When people think of Lyme Disease, they think of tick bites, fevers, being ill and going to the Doctor for antibiotics; that is the gist in the conventional healthcare world and pretty darn effective (for a straight forward acute situation with obvious symptoms and a high load of transfer that made them “sick from the get go”). And if a person feels like a million bucks after the conventional care that actually tested, found it and treated, that is great!
This is the hard truth for many who have been diagnosed (or yet to be found & diagnosed) with “Lyme.” Side note: the term “Lyme” can have a few meanings: most usually mean Lyme Borreliosis (from one of the borrelia species), but people will also say the term “Lyme” when referring to other types of bacterias, protozoans or viruses that you will often hear called “lyme coinfections.”
Antibiotics are the mainstay for conventional treatment after the conventional test actually finds it (and I do agree with patients seeking medical evaluation if they suspect Acute Lyme Disease and have yet to be diagnosed – they likely need prescription antibiotics!).
What is Lyme Disease?
Some basics: Lyme disease is the most common vector-borne disease in the United States. It is often used as an umbrella term for multiple vectorborne issues. Lyme disease is caused by the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi, which typically comes from the bite of an infected tick, but multiple sources say it can come from other vectors, be spread sexually, and spread from mother to baby.
Lyme Disease is tricky!
Symptoms of it are “non-specific” meaning symptoms could point to a million things and Lyme Disease sometimes gets overlooked for many reasons. The obvious bullseye circle bite plus fever often alerts a practitioner to rule out or confirm this, but the bulleyes doesn’t show (or patient isn’t aware of it) in all situations so its not always a straight forward diagnosis. Some tests are known for high false negatives. Plus many feel fine with the initial transmission as maybe it was a low load or their immune system at the time of bite could handle the microbes.
Conventional Testing for Lyme disease
Bloodwork is the mainstay when it comes to diagnosing Lyme Disease. However, bloodwork is notoriously known for showing false negatives, so most Doctors rely heavily on diagnosis through a patient’s symptomatology when it comes to Lyme Disease. Lyme can be hard to be picked up via conventional blood testing as it can burrow in other places in the body or “hide” in biofilms, or not enough detectable antibodies are present at the exact time of the blood draw.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) points out that patients tested during the first few weeks of illness often test negative, because there’s not enough antibodies in the bloodstream to be detected. The ELISA and Western blot can miss up to 60% of well-defined Lyme disease cases.
Functional Testing: Tickborne Testing
Functional/Integrative Practitioners often use other tests, like the Tickborne 1.0 or 2.0, or Igenex testing which detects Lyme Disease and other tickborne diseases through both antigen and PCR detection of microorganisms. The Tickborne Diseases panel tests for IgG and IgM antibodies for Borreliosis/Lyme Disease, plus it tests for other co-infection(s) and opportunistic infections with other tickborne illnesses, and detection of DNA of the species causing these infections. The test can also detect lower level of antibodies compared to ELISA-Enhanced IgM for early detection.
What are Lyme co-infections?
A co-infection is a simultaneous infection by two or more pathogen species – meaning a human has two infections going on at once. A person with Lyme Disease who also has co-infections (very common) generally experiences symptoms for a while and has a longer recovery. Ticks don’t just carry Borrelia, but can also carry Bartonella and Babesia which are common coinfections.
Conventional Treatment of Lyme Disease:
Antibiotics like doxycycline are prescribed for those who are diagnosed by a Doctor with Lyme disease.
But why do some patients still have lingering symptoms and report not feeling better even after antibiotics?
Here is one study that indicates that these bacterial cells can lie dormant and become persistent and difficult to treat when not identified in the acute phase. As stated above, sometimes the patient is just fine after transmission; it is often a series of events (living in toxic indoor mold, poor diet, stress) that cause the pathogen to come out of dormancy.
Other things can also contribute to a person not feeling great even post antibiotics: The totality of Lyme Disease plus other underlying infections, toxicities, and stressors can lead to a patient still feeling poorly. This is often the straw that breaks the camel’s back that leads to the patient pushing for answers EVEN AFTER antibiotic treatment.
Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome
Even after conventional treatment, According to the Cleveland Clinic, “some people (estimated at 5% to 15%) may experience lingering fatigue, achiness or headaches.” This is known as Post-Treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS). The symptoms AFTER antibiotics usually don’t mean an active infection. PTLDS won’t respond to additional antibiotics anyways. This is where Functional/Integrative healthcare usually takes the reigns.
Do still need to initially see your doctor for conventional care and antibiotics first and foremost? Yes! This is a time and place where conventional medicine shines! But if you are still not feeling great after antibiotics, there are other considerations and actions you can take.
SO WHAT ELSE COULD BE GOING ON and WHY DON’T YOU FEEL MUCH BETTER?
Lyme disease is tricky as its often not just the infection from the Borrelia bacteria;
Functional Nutrition offers alternative ways to handle PTLDS by focusing on optimizing immune function, reducing inflammation, supporting the body’s natural healing processes, & addressing underlying concerns as shown in the list above. Reclaiming a PTLDS patient’s health can happen via utilizing therapeutic dietary interventions, and evidence-based supplementation.
This is general Functional/Integrative Nutrition guidance on the next set of things to pursue with PTLDS and in this order:
What does “open drainage pathways” mean?
Kind of like it sounds – to drain things from the body that aren’t supposed to be there or should leave- and ideally things are flowing well from each link in the chain. The colon is the first major link when it comes to drainage, and then the kidneys and liver, next the lymphatic system, skin, and at the top – the cells.
If there is stagnation in any link in the chain, the “assembly line” of the body is backed up. If you aren’t pooping regularly to the tune of 1 to 3 soft yet formed stools per day, this is a problem and a barrier to normal metabolic detoxification. The body works best when it is efficiently and effectively able to rid itself of harmful pathogens and toxins. Read my whole article on “is Detoxing legit?” or better yet, take my 2 hour long online course called Detoxing 101. I explain all of this step by step in great detail.
Note that drainage and detox are not the same thing:
In ideal health situations, the body does this well, but in not ideal health scenarios which is most Americans, the body needs support and proper nutrition to best facilitate this innate process.
Specific examples of ways to support open drainage pathways at various levels in the body:
Detoxification is a huge topic to succinctly try to tackle in a short blog – click here to read about my detoxification online program that outlines the phases of liver detoxification.
In short, what are other potential key players to “detox from” when it comes to PTLDS ?
Other toxins like mycotoxins or heavy metal bioaccumulation, and other co-infections can make a person more susceptible to PTLDS by lowering immune function and/or it can making it hard for symptoms to fully resolve. Heavy metals and mycotoxins also invite and encourage overgrowth of pathogens (like candida and parasites) which is just another layer of health chaos.
Detoxification: what can you do from a nutrition, lifestyle and supplementation perspective to address PTLDS and other potential overgrowths, toxins and co-infections?
Addressing Borrelia when it’s Lyme:
After parasites are eliminated and binders have been used over the course of 1-4 months (can be longer too), targeting Borrelia/Bartonella/Babesia is the next step. Cellcore’s IS-BORR/IS-BART/IS-BAB are nutraceuticals that are another effective intervention I recommend to patients. IS-BORR contains Cat’s Claw, which is anti-inflammatory and has immune-modulating properties. There are multiple other brands out there too like “Return Healthy.”
Tying it all together:
I realize this is a lot of information. Note that Cellcore does have a simplified, multi month start to finish kit that addresses the majority of what I highlighted in this blog. The Cellcore protocol kit helps via supporting open up drainage pathways and then pulling/binding multiple toxins/co-infections. The multi month step by step kit is available only through Cellcore Practitioners at this website (My Cellcore Practitioner Code is 2FQLrpNb ). After talking with your doctor, consider the comprehensive protocol which includes the majority of nutraceuticals as described above with step by step plan, and in the right order of operations.
Ongoing Nutrition Guidelines for PTLDS:
Following a Mediterranean diet, preventing nutrient deficiencies and “fixing” them if they come up, and a continued focus on ways to support metabolic detoxification are all important areas related to nutrition that help a person with PTLDS.
GIMAP Testing:
Note that Lyme Disease (and other co-infections) may have contributed to intestinal permeability and/or histamine intolerances. If this is the case, gut health support is key for you. This could involve strain specific probiotics, antimicrobials, glutamine, etc. depending upon your GIMAP results. I highly recommend getting a GIMAP test done to gather data on the biomarkers and then addressing the results.
I can help you navigate these holistic strategies and provide Medical Nutrition Therapy if you have already accessed your Physician for conventional treatment for Lyme Disease, but still not feeling your best and not sure where to turn. We can focus on health restoration which is not a diagnosis, but focusing on optimizing your health.
References:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2682960
https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/33/6/780/328918
https://www.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/NEJMe1502350
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6287027
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/27/2/20-2731_article
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC266646/?page=1
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1586/14787210.2015.1081056
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4258916
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October 6, 2023
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