What does Syphilis do to brain cells universally? As opposed to what can it do to brain cells. For instance, tertiary vs secondary syphilis.
Maybe looking hard at a fairly known brain infection might be a decent starting point.
It needn't be an infection. Brain cancer might approximate some...
I spent the first half century of my life believing diagnostics were trustworthy and authoritative and final.
The last two decades has seen the slow unraveling of that belief.
The most recent five years, a desolate realization has breezed over me that, diagnostically speaking, we've been had.
By my sloppy math, at least one third of these Lyme authors has a vested or historic interest in Lyme vaccines.
When money matters in medicine, we should watch.
BTW: What happened to all those Lyme diagnoses in the late 1980's that got undone by 1995? Many, by virtue of Lyme leaders at that...
In LymeWorld. the Rat Fink factor wields a lot of influence.
It's like Clavell's King Rat: Money rules.
Medicine has been breached, and the Marginot line is/was Lyme and babs and rickettsia. And yes, ME/CFS.
One last observation about definitions:
In 1980's in the US, if you had documented Lyme, and were treated, and symptoms persisted, you were categorized as having chronic Lyme. Period. Definition back then of chronic Lyme: Lyme disease that cannot be resolved with "suggested" treatment protocol...
This should not be about the chronic Lyme label, but they introduced it into their screed. So I just want to point out how frequently chronic Lyme was discussed and researched and acknowledged prior to the 1990's - when vaccines started to come into play.
We can thank the Bayh-Dole Act for much...
See? Definitions. :)
There absolutely can be evidence of initial Lyme infection in chronic Lyme, certainly when it comes to formal research. I was enrolled in an NIH chronic Lyme study about 15 years ago, and you had to have documented evidence of a Lyme infection in order to participate.
Some...
Some heavy hitters from the Lyme field (Patricia Coyle, Maria Gomes-Solecki; some of you will recall Steven Schutzer when he compared Lyme with CFS several years back).
Why anyone would lead a research-methodological guideline with Lyme - arguably one of the most politically contentious and...
Recently found another embedded tick, hidden on my upper back. Promptly removed, but within a couple of days a bulls-eye rash appeared, plus a fever and severe balance issues and gut problems. Doctor said it was Lyme with possible babesiosis - she was concerned about the overt neuro involvement...
"Sickness behaviour" was coined by a veterinarian because his patients could not communicate with words. Humans don't suffer from that deficit. "Sickness" suffices; otherwise we invite attention from a group we don't want.
Right, which cause us to feel sick somehow.
Ok. Just acting on how...
I don't understand.
Omit "behaviour" from your sentence, and doesn't the sentence still stand on the same merit?
ETA: Better yet, change sickness behaviour to feeling sick. But I think even that's implied simply by the word "sickness" Sickness can be differentiated from disease in that a...
The sickness behavior schtick has always struck me as absurd. It's one step removed from the real subject.
This sickness as a defense mechanism is more of the same. Might as well say a flat tire on a bicycle is the bike's defense once it gets a nail embedded in it.
I suspect most clinicians don't give it enough time to think it through. It's transactional.
Researchers are different. Shame on them as an institution.
And screw the lazy-ass clinicians. Rat bastards.
What an odd observation. I shun most things psychological when they pertain to contested disease. I nurture a special aversion as it pertains to ME/CFS
But I also hold a fondness for confronting straight on the hard realities of my disease.
Let's see. Three broad PEM categories: Physical...
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