called Erythma migrans -- that is supposed to appear
after being bitten by a tick carrying the Lyme
spirochete.
Every doctor with whom the
authors spoke said that
this rash appears in
only 30% to
40% of infected people.
Dr. Jones said that fewer than 10% of the infected
children he sees exhibit the rash.
A
Master Of Elusiveness
More importantly,
Lyme can disseminate
throughout the body remarkably rapidly.
In its classic spirochete form, the bacteria can
contract like a large muscle and twist to propel
itself forward: because of this spring-like action
it can actually swim better in tissue than in blood.
It can travel through blood
vessel walls and through connective tissue. Animal
studies have shown that in less than a week after
being infected, the Lyme spirochete can be deeply
embedded inside tendons, muscle, the heart and the
brain. It invades tissue, replicates and destroys
its host cell as it emerges. Sometimes the cell wall
collapses around the bacterium, forming a cloaking
device, allowing it to evade detection by many tests
and by the body's immune system.
The Lyme spirochete (Bb) is
pleomorphic, meaning that it can radically change
form. The photo on the left shows a colony of Bb
both in spirochete and round cell wall deficient
(CWD) forms.
In the CWD form, the Lyme
organism can lack the membrane information necessary
for the immune system and antibiotics to recognize
and attack it. Dr. Lida Mattman states that cell
wall deficient organisms are more properly called
cell wall divergent.
The Lyme spirochete can not
only change from the classic spiral into a round
form, but can change back again into a spiral. The
middle photo shows this process occurring in the
area shown by the arrow.
But the main reason that Lyme
is so resistant to detection and therapy is that it
can radically
change form -- it is pleomorphic.
Explains Dr. Whitaker, "We have examined blood
samples from over 800 patients with clinically
diagnosed Lyme disease with the RiBb test and have
rarely seen Bb in anything but a cell wall deficient
(CWD) form.
The problem is that a CWD
organism doesn't have a fixed exterior membrane
presenting information -- a target -- that would
allow our immune systems or drugs to attack it, or
allow most current tests to detect it."
As a CWD organism, says Dr.
Mattman, Bb is extremely diverse in its appearance,
its activity and its vulnerability. Adds Dr. Cowden,
"Because Bb is very pleomorphic, you can't expect
any one antibiotic to be effective. Also, bacteria
share genetic material with one another, so the
offspring of the next bug can have a new genetic
sequence that can resist the antibiotic."
Clinical Diagnosis
The doctors the authors
interviewed all had their own testing preferences,
but each insisted that Lyme was a clinical
diagnosis, only supported by testing -- and
retesting.
"We look at the patient's
history and symptoms, genetic tendencies,
metabolism, past immune function problems or
infection," explains Dr. Bock, "as well as history
and duration of antibiotic treatment, co-infection,
nutritional and micronutritional status and also
psychospiritual factors."
Dr. Tang uses all of the
above, but also analyzes the blood using darkfield
microscopy -- although she cautions that not
spotting the spirochete doesn't mean that the
patient does not have Lyme disease.
Dr. Cowden also employs muscle
testing and electrodermal screening. Dr. Burrascano
has developed a weighted list of diagnostic criteria
and an exhaustive symptom checklist.
"In pediatric screening
especially," says Dr. Jones, "we ask about sudden,
sometimes subtle, changes in behavior or cognitive
function -- such as losing skills or losing the
ability to learn new material; not wanting to play
or go outside; running a fever; being sensitive to
light or noise.
If one has joint phenomena, we
know that an inflammatory or infectious process is
present. A hallmark of Lyme is fatigue unrelieved by
rest."
For women, Dr. Barkley has
found that testing around the time of menses
increases the
probability of discovering the presence of Bb.
"Women with Lyme have an exacerbation of their
symptoms around menses," she explains.
"The decline of both estrogen
and progesterone at the end of the menstrual cycle
is associated with the worsening of the patient's
Lyme symptoms."
Government Persecution Of Lyme Disease Doctors
Physicians who treat Lyme
disease in ways other than the established standard
of care -- which means a course of antibiotics
lasting no more than 30 days -- risk invasive,
exhausting, time-consuming investigation by state
licensing agencies, leading to possible loss of
their right to practice medicine.
Activists report that
50
physicians
in Texas, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, New
Jersey, Connecticut and Michigan have been
investigated,
disciplined and/or stripped of their licenses over
the past three years because of their approach to
healing Lyme disease.
This past November 9th, 500
patients who got well after their doctors used
alternative or complementary methods joined in a
protest rally in New York City. They rose to defend
Dr. Joseph Burrascano, who has treated an estimated
7,000 cases.
As this story was heading for
publication, New York's Office of Professional
Medical Misconduct was engaged in what activists
call an unjustified fishing expedition that will
probably last for months and will allow state
bureaucrats to hunt for any irregularity that could
be used to damage Dr. Burrascano.
State medical boards seem to be trying to protect
the medical insurance industry rather than patients.
In most cases, effective
alternative/complementary treatments require much
more doctor time per patient and often include a
broad range of medicines and supplements consumed
over a much longer period of time, costing much more
money than the current standard of care accepted by
medical insurers.
But at the rally, patients
angrily rejected the medical board's suggestion that
their cases demonstrated anything negative about
their physician. In fact, they all insisted, it was
Dr. Burrascano whose knowledge, patience and care
finally freed them from the pain and debilitation
that had been ruining the quality of their lives.
|