Guest guest Posted October 23, 1999 Report Share Posted October 23, 1999 J.R. Labbe jrlabbe@... I’d like to thank you for at least considering my response to Tom Hall's " Where was Granger " for publication. As you have probably discerned from my web site (http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/james.html), there is controversy in the Lyme disease community about treatment protocols. One of the most recent controversies within the Lyme victim community is the announced honoring of Dr. Steere at The NIH Director's Second Astute Clinician Lecture -- November 3, 1999, 3 p.m. Masur Auditorium, NIH Clinical Center (http://www.cc.nih.gov/ccc/lecture/astute.html). The current vernacular now being used on (onelist.com) and sci.med.diseases.lyme (Deja.com) is Bum Steere (Dr. Steere), and Ah, Stupid (Astute). One of the participants (beth Feldman – Item 1, below), sent an e-mail to NIH essentially saying that as a Lyme disease victim, she objected to Dr. Steere doing a presentation at NIH, and citing reasons. She then posted the response(s) received from NIH (Item 2, below). Why would her message generate a question about security alerts? Maybe because paranoids have long memories? See Item 3 below, from 1996, and Item 4 below, from 1995. Thought you might get a chuckle, or maybe even an article from it. If you go the article route, an excellent collection of web links on just about everything concerning Lyme disease can be found at http://www.geocities.com/HotSprings/Oasis/6455/lyme-links.html. It contains over 4,100 categorized about Lyme disease. Again, thank you for considering my response for publication. R. 501 Sycamore Lane, #327 Euless, TX 76039 817.540.2272 rjamesmartin@... http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/james.html ’s Lyme Disease Horror Story – How Lyme Disease And Exploitation of ERISA Laws Can Ruin A Life. ================================================================================ (Item 1) Dr. Steere Importance: High Dr. Gallin, I have not responded to Feldman's email sent this afternoon, and you are the only one I've forwarded it to. Maybe I'm overreacting, but should security be alerted on Nov. 3, just in case. . .? If there's anything you want me to do, please let me know. Hilda ================================================================================ (Item 3) November 7, 1996 For more info, call :(503) 292-5271 LYME ACTIVISTS PROTEST MONOPOLY AT CONFERENCE ON INFECTIOUS DISEASES Seattle, WA -- Five women, members of NW Lyme Disease Support Network, protested the monopoly on treatment for Lyme Disease. The protesters crashed a conference to rebut claims made by a Dr. Steere, the powerful advocate of severe restrictions on medical treatment for the disease. Hospital administrators ejected, with the help of security guards,four of the women who were quietly passing out a scientific rebuttal to a paper by Steere, case histories documenting the benefits of longer more aggressive treatment and a sheet with ten questions for Steere. The hospital claimed the literature had not been approved. Dr. Steere was speaking at Swedish Hospitals 4th Annual Infectious Disease Symposium: Emerging Infections. Calls from Lyme activists across the country jammed the switchboard at the Seattle hospital in support of the protesters. Lyme Disease infects a hundred thousand people every year. Without adequate treatment, it can become chronic and disabling. Treatment of the tick borne disease has been severely restricted by Steere who wrote the treatment protocol limiting people with Lyme disease to four weeks of antibiotics. Dr. Steere holds a twenty year monopoly on treatment and research. Doctors,like Dr. ph Natole of Saganaw, Michigan, who have disagreed with Steere's treatment protocol have risked their medical careers. Many patients and their doctors have been forced to go underground for treatment. According to the protest organizer, Rita Stanley, " These academically spawned views are hotly challenged by many front line clinicians and thousands of chronically ill patients who contend that the academically wrought guidelines for diagnosis and care are obsolete, biologically unfounded and ethically suspect. " ================================================================================ (Item 4) I. LYMENET: Interpret Steere's Comments With Great Caution ------------------------------------------------------------- Sender: McFadden I am writing this contribution to the LymeNet Newsletter in response to the recent 10/13/95 Science article [1] reporting the National Institutes' of Health (NIH) plans to study the possible existence of chronic Lyme disease. The main focus of the article was the controversy between patient advocacy groups and treating physicians on one side, and university based researchers (who frequently dispute the existence of chronic Lyme disease) on the other. The article reported that the patient groups' tactics to encourage the study of chronic Lyme disease " have angered research leaders such as Steere of Tufts University. " Is patient inspired research really so bad? What if this is an important research area university based physicians have chosen not to study? Dr. Steere has been one of the most outspoken critics of the existence of chronic Lyme disease [2], and one of the most outspoken proponents of the success of modest (10 - 30 day) courses of antibiotics [2]. In a 1993 paper [3], Dr. Steere writes that in Lyme disease " Standard antibiotic treatment probably fails less often than one might think. Most apparent treatment failures actually reflect misdiagnosis. " However evidence is mounting that the Lyme disease spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi, can persist in some patients despite antibiotic therapy. The spirochete has been isolated from the skin [4,5], spinal fluid [5,6], synovial fluid [7], blood [8], ligamentious tissue [9], muscle tissue [39] and iris tissue [10] of patients after antibiotic therapy, including intravenous (IV) and/or long courses of supposedly curative antibiotics. In one large European study of late Lyme disease treatment [11], 2 weeks of IV Rocephin resulted in a cure rate of 31% (4 of 13 patients). When 2 weeks of IV Rocephin were followed with 100 days of oral antibiotics, the cure rate went up to 87% (69 of 79 patients). A second European study of Lyme disease [12] showed a 50% cure rate with 3 weeks of antibiotics, and a 78% cure rate with 8 weeks of antibiotics. Perhaps examining some of Dr. Steere's earlier beliefs can add insight to his belief that chronic Lyme disease is extremely rare or does not exist. It may surprise some to learn that in the first few years he was associated with Lyme disease, Dr. Steere believed antibiotics were ineffective. In a 1977 Lyme disease paper [13], Dr. Steere and his colleagues state " We remain skeptical that antibiotic therapy helps. " In a 1978 paper [14], Dr. Steere and his colleagues wrote " To sum up the therapy of Lyme arthritis (Lyme disease), it appears that at this point only symptomatic treatment is feasible. " In a 1979 paper [15] on the neurological abnormalities of Lyme disease, Dr. Steere and his colleagues reported that they " have noted no benefit from antibiotic treatment. " In an article in The New Yorker [16], a physician from Shelter Island, New York, who was treating Lyme disease with antibiotics as early as 1976, stated that " When Steere assured me that the disease was self-limiting, I stopped using antibiotics. " Dr. Steere's early beliefs about antibiotics are surprising, considering the literature that existed at the time. A literature search revealed 18 papers [18-35] reporting the efficacy of antibiotics in treating Lyme disease (then called ECM disease) before 1979. Only one paper could be found (besides Dr. Steere's) that reported no benefit [36]. In fact in all 4 case report papers [20-23] on Lyme disease (ECM disease) where the patient(s) acquired the disease in the United States, published before Dr. Steere's first Lyme disease paper [37], all patients received antibiotics. It is ironic that Dr. Steere, currently an outspoken proponent of the near universal efficacy of 10 - 30 days of antibiotics in the treatment of Lyme disease, was, with his colleagues, one of the lone voices in the late 1970's insisting that antibiotics did not help. Dr. Steere apparently turned his beliefs into action, or inaction as the case may be. In a 1987 paper [17] co-authored with Dr. T. Schoen, Dr. Steere reported: " To determine the clinical evolution of Lyme arthritis, 55 patients who did not receive antibiotic therapy for erythema chronicum migrans (ECM, the rash) were followed longitudinally for a mean duration of 6 years [up until 1981]. " This paper goes on to describe the ailments of many of these unfortunate individuals, including frank arthritis, chronic synovitis, joint erosions, and permanent joint disability. Dr. Steere eventually conducted his own studies of antibiotics, and discovered what many physicians already knew; antibiotics frequently worked. In a 1985 paper [38] describing the efficacy of antibiotics in treating arthritic manifestations of Lyme disease, Steere wrote that in the period 1980-1982, " We found that neurological abnormalities of Lyme disease responded to high dose intravenous penicillin. " In a 1958 paper [28], 58 of 65 patients responded to treatment with penicillin. One wonders why Dr. Steere had to reinvent the wheel considering the 18 prior papers spanning 3 decades, from both the US [18-24], and Europe [25-35], describing the efficacy of antibiotics in treating this illness. These studies report exactly what Dr. Steere later found [38]; though not universally effective, most patients treated with penicillin fared much better. It is interesting that the only controlled studies [11,12] of longer term antibiotics in helping to prevent chronic or relapsing Lyme disease (both successful) were performed in Europe. But then Dr. Steere himself stated [1] that the proposed NIH study of chronic Lymedisease " would never have been funded " through the " normal mechanisms " of investigator-initiated research. Unfortunately, I'm afraid I agree with Dr. Steere on this point. Dr. Steere's early insistence that antibiotics played no role in the treatment of Lyme disease indicates that his current statements and beliefs should be interpreted with great caution. McFadden, M.S. 4611 Governor's Drive Apartment 1001 Huntsville, AL 35805 (205) 722-0474 References: ----------- [1] Marshall, E: Science 270, 228 (1995) [2] Steere AC et al: " The Overdiagnosis of Lyme Disease " JAMA 269, 1812 (1993) [3] Steere AC: Hospital Practice, pg 37 (April, 1993) [4] Hassler D et al: The Lancet 338, 193 (1991) [5] Preac-Mursic V et al: Infection 17, 355 (1989) [6] Pfister H et al: The J of Infectious Disease 163, 311 (1991) [7] Schmidli J., et al; Cultivation of B. burgdorferi from Joint Fluid Three Months After Treatment of Facial Palsey Due to Lyme Borreliosis; J. of Infectious Disease 158: 4, pg 905-906 (1988) [8] Masters E et al: " Spirochetemia Two Weeks post cessation of six months of continuous p.o. Amoxicillin Therapy " (Abstr. 65, Fifth Int'l Conf on Lyme Borreliosis, Arlington, VA; 1992) [9] Haupl T et al: Arthritis & Rheumatism 36, 1621 (1993) [10] Preac-Mursic V et al: J of Neuroloophthalmology 13, 155 (1993) [11] Wahlberg P et al: J of Infection 29, 255 (1994) [12] Bojic I et al: Glas Srp Akad Nauka 43 (Yugoslavia), 257 (1993) [13] Steere AC et al: ls of Internal Medicine 86, 685 (1977) [14] Steere AC et al: Hospital Practice, 143 (April, 1978) [15] Reik L, Steere AC et al: Medicine 58, 281 (1979) [16] Roueche B: The New Yorker, 83 (Sept. 12, 1988) [17] Steere AC et al: ls of Internal Medicine 107, 725 (1987) [18] Hellerstrom S: Erythema chronicum migrans afzelius with meningitis. Southern Med J 43:330, 1950. [19] Flanagan BP: Erythema chronicum migrans Afzelius in Americans. Arch Dermatol 86:410-411, 1962. [20] Scrimenti RJ: Erythema chronicum migrans. Arch Dermatol 102:104-105, 1970. [21] Mast WE, Burrows WM Jr: Erythema chronicum migrans in the United States: JAMA 236:859-860, 1976. [22] Wagner L, Susens G, Heiss L, et al: Erythema chronicum migrans: a possibly infectious disease imported from Northern Europe. West J Med 124:503-505, 1976. [23] RL et al: Cutis 17, 962 (1976) [24] Naversen DN, et al; Erythema Chronicum Migrans in America; Archives of Dermatology 114, pg 253-254 (1978) [25] Lennhoff C: Spirochaetes in aetiologically obscure diseases. Aca Derm Venereol (Stockh) 28:295-324, 1948. [26] Hollstrom E: Successful treatment of erythema migrans Afzelius. Acta Derm Venereol (Stockh) 31:235-243, 1951. [27] Hellerstrom S: Erythema chronicum migrans Afzelius with meningitis. Acta Derm Venereol 31:227-234, 1951. [28] Janson P: Haufigkeit, klinisches Bild, Therapie und Aetiologie des Erythema chronicum migrans. Med Kiin 48:1139-1141, 1953. [29] Degos R, Touraine R, Aroutte J: Erythema chronicum migrans: Discussion of rickettsial origin. Ann Derm Syph 89:247-260, 1962. [30] Hollstrom E: Penicillin Treatment of erythema chronicum migrans afzelius. Acta Derm 38:285-289, 1958. [31] Binder E, Doepfmer R, Horstein O: Experimentelle ubertragung des erythema chronicum migrans von Mensch zu Mensch. Hautarzt 6:494-496, 1955. Abstracted, Excerpta Med 10:453, 1956. [32] Sonck CE: Erythema chronicum migrans with multiple lesions. Acta Derm Venereol (Stockh) 45:34-36, 1965. [33] Andermann I: Beitrag zur Begandkung des Erythema chronicum migrans. Dermatol Wochenschur 149:441-443, 1964. [34] Sonck CE: Griseofulvin: Unwirksam bei erythema chronicum migrans.Hautarzt 21:514-516, 1970. Abstracted, Exerpta Med 26:149, 1972. [35] Weber K: Erythema chronicum migrans meningitis eine bakterielle Infektionskrankheit? Munch Med Wochenschr 116:1993-1998, 1974. [36] Horstrup P, Ackermann R: Durch zecken ubertragene Meningopolyneuritis (Garin-Bujadoux, Bannwarth). Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr 41:583-606, 1973. [37] Steere AC et al: Arthritis Rheum 20, 7 (1977) [38] Steere AC et al: NEJM 312, 869 (1985) [39] Hoffmann JC et al: Lyme disease in a 74 year old forest owner with symptoms of dermatomyositis. Arthritis Rheum 38, 8: 1157-1160 (1995) ===== R. rjamesmartin@... <a href= " http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/james.html " > 's Lyme Disease Horror Story -- How Lyme Disease And Exploitation Of ERISA Laws Can Ruin A Life</a> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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