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> I've heard that when someone doesn't respond to antibiotics for Lyme it may

be due to untreated co-infections. These co-infections can be tricky to

diagnose (tests not accurate).

yes, that is a possible cause; statistically people with Borrelia plus

coinfections respond less well to treatment (less improvement, more relapse

etc.), especially with coinfections that are immune suppressive like Babesia.

The same goes for people who have multiple Bb strains, something that is not

detected with the normal Lyme tests.

But there are probably other factors and this is one of the major issues that

needs to be resolved. One suggestion (from Stoney Brook / Ben Luft) is that

Borrelia strains may be very different regarding how aggressive, persistent or

resistant to antibiotics they are. In that case the outcome will mostly depend

on the strain that you got and not on the treatment (and that would be bad news

for those of us who have been struggling to get treatment results for a long

time ...).

> It seems like no two people respond the same way with these tick-borne

infections.

yes, I'm sure there is huge individual variation and we don't know why. Is it

because of their genetics, because of the Bb strain, because of coinfections

(probably many are not monitored yet, the tick is a real pathogen zoo), because

of specific environmental factors?

> I've heard of people who were asymptomatic for years, then suddenly had a host

of health problems which turned out to be Lyme related.

A German MD in an area with lots of LD cases is doing a longtime study into

Lyme. He is expected to publish his results soon, however up to now nothing in

the official scientific literature. The finding in Germany is that about 90% of

people who are infected with Borrelia are asymptomatic for some time, often

years; only 10% develop obvious LD symptoms pretty soon after infection. But his

impression is that ALL of the infected patients will develop Lyme disease within

about 8 years.

This would be an interesting twist to the 'false-positives' stories of the

hardliners. It also fits in with the 'two-step' hypothesis for Lyme, that Bb

infection is not the only requirement for getting LD. There has to be another

factor involved.

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