I have been treating this 45 year old woman for about a
year. For the previous year she had been treated with pulsed, low dose
antibiotics prescribed by another physician. She sought my help because she was
not feeling better. She was well until 2010. At that time she had a tick bite
and bull’s eye rash. Because the Lyme test and even a skin biopsy were negative
she was told she did not have Lyme disease. Her symptoms started atypically
with abdominal pain and sinusitis. Early on she experienced a loss of sense of
smell. After this she developed more typical symptoms, cognitive issues,
dizziness and hyperaccusis (extreme sensitivity to loud sounds). An MRI of her
brain showed white matter disease. The diagnosis of MS was considered and
dismissed. She developed palpitation but had a negative cardiac workup. In 2012
her previous physician diagnosed Lyme on clinical grounds. Western Blot testing
for Lyme by various laboratories, including IgeneX was negative. She did
however test positive through Pharmasan Labs on the ISpot test for Lyme.
Coinfection testing was also negative. At the time I saw her previous
antibiotic therapy had included: Omnicef, Mycobutin, Minocin, Biaxin and
Flagyl. She had stopped antibiotics because of a lack of improvement. When we
met chief complaints included: fatigue, nausea, vertigo, weakness, migratory
joint pain, numbness and tingling and cognitive impairment. She also reported
flulike symptoms with fevers and chills. She experienced low grade, daily, low
grade fevers of 99.5 to 100 F. She was treated for chronic depression with
medicine which was effective. She was worked as a professional writer, was
functioning poorly and ultimately took a leave from work.
Over the ensuing months Lyme was the working diagnosis. I
treated her aggressively with a variety of antibiotics beyond those already
prescribed. I treated her for coinfections. Including Babesia with Mepron and
Malarone. Ultimately she did not improve. Over time the diagnosis of chronic
fatigue syndrome was added to the top of her problem list. Viral causes were
considered and she was treated with months of antiviral therapy; nothing helped
substantially.
During a recent office visit I thought about those
persistent low grade fevers and suggested we repeat a blood smear (a prior one
many months ago was negative). A photomicrograph is included here.
Discussion: Did she have Lyme? I am frequently asked, can
you just have a coinfection, like Babesia and not have Lyme. This is certainly
possible but seems unlikely. A large percent of the population is silently
infected with Babesia species. My sense is that the compromised immune system
of Lyme tends to make Babesia more active and symptomatic. Usually you don’t
get one with the other (probably others as well).
I have relied heavily
on Lyme Western Blots, C6 ELISA tests and clinical judgment to diagnose Lyme. I
have not used the ISpot which I thought was too nonspecific. This test measures interferon responses of
killer T-cells when provoked by specific Lyme antigens. The ISpot may be
useful, especially when other tests yield negative results.
No commercial tests are available for other common Borrelia
species which I believe are more and more responsible clinical Lyme disease,
Borrreliosis. Alternative Lyme species (like B. lonstari) may be tested by PCR
but this is a low yield test.
Standard Babesia tests, antibodies for B. microti,
B. duncani and FISH tests may detect only 2 species of Babesia; there are an
untold varieties of Babesia which hold clinical importance. The CDC recognizes
the existence of at least 3 other species of Babesia causes disease in the
U.S.: B. CA1, B. MO1 and B. divergens. Countless species are known to cause
animal illness (more than 100) and many non-speciated varieties of Babesia have
been found in local ticks using broad DNA/PCR probes/primers. I am fairly sure
that there are many, yet unknown, species of Babesia associated with human
disease.I think the blood smear above is consistent with this phenomenon.
A lot is known about the 5 common species of Malaria
including distribution patterns and drug resistance. These facts well known by
organizations including: IDSA, CDC and WHO. This is not to say that Malaria is
not one of the largest, if not the largest public health problem in the world.
It is said that Malaria has been eradicated in the US;
still, about 2000 cases are reported to the CDC each years, mostly for foreign
travelers. In 2013 the CDC states that 1700 cases of Babesia from 27 states was
reported. From this data one can infer the CDC thinks we have no Babesia problem.
This tremendous epidemic of human babesiosis of unimaginable
proportion goes completely unseen by the CDC and Mainstream Medicine. One
reason may be its association with the four letter word: (Lyme) – guilt by association.
This unknown epidemic, of which we know very little, is
wildly out of control and ravaging the health of patients I see daily.
Babesia, a blood parasite, is also a brain parasite. It is
carried into the blood on the back of red blood cells, called the Trojan horse
effect. The parasites are carried into tiny blood vessels where they become
impacted and fixed.
Brain parasites are mysteriously associated with reliably specific symptoms. Toxoplasmosis suicide and car accidents (published). Babesia depression. Bartonella irritability and rage. The mechanism may be specific effects on molecular signalling in the brain. Action at a distance.
Bartonella enters the brain by the same mechanism.
Bartonella is not limited to blood cells, it also invades the lining of blood
vessels, endothelium, taking up residence.
My comments here are about Babesia.
Babesiosis is frequently intractable. It is resilient and becoming
increasingly resistant to our standard drugs. Mepron is frequently ineffective.
Malarone may work only a little better. Coartem seems to be more effective but
it usually fails to eradicate the parasites. We add herbal remedies,
artemisinin and a triple concoction recommended by Buhner. The parasites persist. Larium has been effective but side effects (depression) have
frequently been intolerable. Babesia patients are depressed to start with.
Recommended doses of quinine are intolerable. I have tried adding low doses of
quinine adjunctively which seems to help some. The antiparasitic drug
albendazole has anti-malaria activity and can also be
helpful adjunctively for babesiosis. Babesia relapses are notorious.
The classic knee-jerk symptoms I always look for are night
sweats and air hunger. Other common symptoms include muscle pain, headache,
mood swings and depression. The depression seems to have a propensity for
causing sudden tearfulness. A plethora of other symptoms may be associated with
Babesia, include chronic, low grade fever.
This seems to be relevant to the patient described above.
Babesia brain Herxheimer reactions are frequently dreadful
and very challenging to manage.
This patient, as so many others, experience palpitations and
other cardiac symptoms. I will explore this topic in my next post.