Guest guest Posted April 22, 2000 Report Share Posted April 22, 2000 By the way Nelly; I am very glad to read that you are having success with the abx. You have my sincerest hopes and wishes that your improvement continues. Again I apologize that I made a joke that offended you and some others. I think a little humor wont hurt here though. If we have to walk on eggshells; if a little joke gets everyone's bowels in an uproar; thats just ridiculous. Read the email again; its a harmless joke; I meant in no way to degrade monkeys. - > Maybe I worry too much; maybe I'm just wierd; but > with the risks involved I don't see how anyone with an I.Q greater than a > monkey's could take this treatment route. -- , Could you keep your totally unreasoned remarks to yourself, PLEASE! I am getting a wee bit irritated here at a few highly emotional people who present themselves as bearers of the Truth, and who are very pushy about forcing their opinions onto others, 's remark is totally uncalled for, and I for one DO object to having my I.Q attacked by someone I don't know and on very flimsy evidence. We used to be real seekers on this list and trying different approaches without insulting one another. I have been ill for a very long time, I was bitten by ticks (on several occasions), I DID have an EM rash (albeit small, hence the length in dx), I am quasi certain I have late neuro Lyme and Chronic Rickettsia, AND antibiotics have already saved my life several times. Yet I wouldn't DREAM of insulting anybody who would prefer to choose another mode of tx. It is a VERY COMPLEX subject, and I just wish people would just refrain from saying anything that comes into their minds on this forum, without any real understanding of the question. I spend a very large part of every day reading up on the subject, and I know that very little is straight forwrd about Lyme. For anyone who might be interested: both my husband and myself have improved DRAMATICALLY after 2 weeks of Tinidazole (a cousin of metronidazole), and I am staying on for the time being. I have some very good reasons to do so, monkey's brain reasons, of course! I would hate to have to leave this list, but I am seriously thinking of leaving if all this continues. Nelly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2000 Report Share Posted April 23, 2000 In Europe do the same ticks transmit lyme as those in the US -- are Euro ticks the same species sub groups as US ticks? Steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 2, 2003 Report Share Posted January 2, 2003 Janet, I think it means treatment with antibiotics? If Sherm's doctor knew that the trigger was definitely from the pneumonia he mentioned...and the antibiotic was started early enough, it seems that it would have helped the infection. Some say that the cycle goes on even if all the bacteria has been eliminated from the body. In other words, our immune system has set up a chain reaction which the bacteria triggered, the bacteria may very well be gone, but that doesn't necessarily mean that the immune system knows that it is gone...and it still goes on operating in high gear....attacking our own bodies (joints, ligaments, muscles, skin, eyes, intestines, etc. At least, this is how I read it. Anybody else have a theory? Best regards, Connie (granny) from Indian Rocks Beach, Fl and Asheville, NC PS...so we won't get confused with the two Connie's from NC...I'll sign my name with just (Granny) Or you all can take a vote...and give me a new name like " Perfect Abs " or " Got Milk " or " No Wrinkles " HaHa Some of you can appreciate those names! One of the waiters on the cruise ship called me " Big MaMa " and the other " MamaMia " Didn't know quite how to take that, but they seemed to do it affectionately and I gladly went along with them. I think we've already started calling Father Dave..... " Old as Dirt. " To me, he still looks like a young man. Now, don't get carried away with a name....like " Old F*** or something like that! We have to keep this group honorable. Ray, nice to have you back with the group again...See, I told you you couldn't stay away from us...you need us and we need you. Finally got to see you and your fine family after these many years. I hear doctors in Va are on strike. Any that you know on strike? Many Doctors here in Florida are retiring early and giving up medicine for good. They say they aren't allowed to practice medicine the way they were taught in school and they can't afford the malpractice insurance. Their fees have been cut the lowest in 20 years, but the rental/equipment/overhead/insurance has gone up and up. The Gov't and HMO and other insurance companies limit what the doctor orders. Gov't and HMOs are the ones now that are practicing medicine....and without a license! So it looks like doctor's are so fed up after so many years of this...that they are just going to give them the ball. I suppose we will be the ones who get hit with the ball. Huh? Maybe we can go to Canada or Cuba for our medical care? I hear they take good care of their peoples health concerns at a reasonable price. Well, sorry to be rambling...probably should have deleted out most of this letter. Best wishes, Granny Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2003 Report Share Posted January 3, 2003 Sherm, I believe your right that high titers aren't normal too. Lower tighters present does show that your body had prior exposure to the bacteria. That is why most MD's won't give the H-Pylori test for stomach problems, if the person had been positive on a prior occasion. However, if you look at the Sanford Guide of Antimicrobial therapy there are definite antibiotics that work better than other depending on how the bacteria is classified, like in your case for mycoplasma. Classifications such as gram negative or gram positive, anerobe etc... I have read Dr. Mirkins thoughts on antibiotics and arthritis and a few other things of his on the web. Although antibiotics may help some people and I tried the 3 month course of Minocin, if it was a virus or something other than a bacteria susceptible to the tetracycline class, it might be of no use. Recently a 3 month study of Zithromax, a macrolide, showed no benefit and this was published in a reputable journal with an adequate sample size in the study. The thought of why the tetracyclines might work is that they are like mini dmards or may interfere with some inflamation in the tissues kind of like really mild TNF blockers, but again most of this is just theory that I have read about at various medical web sites. Like alot of people in this group have stated, for many of us the problem is a hyper immune system that cause an autoimmune type effect. By continued scientific pursuit of being able to turn off certain things within the cells but leaving others, I truly believe that in the not to distant future they will be able to turn off or block things responsible for the over reaction. The TNF's surely seem like a step in that direction as does research being done for other autoimmune diseases. Here's to hoping of great medical advances in 2003, Dave in NC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 3, 2003 Report Share Posted January 3, 2003 Yes abx means antibiotics. My Dr works on the theory that Reiter's and Chronic Prostatitis are due to infection. Whether he thinks the infection is active or not I don't know. I do know that I have had high titers for Mycoplasma Pneumonia for 12 years, that's as far back as I was tested for it. I know I had M pneumonia pneumonia in 1990. I suspect the MP was the cause of my chronic bronchitis going back to pre-school yrs. I see Dr Gabe Mirkin in Kensington Md. He checked the MP when I started with him and they were high. He explained that the test couldn't distinguish between current or past infection. He recommended treating with abx to see what happens. The abx treatment improved me dramatically. But after several yrs of abx the side effects got to be too bad. I discontinued the abx in mid 7/02. By the end of 8/02 I was in the ER with a severe Eye inflammation. I was treated by local Dr's with prednisone and my local Rheumy now has me on Indocin. I need to get back to Dr Mirkin but I've been too sick to drive that far. Hopefully I can get to Mirkin in the near future. I have been on many meds, but for me nothing worked as well as abx. Tequin was the best of the abx. I haven't got a clue if Reiter's is triggered by the infection, or if it's really an active infection that the abx controls but doesn't kill. If someone could answer this question the result could be a four letter word; CURE. Sherm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 18, 2003 Report Share Posted January 18, 2003 What Connie said is what my Docs have been saying all along. The residual that is left behind, scaring, etc., is now what the body thinks is still the bacteria, so it just keeps on fighting the fight. The meds to suppress them from fighting the fight leaves us open to pick up other infections. Well, what a hamster wheel we are on. It's life, and we are all in it together, smile:) EFD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 3, 2003 Report Share Posted April 3, 2003 It is good to hear that you have been fine while on abx. Thanks for the info Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 28, 2010 Report Share Posted November 28, 2010 > > I agree with knotweed that long-term abx use is likely doing harm to the global population by creating more antibiotic resistant bugs (not just the spirochetes but all organisms due to their ability to pass genetic material through conjugation, etc.). The only reason I support the abx effort is because I believe patients should have choices. actually I think in many countries the medical use of ABX is not the main problem, the agricultural use is. In Netherlands the use of ABX for dairy farming is 5-10 times higher than for humans, and most of these ABX flow untreated into the environment (while for humans at least a part is cleared by wastewater treatment). So agri use is even more damaging than the 5-10x factor suggests. I guess the US situation is not much better. > I believe alternative therapies that can reduce the burden on the immune system by attacking other pathogens such as candida, viruses, protozoa/parasites, etc. which can help the body handle the heavy load. Yes; in that sense I agree that even Salt/C, MSM etc. might have some value. But they won't fight Borrelia itself. I agree supplements, detox, restoring the damage can be very important (and this is lacking in allopathic medicine). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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