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Schaller MD-tick infection stealth//5% with mycotoxin overload?

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Great question.

If your skin is unbroken and you remove the tick with tweezers and then

dispose of it reasonably.... I do not think that is a problem at all.

I think it is the poppy-seed sized nymph with an antihistamine, pain killer

and anti coagulant in its injector with 100,000 spirochetes which you DO NOT

SEE that is the problem.

We are doing a book on pediatric tick-born infections in children and

adolescents --literally the fetus to the 20 y/o ..... I will try to keep

folks updated when it is done.

XXXX---I am getting a scary sense that many very sweet and precious folks on

this list have had tick borne infections ruled out by junk labs and also

that co-infections were never tested for. This is very concerning to me,

since tick infections are the top vector infections in the USA and reported

as little as 1/40 times and this is with junk labs, so who knows how many

millions?

XXXX---And indoor mold exposure might expose 30% in the US (EPA#) of which

20-25% of these are poor at removing these mold spore surface chemicals.....

So I guess that is crudely 5-7% of the country exposed and unable to rid the

body in a reasonable time.

Best,

Schaller, MD

jschaller@...

www.personalconsult.com

Re: LYME-BIG CITIES?--Dr Schaller

> That's what I was thinking, too. Plus what about overseas? I have a

> former supervisor who spends September through May in NYC and the

> rest of the time in rural France. She's not alone in this. I wonder

> what she picks up overseas and then brings back here.

>

>

>

>

>

>>

>> Oh my God, Dr Schaller, NYC is full of us.

>> We were so naive. Summer weekends we'd go to...the Hamptons, Block

>> Island, the Cape, Connecticut shore...I mean, that's what you do in

>> NY. So many places to get borrelia and babesia its not funny. There

> is

>> nobody who lives in NYC who just stays in NYC and never leaves it.

> And

>> I really think we are almost more at risk.

>>

>> Plus folks go back and forth with their dogs, and bring the ticks

> back

>> to their friends.

>>

>> I remember my literary agent, years ago, had friends from the

> Hamptons

>> visit him in his apartment in NYC, with their dog. He ended up with

> a

>> huge bullseye on his back. Obviously the tick dropped off the dog

> and

>> found my agent later that day in his own home.

>>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> This list is intended for patients to share personal experiences with

each

> other, not to give medical advice. If you are interested in any

treatment

> discussed here, please consult your doctor.

>

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