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I know you guys don't really follow the polrtical scene in Lyme- but

here's a Dr.s rebuttal to a recent article about Lyme... and this Doc

is REALLY putting his lisence on the line going against the big guys-

There's been investigations of several Drs. who prescribe long term

abx for Lyme.

Barb

http://www.jemsekspecialty.com/files/NEJM-Response.pdf

Responding to a New England Journal of Medicine

Critical Appraisal of " Chronic Lyme Disease "

Read The Full NEJM Article Online

This is an opinion piece by Dr. ph Jemsek, in consulting

collaboration with other experienced

colleagues. It is not intended to reflect an exhaustive critique of

the many shortcomings of the " Feder " paper, but rather an attempt to

highlight the most glaring incongruities and perplexing logic flows

contained within what is considered a shameful and politically-

motivated article. The purpose of this critique is to place

disparaging opinion about persistent disease associated with Lyme

Borreliosis on full exhibit.

The subject of " Chronic Lyme Disease " was once again presented in a

prominent journal setting in a recently published " review " in the

October 4 NEJM article by Feder et al. As seen in several previously

published reviews, opinions, and guidelines, the tenor of the

publication is dismissive to physicians who feel that Borrelia

burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, may be responsible

for persistent illness which requires long-term antibiotics and a

myriad of other treatment considerations and measures. It seems to

patronize the opinions of these physicians, opinions which are backed

by hundreds

of scientific publications and galvanized by countless clinical

encounters with desperate and

marginalized patients.

Published " reviews " on Lyme disease, similar to the Feder article,

seldom offer any new or credible insight into clinical or scientific

issues, and therefore their purpose and timing must be questioned.

This article clearly echoes the stilted logic and highly suspect

content promoted by the portion of the 2006 IDSA Guidelines which

dealt with this subject matter and whose authors may come under anti-

trust

investigation. The repetitive arguments promoted by a select group of

researchers and/or self-proclaimed " ad hoc " committee members – " the

Lyme Cabal " , as we will refer to them, includes the high-ranking

members of the CDC's Vector Borne Branch, and Mead, and do

nothing to further our understanding of what is making our population

chronically ill.

In the absence of new ideas and with a history of rejecting

meaningful dialogue with those who may

disagree with them, Feder and associates appear to simply reshuffle

authors and rearrange their template of imperial arguments for this

most recent article. Again they employ the same indecipherable,

distorted, and circular logic which they have displayed in the past,

and appear to play favorites with their facts.

Many of the authors cited are known to have ties to patented business

ventures dealing with, among

other things, future testing and vaccine development in Borreliosis-

related ventures. We have serious concerns about propriety and

integrity issues for both the Lyme Cabal constituents and for the

NEJM, which has a heretofore irreproachable standard of excellence in

publishing medical science.

We also express serious concerns about the health of our population

in terms of the continuing scientific " ambiguity " surrounding this

disease complex, which we term Lyme Borreliosis Complex (LBC).

The review begins by indicating an important fact – that Lyme disease

is a serious public health problem which is " complex " , but the tone

of the article immediately thereafter becomes and remains,

dismissive. LBC is trivialized through consistent application of

journalistic phrasing techniques designed to give the reader a sense

that the authors are annoyed that there is a fuss about this issue,

and that their views have not been accepted without reservation.

Examples of these methods of literary intimidation and the abusive

misuse of factual material are scattered throughout the text and are

briefly portrayed as follows:

a) This " serious public health threat " which is " complex "

will " usually respond well to

conventional antibiotic therapy. " The committee fails to provide

evidence of what response is

measured and by what methods.

B) They further state that a " minority of patients " have symptoms

which remain after

" resolution…after antibiotic treatment. " Again, this assumes that all

patients are diagnosed

and treated, which is simply not fact, and again this statement

defaults to the committee's

inflexible criteria for diagnosis and treatment.

c) The committee further considers symptomatic illness as " usually

mild and self-limiting " , and

defines these patients as having " post-Lyme disease syndrome " , an

arbitrary term adopted by

the Feder camp years ago and thoroughly associated with ill-defined,

non-organic illness

through repetitive indoctrination with this brand of pseudo-

scientific jargon on the

unsuspecting medical community. " Mild and self-limited " is counter to

the characterization

of numerous other reports, and contradicts the authors' opening

remarks of a " serious and

complex " illness. The terms " mild and self-limited " are subjective,

and craftily inserted to

prejudice the biased opinions which follow.

d) After the initial paragraph, the word " complex " is no longer

mentioned, as if the authors feel readers will forget the reference

as it is plowed under by subsequent disparaging remarks.

e) The committee stated that their review is " not the objective

manifestations of late Lyme

disease but rather the imprecisely defined condition referred to

as `chronic Lyme disease.' "

i. `Objectivity is in the eye of the beholder. The more skilled and

experienced the observer becomes, the better the tools available with

which to measure; the better the

understanding of the elements which comprise the universe of the

subject matter at

hand, the more " objective " the manifestations of the illness complex

will become.

ii. The committee is derelict in not being more forthright about

issues of objectivity; if

objective measures are wanting, why not make efforts to improve them?

The practice of

medicine is suffering mightily as our practitioners increasingly rely

upon guidelines and " cookbook " medicine, and not on what the patient

communicates. We physicians are

becoming more robotic, and why is that so? The physician must

constantly listen to,

and learn from the patient, especially when " testing " fails both

provider and patient.

iii. The committee stumbles over the precise definition of an illness

they initially state is

" complex " and proceeds to wantonly blur the debate further by talking

about, " not the

objective manifestations of Lyme disease " , but rather " chronic Lyme

disease " . This is

classic double–speak on their part.

f) The committee targets a " small number of practitioners " , not a

subtle reference, the

terminology of which is assuredly designed to reduce the number and

significance of those

with opposing viewpoints. The committee appears to mock physicians

who " suggest " that

persistent B. burgdorferi may require long-term antibiotic treatment,

or that it may be

" incurable " . They do so in such manner that suggests a whimsical

allusion to futility, and

implies in parallel analogy that patients who embrace this view are

equally futile in their

thinking.

g) Declarative and unsubstantiated statements dominate the " review "

as in " the opinion of the

committee is that Lyme disease includes a broad array of illnesses or

symptom complexes for

which there is no reproducible or convincing scientific evidence of

any relationship to B.

burgdorferi infection " . First, note that this is an opinion but, in

the setting of the Lyme Cabal

publishing in the NEJM, this opinion equates to dictum and also, in

our collective opinion,

equates to an abuse of power by those who hold power in this setting.

The lack of " evidence "

reference, which glides so easily on the NEJM page, is easily

countered by well-documented

literature references indicating that the world at large is held

hostage to unreliable and stifled

testing which severely limits the ability of the practitioner to

provide laboratory data in

support of this aforementioned " complex illness " .

h) In the very near future, we predict that many of the Lyme Cabal

will find it hard to explain

the more than 200 patents they hold for better testing, vaccine

development, and other

business interests in the expanding universe of Borreliosis-related

disease. Further, it may

prove exceedingly difficult for the Cabal to explain why their

involvement with these patents

have been largely undisclosed, when the science at hand could have

benefited the untold

thousands whose lives have been unalterably changed by this chronic

illness.

i) Late in the publication, the committee uses the political and

inflammatory term " Chronic

Lyme Disease " as the heading of a new section, instead of their

preferred term, " late Lyme

disease " . We ask the obvious question of why the choice to begin a

section with something

the committee says does not exist.

j) The committee further makes vague and imperial comments about

those diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease, as somehow

being " substantively " different than those with other " recognized "

infectious diseases. We are disturbed that a NEJM editorially-

approved article would accede to a reference which equates

to " intellectual cement " in academic medicine.

At what point did the US academic universe decide that they had a

handle on the mysteries of

medicine? Over 90% of the most prominent chronic illnesses, e.g. MS,

RA, Crohn's, etc.,

have no know cause. This is hardly a position from which to exude

scientific arrogance.

Diagnoses are, and always will be, integrally associated with varying

clinical criteria, test

interpretations, and physician judgment. Testing was designed to

serve the will of the

clinician and now it seems that the tail wags the dog. Generational

change in medicine

historically shows that 50% of what we hold as fact today will

change, but which 50%?

k) A disclaimer by an organization is an attempt by the rule makers

to absolve all recriminations

in perpetuity. To wit, as our authors and their alter egos at the

IDSA suggest, (and as some

of the committee's authors who took part in the 2006 Lyme Guidelines

stated): " It is

important to realize that guidelines cannot always account for

individual variations among

patients. They are not intended to supplant physician judgment with

respect to particular

patients or special clinical situations " . Why then would these

committee members attempt to

minimize the role of physician judgment in the diagnosis of any

illness, especially a disease

with the devastating impact of persistent Lyme disease? Clearly the

committee is deemphasizing

clinical judgment and experience because they don't fully appreciate

the roots

of their discipline – the patient. This is a highly disturbing and

dangerous thought for the

profession of medicine and for the population which it serves.

l) The committee criticizes the " lines of reasoning " to support a

diagnosis of Lyme disease in those who do not show antibodies against

B. burgdorferi in serum, particularly given the " the

well-known immunogenicity of lipoproteins " . They claim

these " theories " of antibody negativity with LBC are not well-

supported by scientific data. They fail to acknowledge that

the testing reagents used in traditional labs are limited to only one

strain (B31) in a disease in

which multiple Borrelia burgdorferi strains may play a role. They

ignore the welldocumented

altered life forms of Borrelia species, (e.g. CWD forms, cysts, and

blebs), none of which manifest lipoproteins. They fail to acknowledge

the intracellular habitat of both helical and cyst forms, and the

disturbing ability of the B31 spirochete to penetrate a series of

neuronal and glial cell lines, as described in the 2006 Livengood CDC

paper published in the

summer of 2006. They fail to hypothesize or consider the notion that

patients with LBC may

have highly dysfunctional innate and adoptive immunologic effects.

As if not satisfied with yet another highly creative and biased

interpretation of the data, the authors then turn to

criticize " specialty labs " as not " FDA approved " . The FDA, which by

the way acknowledges that current testing is unreliable, has nothing

to do with credentialing

labs unless a product is marketed, a convenient oversight by the

authors. This " shoot the

messenger " approach ignores the highly suspect and arbitrary

manipulation of data and

policy which took place at the 1994 Dearborn meeting and left the

world without Osp A and

B bands as qualifying criteria for diagnosis. This is a particularly

mystifying situation since

the ill-fated and ill-conceived LYMErix vaccine promoted by several

of the Lyme Cabal was

based on the Osp A, or kda band 31, lipoprotein antigen.

Most significantly, the authors fail to mention that much of the

research done by several of

the authors of their own committee, (when closely examined), supports

the opposite view of

what they express. Perhaps they should go back and re-study their

own, earlier research. As

stated previously, many in the Lyme Cabal are involved in various

side-interests which

include, but are not limited to, the patenting of diagnostic tests

and/or components thereof,

which we have referred herein. Therefore, we and others are concerned

that these individuals

might have a vested interest in dismissing any diagnostic or

treatment modalities contrary to

their " recommendations " .

m) The committee uses " shock value " terminology to describe a

minority group who treat Lyme

disease – a handful of practitioners utilizing " unconventional "

or " dangerous " methods to treat Lyme, as if they are the collective

majority. The mainstream of providers does not fit

their characterization, so these inferences are wholly

unsubstantiated, unwarranted and

malicious. To this end, the committee has a history of promoting the

term " medical

quackery " at every opportunity because its use resonates loudly as an

alarm to the public.

The authors know that libelous remarks directed against specific

physicians or groups are

very difficult to prosecute and that their public indignation makes

for good journalistic copy

without fear of reprisal.

n) Further, the committee states that " no other spirochetal illness

including…tertiary syphilis is

managed in an analogous fashion. " Syphilis, caused by treponema

pallidum, has a formidable and sinister history for causing human

illness in past centuries, and in recent times has experienced a

renaissance associated with the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Unlike Borrelia

burgdorferi, treponema pallidum has only one host, the human, whereas

Borrelia burgdorferi has many hosts. For the record, we use a " tongue

in cheek " byword when

referring to treponema pallidum, which we refer to as " Lyme's DUMB

Cousin. " We use this

droll term based on comparative genomic profiling among spirochetal

and other bacterial

species, which makes Borrelia burgdorferi the clear winner in the

microbial genetic

lottery.

o) The authors compare the duration of treatment for Lyme disease to

that of tuberculosis,

another predominantly intracellular infection. We are amused at the

implications by the

authors that tuberculosis is treated successfully for a relatively

limited period of 6 months,

compared to LBC which " may go on for years " . However, in the not so

distant past,

tuberculosis used to require 18 months or more of antibiotics. When

better drugs became

available and pulsed antimicrobial programs were employed, therapy

was made more

efficient and shorter in duration. Of interest, pulsed therapy is

precisely the treatment

methodology employed by the Jemsek Specialty Clinic and other Lyme-

literate physicians in

treating " chronic Lyme disease " . Furthermore, as experience is

gained, treatment programs

using combination antimicrobials, as is the case for tuberculosis and

HIV/AIDS among many

other complex infections, is also allowing for more efficient therapy

of shorter duration in

LBC.

p) In terms of persistence, dozens of articles support this notion,

including some of the authors'earlier works. From a purely

observational basis, if Borrelia burgdorferi is so easily dealt with

in the infectious state, why does it proliferatively persist in hard-

shelled ticks, various small and large mammals, and humans (not the

end host).

Why is it revered by microbiologists as the most uniquely and

lavishly genetically-endowed bacterium on the planet, and why is it

being so heavily patented by Universities, researchers and others,

including the majority of the members of the committee who performed

the NEJM review?

q) Approaching the stratosphere of arrogance, the committee goes on

to summarize Lyme

disease into 4 convenient categories, like shoeboxes lined up in a

row for shoeless and

illiterate providers, without vote or consensus via any authorized

committee or organization

which would consummately arrive at these " categories " ; and yet these

were blithely

published by the NEJM. So, because they must be addressed, we will do

so.

i. They do not accurately encompass the majority of Lyme disease

patients.

ii. They choose to ignore patients who present to their physicians

with clear erythema

migrans rashes and other clinical symptoms of Lyme disease, but who

are told they " do

not have Lyme " , because the physicians do not recognize its clinical

manifestations, or

are relying on surveillance criteria definitions, and inaccurate

laboratory testing.

iii. These individuals are then not treated, and go on to develop

Lyme disease in a chronic

form.

iv. They also do not address patients who are misdiagnosed with other

illnesses such as

MS, ALS, RA and CFS.

v. The committee assumes at all points that patients are treated

appropriately for their

illness, and yet in fact, most patients receive little or no

treatment, which is why they

remain chronic.

vi. In patients with positive serology and no objective symptoms, the

Bb-associated illness

may be subclinical, as research proves that Bb remains dormant within

the body for

extended periods of time, from months to years after infection. Some

of the committee

members' own research clearly states this.

vii. Category 4 disease, as newly crafted and defined by the Lyme

Cabal, has had an

embarrassingly small number of treatment trials upon which to draw

these conclusions.

Further, in eschewing the study and expansion of the scientific and

clinical horizons for

the innumerable issues which remain to be addressed in this illness

complex, the

authors make it clear that they are content to remain entrenched in

their existing dogma

perhaps until it is " time to announce the Lyme epidemic " and bring

out the new tests

and vaccines.

The most prominent of the studies mentioned above was performed by

Dr. Mark Klempner, a committee member who also happens to be on the

editorial

board of the New England Journal of Medicine. If the NEJM is an

objective medical journal, we ask why this fact was not made

prominently apparent for its readership.

r) The committee is disdainful about antibiotic therapy

causing " considerable harm " to patients,

but fails to mention that all medical treatments have inherent risks.

This allowance by the

editor of the NEJM is in and of itself, unpardonable. Further, the

authors fail to present a balanced representation of the patient

populations in question. They fail for example, to

mention that untreated and dismissed chronic Lyme patients commit

suicide at alarming rates

due to the hopelessness and agony associated with this illness.

s) The committee members claim those running clinical studies have

had " difficulty " securing

patients who meet the criteria of their obviously biased studies –

such as the elimination of

500 people who were excluded because they lacked a " substantiated

history of Lyme

disease. " Substantiated by what account? Most Lyme patients have no

substantiated history

of Lyme disease because doctors are missing the diagnosis and failing

to treat these

patients…more circular logic. Again, the committee is myopic in

arriving at its conclusions

about the scarcity of patients, either those " well-documented " or who

develop " clinically

significant problems " after " conventional treatment. " We would like

to provide the benefit

of the doubt to the Lyme Cabal and pray that their glossing over and

misinterpreting/ignoring

or trivializing consistent and debilitating patient issues are not

intentional.

t) There are untold thousands of individuals in our country and

around the world who live

unfulfilled and tortuous lives due to the political situation

surrounding LBC and consequent

access to quality care issues. A symptom of the rudimentary state in

which we find ourselves

is made evident by the authors suggesting that eligibility criteria

for controlled trials require

symptoms be " severe enough to interfere with the patient's ability to

function " . This line of

reasoning is simply astounding in its unsophistication and

insensitivity. The committee's statements about controlled trials and

documented disease history is admirable and would be more so if the

medical community was fully engaged in an environment in which, as in

HIV research, the best minds were involved and funded in the pursuit

of the study of this illness

complex. Patients know what has made them better and it is highly

insulting to patients who

are denied care or who had irreversible adverse health consequences

to themselves or their

loved ones because of suspect motivations by those who now hold

power…….almost

certainly the patient's interest is not the primary concern in this

story.

IN SUMMARY

Open attempts to intimidate the Connecticut Attorney General,

physicians, and patients are not

lending credibility to those who are perpetrating this behavior.

Nevertheless, the politicization of an illness for which many people

are tragically suffering, and who are afforded very little credence

by the scientific community when evidence shows their illness is

real, and who are subjected to increasingly narrow treatment options,

may indeed be approaching not only anti-trust violations, but

scientific fraud on a grand scale.

The public confusion comes not just from the myriad of symptoms or

the restrictive definition of the illness itself, but also from

physicians and patients who are well aware of the illness within

their own bodies, and who are confounded by the unwillingness of the

scientific community to embrace a medical illness of such major

significance. Rather, many perceive an increasing plaintive and

obvious disregard for the welfare of thousands of patients by a small

number of individuals entrenched in power and trapped within their

logic loops, whether these loops are genuinely believed, or

contrived. Inaction is

somehow justified on the basis of a lack of double-blind, randomized

studies. Regrettably, there also appears to be a barrier to

publication of dissenting views by the editors and reviewers of

established journals. The public, including some physicians, do know

how to read, after all, and patents and a pattern of interpretative

reversal in research opinions speak volumes about the truth of LBC.

So does successful resolution of symptoms through open-ended, long-

term antibiotic treatment of Lyme disease.

In this complex illness, therapy is most often successful, i.e. life

restoring, when it is patterned on an increasingly sophisticated

understanding of the many interwoven issues involved in the illness,

and in the successful integration of therapies which address the

immunosuppressive, multi-systemic, polymicrobial disease complex

which is LBC.

Most of us deeply involved in patient care don't care who takes

credit for change, and realize that traditional powers must engage

for this to happen. We encourage this at every opportunity.

Physicians and patients are earnestly waiting for the truth to be

revealed, and we hope that this truth will arise from the medical

community in a proactive and vigorously engaged manner. LBC is just

part of what is driving an epidemic of unwellness and chronic illness

in this country. The paradigm of medicine and chronic illness must

change over time………too

many of us are sick and getting sicker.

[1] Feder HM Jr, BJB, O'Connell S, Shapiro ED, Steere AC,

Wormser GP, and the Ad Hoc

International Lyme Disease Group*. NEJM. 2007 Oct 4;357(14):1422-

1430. A review article

[2] Wormser GP, Dattwyler RJ, Shapiro ED, Halperin JJ, Steere AC,

Klempner MS, Krause PJ, Bakken

JS, Strle F, Stanek G, Bockenstedt L, Fish D, Dumler JS, Nadelman

RB. " The Clinical Assessment,

Treatment, and Prevention of Lyme Disease, Human Granulocytic

Anaplasmosis, and Babesiosis:

Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of

America. " Clinical Infectious

Diseases 2006;43:1089-1134.

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Wow, that's a remarkable rebuttal. Good for Dr. Jemesk. I really admire him for hanging in there all this time against some pretty tough adversaries. It's time medical authorities stop trivializing chronic infection and start taking patient health seriously enough to figure out why people are chronically ill and why they require long term treatment. The fact that doctors are being attacked when they're the ones on the front line dealing with the sick, is really telling. Rather than joining forces and attacking the illness, these powers attack the docs. It's very clear that there's another agenda at work here other than helping sick people. pennyBarb Peck <egroups1bp@...> wrote: I know you guys don't really follow the polrtical scene in Lyme- but here's a Dr.s rebuttal to a recent article about Lyme... and this Doc is REALLY putting his lisence on the line going against the big guys- There's been investigations of several Drs. who prescribe long term abx for Lyme.Barbhttp://www.jemsekspecialty.com/files/NEJM-Response.pdfResponding to a New England Journal of MedicineCritical Appraisal of "Chronic Lyme Disease"Read The Full NEJM Article OnlineThis is an opinion piece by Dr. ph Jemsek, in consulting collaboration with other experiencedcolleagues. It is not intended to reflect

an exhaustive critique of the many shortcomings of the "Feder"paper, but rather an attempt to highlight the most glaring incongruities and perplexing logic flows contained within what is considered a shameful and politically-motivated article. The purpose of this critique is to place disparaging opinion about persistent disease associated with Lyme Borreliosis on full exhibit.The subject of "Chronic Lyme Disease" was once again presented in a prominent journal setting in a recently published "review" in the October 4 NEJM article by Feder et al. As seen in several previously published reviews, opinions, and guidelines, the tenor of the publication is dismissive to physicians who feel that Borrelia burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, may be responsible for persistent illness which requires long-term antibiotics and a myriad of other treatment considerations and measures. It seems to patronize the

opinions of these physicians, opinions which are backed by hundredsof scientific publications and galvanized by countless clinical encounters with desperate andmarginalized patients.Published "reviews" on Lyme disease, similar to the Feder article, seldom offer any new or credible insight into clinical or scientific issues, and therefore their purpose and timing must be questioned. This article clearly echoes the stilted logic and highly suspect content promoted by the portion of the 2006 IDSA Guidelines which dealt with this subject matter and whose authors may come under anti-trustinvestigation. The repetitive arguments promoted by a select group of researchers and/or self-proclaimed "ad hoc" committee members –"the Lyme Cabal", as we will refer to them, includes the high-ranking members of the CDC's Vector Borne Branch, and Mead, and do nothing to further our understanding of what is making our

population chronically ill.In the absence of new ideas and with a history of rejecting meaningful dialogue with those who maydisagree with them, Feder and associates appear to simply reshuffle authors and rearrange their template of imperial arguments for this most recent article. Again they employ the same indecipherable, distorted, and circular logic which they have displayed in the past, and appear to play favorites with their facts.Many of the authors cited are known to have ties to patented business ventures dealing with, amongother things, future testing and vaccine development in Borreliosis-related ventures. We have serious concerns about propriety and integrity issues for both the Lyme Cabal constituents and for the NEJM, which has a heretofore irreproachable standard of excellence in publishing medical science. We also express serious concerns about the health of our population in

terms of the continuing scientific "ambiguity" surrounding this disease complex, which we term Lyme Borreliosis Complex (LBC).The review begins by indicating an important fact – that Lyme disease is a serious public health problem which is "complex", but the tone of the article immediately thereafter becomes and remains, dismissive. LBC is trivialized through consistent application of journalistic phrasing techniques designed to give the reader a sense that the authors are annoyed that there is a fuss about this issue, and that their views have not been accepted without reservation.Examples of these methods of literary intimidation and the abusive misuse of factual material are scattered throughout the text and are briefly portrayed as follows:a) This "serious public health threat" which is "complex" will "usually respond well toconventional antibiotic therapy." The committee fails to provide evidence

of what response ismeasured and by what methods.B) They further state that a "minority of patients" have symptoms which remain after"resolution…after antibiotic treatment." Again, this assumes that all patients are diagnosedand treated, which is simply not fact, and again this statement defaults to the committee'sinflexible criteria for diagnosis and treatment.c) The committee further considers symptomatic illness as "usually mild and self-limiting", anddefines these patients as having "post-Lyme disease syndrome", an arbitrary term adopted bythe Feder camp years ago and thoroughly associated with ill-defined, non-organic illnessthrough repetitive indoctrination with this brand of pseudo-scientific jargon on theunsuspecting medical community. "Mild and self-limited" is counter to the characterizationof numerous other reports, and contradicts the authors' opening remarks of a

"serious andcomplex" illness. The terms "mild and self-limited" are subjective, and craftily inserted toprejudice the biased opinions which follow.d) After the initial paragraph, the word "complex" is no longer mentioned, as if the authors feel readers will forget the reference as it is plowed under by subsequent disparaging remarks.e) The committee stated that their review is "not the objective manifestations of late Lymedisease but rather the imprecisely defined condition referred to as `chronic Lyme disease.'"i. `Objectivity is in the eye of the beholder. The more skilled and experienced the observer becomes, the better the tools available with which to measure; the better theunderstanding of the elements which comprise the universe of the subject matter athand, the more "objective" the manifestations of the illness complex will become.ii. The committee is derelict in not being more

forthright about issues of objectivity; ifobjective measures are wanting, why not make efforts to improve them? The practice ofmedicine is suffering mightily as our practitioners increasingly rely upon guidelines and "cookbook" medicine, and not on what the patient communicates. We physicians arebecoming more robotic, and why is that so? The physician must constantly listen to,and learn from the patient, especially when "testing" fails both provider and patient.iii. The committee stumbles over the precise definition of an illness they initially state is"complex" and proceeds to wantonly blur the debate further by talking about, "not theobjective manifestations of Lyme disease", but rather "chronic Lyme disease". This isclassic double–speak on their part.f) The committee targets a "small number of practitioners", not a subtle reference, theterminology of which is assuredly designed

to reduce the number and significance of thosewith opposing viewpoints. The committee appears to mock physicians who "suggest" thatpersistent B. burgdorferi may require long-term antibiotic treatment, or that it may be"incurable". They do so in such manner that suggests a whimsical allusion to futility, andimplies in parallel analogy that patients who embrace this view are equally futile in theirthinking.g) Declarative and unsubstantiated statements dominate the "review" as in "the opinion of thecommittee is that Lyme disease includes a broad array of illnesses or symptom complexes forwhich there is no reproducible or convincing scientific evidence of any relationship to B.burgdorferi infection". First, note that this is an opinion but, in the setting of the Lyme Cabalpublishing in the NEJM, this opinion equates to dictum and also, in our collective opinion,equates to an abuse of power

by those who hold power in this setting. The lack of "evidence"reference, which glides so easily on the NEJM page, is easily countered by well-documentedliterature references indicating that the world at large is held hostage to unreliable and stifledtesting which severely limits the ability of the practitioner to provide laboratory data insupport of this aforementioned "complex illness".h) In the very near future, we predict that many of the Lyme Cabal will find it hard to explainthe more than 200 patents they hold for better testing, vaccine development, and otherbusiness interests in the expanding universe of Borreliosis-related disease. Further, it mayprove exceedingly difficult for the Cabal to explain why their involvement with these patentshave been largely undisclosed, when the science at hand could have benefited the untoldthousands whose lives have been unalterably changed by

this chronic illness.i) Late in the publication, the committee uses the political and inflammatory term "ChronicLyme Disease" as the heading of a new section, instead of their preferred term, "late Lymedisease". We ask the obvious question of why the choice to begin a section with somethingthe committee says does not exist.j) The committee further makes vague and imperial comments about those diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease, as somehow being "substantively" different than those with other "recognized" infectious diseases. We are disturbed that a NEJM editorially-approved article would accede to a reference which equates to "intellectual cement" in academic medicine.At what point did the US academic universe decide that they had a handle on the mysteries ofmedicine? Over 90% of the most prominent chronic illnesses, e.g. MS, RA, Crohn's, etc.,have no know cause. This is hardly a

position from which to exude scientific arrogance.Diagnoses are, and always will be, integrally associated with varying clinical criteria, testinterpretations, and physician judgment. Testing was designed to serve the will of theclinician and now it seems that the tail wags the dog. Generational change in medicinehistorically shows that 50% of what we hold as fact today will change, but which 50%?k) A disclaimer by an organization is an attempt by the rule makers to absolve all recriminationsin perpetuity. To wit, as our authors and their alter egos at the IDSA suggest, (and as someof the committee's authors who took part in the 2006 Lyme Guidelines stated): "It isimportant to realize that guidelines cannot always account for individual variations amongpatients. They are not intended to supplant physician judgment with respect to particularpatients or special clinical situations". Why then

would these committee members attempt tominimize the role of physician judgment in the diagnosis of any illness, especially a diseasewith the devastating impact of persistent Lyme disease? Clearly the committee is deemphasizingclinical judgment and experience because they don't fully appreciate the rootsof their discipline – the patient. This is a highly disturbing and dangerous thought for theprofession of medicine and for the population which it serves.l) The committee criticizes the "lines of reasoning" to support a diagnosis of Lyme disease in those who do not show antibodies against B. burgdorferi in serum, particularly given the "thewell-known immunogenicity of lipoproteins". They claim these "theories" of antibody negativity with LBC are not well-supported by scientific data. They fail to acknowledge thatthe testing reagents used in traditional labs are limited to only one strain (B31)

in a disease inwhich multiple Borrelia burgdorferi strains may play a role. They ignore the welldocumentedaltered life forms of Borrelia species, (e.g. CWD forms, cysts, and blebs), none of which manifest lipoproteins. They fail to acknowledge the intracellular habitat of both helical and cyst forms, and the disturbing ability of the B31 spirochete to penetrate a series ofneuronal and glial cell lines, as described in the 2006 Livengood CDC paper published in thesummer of 2006. They fail to hypothesize or consider the notion that patients with LBC mayhave highly dysfunctional innate and adoptive immunologic effects.As if not satisfied with yet another highly creative and biased interpretation of the data, the authors then turn to criticize "specialty labs" as not "FDA approved". The FDA, which bythe way acknowledges that current testing is unreliable, has nothing to do with credentialinglabs unless a

product is marketed, a convenient oversight by the authors. This "shoot themessenger" approach ignores the highly suspect and arbitrary manipulation of data andpolicy which took place at the 1994 Dearborn meeting and left the world without Osp A andB bands as qualifying criteria for diagnosis. This is a particularly mystifying situation sincethe ill-fated and ill-conceived LYMErix vaccine promoted by several of the Lyme Cabal wasbased on the Osp A, or kda band 31, lipoprotein antigen.Most significantly, the authors fail to mention that much of the research done by several ofthe authors of their own committee, (when closely examined), supports the opposite view ofwhat they express. Perhaps they should go back and re-study their own, earlier research. Asstated previously, many in the Lyme Cabal are involved in various side-interests whichinclude, but are not limited to, the patenting of

diagnostic tests and/or components thereof,which we have referred herein. Therefore, we and others are concerned that these individualsmight have a vested interest in dismissing any diagnostic or treatment modalities contrary totheir "recommendations". m) The committee uses "shock value" terminology to describe a minority group who treat Lymedisease – a handful of practitioners utilizing "unconventional" or "dangerous" methods to treat Lyme, as if they are the collective majority. The mainstream of providers does not fittheir characterization, so these inferences are wholly unsubstantiated, unwarranted andmalicious. To this end, the committee has a history of promoting the term "medicalquackery" at every opportunity because its use resonates loudly as an alarm to the public.The authors know that libelous remarks directed against specific physicians or groups arevery difficult to

prosecute and that their public indignation makes for good journalistic copywithout fear of reprisal. n) Further, the committee states that "no other spirochetal illness including…tertiary syphilis ismanaged in an analogous fashion." Syphilis, caused by treponema pallidum, has a formidable and sinister history for causing human illness in past centuries, and in recent times has experienced a renaissance associated with the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Unlike Borrelia burgdorferi, treponema pallidum has only one host, the human, whereas Borrelia burgdorferi has many hosts. For the record, we use a "tongue in cheek" byword whenreferring to treponema pallidum, which we refer to as "Lyme's DUMB Cousin." We use thisdroll term based on comparative genomic profiling among spirochetal and other bacterialspecies, which makes Borrelia burgdorferi the clear winner in the microbial geneticlottery.o) The authors

compare the duration of treatment for Lyme disease to that of tuberculosis,another predominantly intracellular infection. We are amused at the implications by theauthors that tuberculosis is treated successfully for a relatively limited period of 6 months,compared to LBC which "may go on for years". However, in the not so distant past,tuberculosis used to require 18 months or more of antibiotics. When better drugs becameavailable and pulsed antimicrobial programs were employed, therapy was made moreefficient and shorter in duration. Of interest, pulsed therapy is precisely the treatmentmethodology employed by the Jemsek Specialty Clinic and other Lyme-literate physicians intreating "chronic Lyme disease". Furthermore, as experience is gained, treatment programsusing combination antimicrobials, as is the case for tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS among manyother complex infections, is also allowing for

more efficient therapy of shorter duration inLBC.p) In terms of persistence, dozens of articles support this notion, including some of the authors'earlier works. From a purely observational basis, if Borrelia burgdorferi is so easily dealt with in the infectious state, why does it proliferatively persist in hard-shelled ticks, various small and large mammals, and humans (not the end host). Why is it revered by microbiologists as the most uniquely and lavishly genetically-endowed bacterium on the planet, and why is it being so heavily patented by Universities, researchers and others, including the majority of the members of the committee who performed the NEJM review?q) Approaching the stratosphere of arrogance, the committee goes on to summarize Lymedisease into 4 convenient categories, like shoeboxes lined up in a row for shoeless andilliterate providers, without vote or consensus via

any authorized committee or organizationwhich would consummately arrive at these "categories"; and yet these were blithelypublished by the NEJM. So, because they must be addressed, we will do so.i. They do not accurately encompass the majority of Lyme disease patients.ii. They choose to ignore patients who present to their physicians with clear erythemamigrans rashes and other clinical symptoms of Lyme disease, but who are told they "donot have Lyme", because the physicians do not recognize its clinical manifestations, orare relying on surveillance criteria definitions, and inaccurate laboratory testing.iii. These individuals are then not treated, and go on to develop Lyme disease in a chronicform.iv. They also do not address patients who are misdiagnosed with other illnesses such asMS, ALS, RA and CFS.v. The committee assumes at all points that patients are

treated appropriately for theirillness, and yet in fact, most patients receive little or no treatment, which is why theyremain chronic.vi. In patients with positive serology and no objective symptoms, the Bb-associated illnessmay be subclinical, as research proves that Bb remains dormant within the body forextended periods of time, from months to years after infection. Some of the committeemembers' own research clearly states this.vii. Category 4 disease, as newly crafted and defined by the Lyme Cabal, has had anembarrassingly small number of treatment trials upon which to draw these conclusions.Further, in eschewing the study and expansion of the scientific and clinical horizons forthe innumerable issues which remain to be addressed in this illness complex, theauthors make it clear that they are content to remain entrenched in their existing dogmaperhaps until it is "time to

announce the Lyme epidemic" and bring out the new testsand vaccines. The most prominent of the studies mentioned above was performed by Dr. Mark Klempner, a committee member who also happens to be on the editorialboard of the New England Journal of Medicine. If the NEJM is an objective medical journal, we ask why this fact was not made prominently apparent for its readership.r) The committee is disdainful about antibiotic therapy causing "considerable harm" to patients,but fails to mention that all medical treatments have inherent risks. This allowance by theeditor of the NEJM is in and of itself, unpardonable. Further, the authors fail to present a balanced representation of the patient populations in question. They fail for example, tomention that untreated and dismissed chronic Lyme patients commit suicide at alarming ratesdue to the hopelessness and agony associated with this

illness.s) The committee members claim those running clinical studies have had "difficulty" securingpatients who meet the criteria of their obviously biased studies – such as the elimination of500 people who were excluded because they lacked a "substantiated history of Lymedisease." Substantiated by what account? Most Lyme patients have no substantiated historyof Lyme disease because doctors are missing the diagnosis and failing to treat thesepatients…more circular logic. Again, the committee is myopic in arriving at its conclusionsabout the scarcity of patients, either those "well-documented" or who develop "clinicallysignificant problems" after "conventional treatment." We would like to provide the benefitof the doubt to the Lyme Cabal and pray that their glossing over and misinterpreting/ignoringor trivializing consistent and debilitating patient issues are not

intentional.t) There are untold thousands of individuals in our country and around the world who liveunfulfilled and tortuous lives due to the political situation surrounding LBC and consequentaccess to quality care issues. A symptom of the rudimentary state in which we find ourselvesis made evident by the authors suggesting that eligibility criteria for controlled trials requiresymptoms be "severe enough to interfere with the patient's ability to function". This line ofreasoning is simply astounding in its unsophistication and insensitivity. The committee's statements about controlled trials and documented disease history is admirable and would be more so if the medical community was fully engaged in an environment in which, as in HIV research, the best minds were involved and funded in the pursuit of the study of this illnesscomplex. Patients know what has made them better and it is highly

insulting to patients whoare denied care or who had irreversible adverse health consequences to themselves or theirloved ones because of suspect motivations by those who now hold power…….almostcertainly the patient's interest is not the primary concern in this story.IN SUMMARYOpen attempts to intimidate the Connecticut Attorney General, physicians, and patients are notlending credibility to those who are perpetrating this behavior. Nevertheless, the politicization of an illness for which many people are tragically suffering, and who are afforded very little credence by the scientific community when evidence shows their illness is real, and who are subjected to increasingly narrow treatment options, may indeed be approaching not only anti-trust violations, but scientific fraud on a grand scale.The public confusion comes not just from the myriad of symptoms or the restrictive definition of

the illness itself, but also from physicians and patients who are well aware of the illness within their own bodies, and who are confounded by the unwillingness of the scientific community to embrace a medical illness of such major significance. Rather, many perceive an increasing plaintive and obvious disregard for the welfare of thousands of patients by a small number of individuals entrenched in power and trapped within their logic loops, whether these loops are genuinely believed, or contrived. Inaction issomehow justified on the basis of a lack of double-blind, randomized studies. Regrettably, there also appears to be a barrier to publication of dissenting views by the editors and reviewers of established journals. The public, including some physicians, do know how to read, after all, and patents and a pattern of interpretative reversal in research opinions speak volumes about the truth of LBC. So does

successful resolution of symptoms through open-ended, long-term antibiotic treatment of Lyme disease.In this complex illness, therapy is most often successful, i.e. life restoring, when it is patterned on an increasingly sophisticated understanding of the many interwoven issues involved in the illness, and in the successful integration of therapies which address the immunosuppressive, multi-systemic, polymicrobial disease complex which is LBC. Most of us deeply involved in patient care don't care who takes credit for change, and realize that traditional powers must engage for this to happen. We encourage this at every opportunity. Physicians and patients are earnestly waiting for the truth to be revealed, and we hope that this truth will arise from the medical community in a proactive and vigorously engaged manner. LBC is just part of what is driving an epidemic of unwellness and chronic illness in this

country. The paradigm of medicine and chronic illness must change over time………toomany of us are sick and getting sicker.[1] Feder HM Jr, BJB, O'Connell S, Shapiro ED, Steere AC, Wormser GP, and the Ad HocInternational Lyme Disease Group*. NEJM. 2007 Oct 4;357(14):1422-1430. A review article[2] Wormser GP, Dattwyler RJ, Shapiro ED, Halperin JJ, Steere AC, Klempner MS, Krause PJ, BakkenJS, Strle F, Stanek G, Bockenstedt L, Fish D, Dumler JS, Nadelman RB. "The Clinical Assessment,Treatment, and Prevention of Lyme Disease, Human Granulocytic Anaplasmosis, and Babesiosis:Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of America." Clinical InfectiousDiseases 2006;43:1089-1134. --------------------------------------------------------------------

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The CDC has been saying this for ages, because they define lyme

disease as the northeastern variant that they first " discovered. "

Therefore STARI is the name they gave to non-lyme i.e. not sensu

stricto in the south for instance, after much fighting from Marshall.

I'm certain they do this with intent. This allows them to contain the

epidemic officially, making it much smaller esp. with their 5 band

western blot requirement.

>

> Dear All

> Looks like Cheney and may have to move over as scapegoats

(or sacrificial lambs).

>

> The whitewash in Feder's paper starts in the first paragraph

> " Lyme disease, the most common tick-borne infection in the northern

hemisphere, is a serious public health problem. In North America, it

is caused exclusively by Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (hereafter

referred to as B. burgdorferi), whereas in Europe it is caused by B.

afzelii, B. garinii, B. burgdorferi, and occasionally by other species

of borrelia.1 "

> http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/357/14/1422.

> This ignores a great deal of contrary evidence encapsulated by

> " The B. burgdorferi sensu lato complex is composed of the following

species: B. turdae, B. tanukii, B. bissettii, B. valaisiana, B.

lusitaniae, B. bissettii, B. andersonii, B. japonica, B. garinii, and

B. afzelii. Of these, B. burgdorferi, B. garinii, and B. afzelii are

the dominant species associated with infection in humans. " from

http://www.thefreelibrary.com/_/print/PrintArticle.aspx?id=63807723

(March 2000)

> It is clear that there is sufficient dispute over several , as yet

un-named Borrelia species known to cause infection to make Feder's

claim appear to be s wildly sweeping statement.

> As my sainted mother would say " None so blind as those that will not

see "

> R

>

> [infections] Lyme

>

>

> I know you guys don't really follow the polrtical scene in Lyme- but

> here's a Dr.s rebuttal to a recent article about Lyme... and this Doc

> is REALLY putting his lisence on the line going against the big guys-

> There's been investigations of several Drs. who prescribe long term

> abx for Lyme.

>

> Barb

>

> http://www.jemsekspecialty.com/files/NEJM-Response.pdf

>

> Responding to a New England Journal of Medicine

> Critical Appraisal of " Chronic Lyme Disease "

> Read The Full NEJM Article Online

>

> This is an opinion piece by Dr. ph Jemsek, in consulting

> collaboration with other experienced

> colleagues. It is not intended to reflect an exhaustive critique of

> the many shortcomings of the " Feder " paper, but rather an attempt to

> highlight the most glaring incongruities and perplexing logic flows

> contained within what is considered a shameful and politically-

> motivated article. The purpose of this critique is to place

> disparaging opinion about persistent disease associated with Lyme

> Borreliosis on full exhibit.

>

> The subject of " Chronic Lyme Disease " was once again presented in a

> prominent journal setting in a recently published " review " in the

> October 4 NEJM article by Feder et al. As seen in several previously

> published reviews, opinions, and guidelines, the tenor of the

> publication is dismissive to physicians who feel that Borrelia

> burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, may be responsible

> for persistent illness which requires long-term antibiotics and a

> myriad of other treatment considerations and measures. It seems to

> patronize the opinions of these physicians, opinions which are backed

> by hundreds

> of scientific publications and galvanized by countless clinical

> encounters with desperate and

> marginalized patients.

>

> Published " reviews " on Lyme disease, similar to the Feder article,

> seldom offer any new or credible insight into clinical or scientific

> issues, and therefore their purpose and timing must be questioned.

> This article clearly echoes the stilted logic and highly suspect

> content promoted by the portion of the 2006 IDSA Guidelines which

> dealt with this subject matter and whose authors may come under anti-

> trust

> investigation. The repetitive arguments promoted by a select group of

> researchers and/or self-proclaimed " ad hoc " committee members - " the

> Lyme Cabal " , as we will refer to them, includes the high-ranking

> members of the CDC's Vector Borne Branch, and Mead, and do

> nothing to further our understanding of what is making our population

> chronically ill.

>

> In the absence of new ideas and with a history of rejecting

> meaningful dialogue with those who may

> disagree with them, Feder and associates appear to simply reshuffle

> authors and rearrange their template of imperial arguments for this

> most recent article. Again they employ the same indecipherable,

> distorted, and circular logic which they have displayed in the past,

> and appear to play favorites with their facts.

>

> Many of the authors cited are known to have ties to patented business

> ventures dealing with, among

> other things, future testing and vaccine development in Borreliosis-

> related ventures. We have serious concerns about propriety and

> integrity issues for both the Lyme Cabal constituents and for the

> NEJM, which has a heretofore irreproachable standard of excellence in

> publishing medical science.

>

> We also express serious concerns about the health of our population

> in terms of the continuing scientific " ambiguity " surrounding this

> disease complex, which we term Lyme Borreliosis Complex (LBC).

>

> The review begins by indicating an important fact - that Lyme disease

> is a serious public health problem which is " complex " , but the tone

> of the article immediately thereafter becomes and remains,

> dismissive. LBC is trivialized through consistent application of

> journalistic phrasing techniques designed to give the reader a sense

> that the authors are annoyed that there is a fuss about this issue,

> and that their views have not been accepted without reservation.

>

> Examples of these methods of literary intimidation and the abusive

> misuse of factual material are scattered throughout the text and are

> briefly portrayed as follows:

>

> a) This " serious public health threat " which is " complex "

> will " usually respond well to

> conventional antibiotic therapy. " The committee fails to provide

> evidence of what response is

> measured and by what methods.

>

> B) They further state that a " minority of patients " have symptoms

> which remain after

> " resolution.after antibiotic treatment. " Again, this assumes that all

> patients are diagnosed

> and treated, which is simply not fact, and again this statement

> defaults to the committee's

> inflexible criteria for diagnosis and treatment.

>

> c) The committee further considers symptomatic illness as " usually

> mild and self-limiting " , and

> defines these patients as having " post-Lyme disease syndrome " , an

> arbitrary term adopted by

> the Feder camp years ago and thoroughly associated with ill-defined,

> non-organic illness

> through repetitive indoctrination with this brand of pseudo-

> scientific jargon on the

> unsuspecting medical community. " Mild and self-limited " is counter to

> the characterization

> of numerous other reports, and contradicts the authors' opening

> remarks of a " serious and

> complex " illness. The terms " mild and self-limited " are subjective,

> and craftily inserted to

> prejudice the biased opinions which follow.

>

> d) After the initial paragraph, the word " complex " is no longer

> mentioned, as if the authors feel readers will forget the reference

> as it is plowed under by subsequent disparaging remarks.

>

> e) The committee stated that their review is " not the objective

> manifestations of late Lyme

> disease but rather the imprecisely defined condition referred to

> as `chronic Lyme disease.' "

>

> i. `Objectivity is in the eye of the beholder. The more skilled and

> experienced the observer becomes, the better the tools available with

> which to measure; the better the

> understanding of the elements which comprise the universe of the

> subject matter at

> hand, the more " objective " the manifestations of the illness complex

> will become.

> ii. The committee is derelict in not being more forthright about

> issues of objectivity; if

> objective measures are wanting, why not make efforts to improve them?

> The practice of

> medicine is suffering mightily as our practitioners increasingly rely

> upon guidelines and " cookbook " medicine, and not on what the patient

> communicates. We physicians are

> becoming more robotic, and why is that so? The physician must

> constantly listen to,

> and learn from the patient, especially when " testing " fails both

> provider and patient.

>

> iii. The committee stumbles over the precise definition of an illness

> they initially state is

> " complex " and proceeds to wantonly blur the debate further by talking

> about, " not the

> objective manifestations of Lyme disease " , but rather " chronic Lyme

> disease " . This is

> classic double-speak on their part.

>

> f) The committee targets a " small number of practitioners " , not a

> subtle reference, the

> terminology of which is assuredly designed to reduce the number and

> significance of those

> with opposing viewpoints. The committee appears to mock physicians

> who " suggest " that

> persistent B. burgdorferi may require long-term antibiotic treatment,

> or that it may be

> " incurable " . They do so in such manner that suggests a whimsical

> allusion to futility, and

> implies in parallel analogy that patients who embrace this view are

> equally futile in their

> thinking.

>

> g) Declarative and unsubstantiated statements dominate the " review "

> as in " the opinion of the

> committee is that Lyme disease includes a broad array of illnesses or

> symptom complexes for

> which there is no reproducible or convincing scientific evidence of

> any relationship to B.

> burgdorferi infection " . First, note that this is an opinion but, in

> the setting of the Lyme Cabal

> publishing in the NEJM, this opinion equates to dictum and also, in

> our collective opinion,

> equates to an abuse of power by those who hold power in this setting.

> The lack of " evidence "

> reference, which glides so easily on the NEJM page, is easily

> countered by well-documented

> literature references indicating that the world at large is held

> hostage to unreliable and stifled

> testing which severely limits the ability of the practitioner to

> provide laboratory data in

> support of this aforementioned " complex illness " .

>

> h) In the very near future, we predict that many of the Lyme Cabal

> will find it hard to explain

> the more than 200 patents they hold for better testing, vaccine

> development, and other

> business interests in the expanding universe of Borreliosis-related

> disease. Further, it may

> prove exceedingly difficult for the Cabal to explain why their

> involvement with these patents

> have been largely undisclosed, when the science at hand could have

> benefited the untold

> thousands whose lives have been unalterably changed by this chronic

> illness.

>

> i) Late in the publication, the committee uses the political and

> inflammatory term " Chronic

> Lyme Disease " as the heading of a new section, instead of their

> preferred term, " late Lyme

> disease " . We ask the obvious question of why the choice to begin a

> section with something

> the committee says does not exist.

>

> j) The committee further makes vague and imperial comments about

> those diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease, as somehow

> being " substantively " different than those with other " recognized "

> infectious diseases. We are disturbed that a NEJM editorially-

> approved article would accede to a reference which equates

> to " intellectual cement " in academic medicine.

>

> At what point did the US academic universe decide that they had a

> handle on the mysteries of

> medicine? Over 90% of the most prominent chronic illnesses, e.g. MS,

> RA, Crohn's, etc.,

> have no know cause. This is hardly a position from which to exude

> scientific arrogance.

> Diagnoses are, and always will be, integrally associated with varying

> clinical criteria, test

> interpretations, and physician judgment. Testing was designed to

> serve the will of the

> clinician and now it seems that the tail wags the dog. Generational

> change in medicine

> historically shows that 50% of what we hold as fact today will

> change, but which 50%?

>

> k) A disclaimer by an organization is an attempt by the rule makers

> to absolve all recriminations

> in perpetuity. To wit, as our authors and their alter egos at the

> IDSA suggest, (and as some

> of the committee's authors who took part in the 2006 Lyme Guidelines

> stated): " It is

> important to realize that guidelines cannot always account for

> individual variations among

> patients. They are not intended to supplant physician judgment with

> respect to particular

> patients or special clinical situations " . Why then would these

> committee members attempt to

> minimize the role of physician judgment in the diagnosis of any

> illness, especially a disease

> with the devastating impact of persistent Lyme disease? Clearly the

> committee is deemphasizing

> clinical judgment and experience because they don't fully appreciate

> the roots

> of their discipline - the patient. This is a highly disturbing and

> dangerous thought for the

> profession of medicine and for the population which it serves.

>

> l) The committee criticizes the " lines of reasoning " to support a

> diagnosis of Lyme disease in those who do not show antibodies against

> B. burgdorferi in serum, particularly given the " the

> well-known immunogenicity of lipoproteins " . They claim

> these " theories " of antibody negativity with LBC are not well-

> supported by scientific data. They fail to acknowledge that

> the testing reagents used in traditional labs are limited to only one

> strain (B31) in a disease in

> which multiple Borrelia burgdorferi strains may play a role. They

> ignore the welldocumented

> altered life forms of Borrelia species, (e.g. CWD forms, cysts, and

> blebs), none of which manifest lipoproteins. They fail to acknowledge

> the intracellular habitat of both helical and cyst forms, and the

> disturbing ability of the B31 spirochete to penetrate a series of

> neuronal and glial cell lines, as described in the 2006 Livengood CDC

> paper published in the

> summer of 2006. They fail to hypothesize or consider the notion that

> patients with LBC may

> have highly dysfunctional innate and adoptive immunologic effects.

>

> As if not satisfied with yet another highly creative and biased

> interpretation of the data, the authors then turn to

> criticize " specialty labs " as not " FDA approved " . The FDA, which by

> the way acknowledges that current testing is unreliable, has nothing

> to do with credentialing

> labs unless a product is marketed, a convenient oversight by the

> authors. This " shoot the

> messenger " approach ignores the highly suspect and arbitrary

> manipulation of data and

> policy which took place at the 1994 Dearborn meeting and left the

> world without Osp A and

> B bands as qualifying criteria for diagnosis. This is a particularly

> mystifying situation since

> the ill-fated and ill-conceived LYMErix vaccine promoted by several

> of the Lyme Cabal was

> based on the Osp A, or kda band 31, lipoprotein antigen.

>

> Most significantly, the authors fail to mention that much of the

> research done by several of

> the authors of their own committee, (when closely examined), supports

> the opposite view of

> what they express. Perhaps they should go back and re-study their

> own, earlier research. As

> stated previously, many in the Lyme Cabal are involved in various

> side-interests which

> include, but are not limited to, the patenting of diagnostic tests

> and/or components thereof,

> which we have referred herein. Therefore, we and others are concerned

> that these individuals

> might have a vested interest in dismissing any diagnostic or

> treatment modalities contrary to

> their " recommendations " .

>

> m) The committee uses " shock value " terminology to describe a

> minority group who treat Lyme

> disease - a handful of practitioners utilizing " unconventional "

> or " dangerous " methods to treat Lyme, as if they are the collective

> majority. The mainstream of providers does not fit

> their characterization, so these inferences are wholly

> unsubstantiated, unwarranted and

> malicious. To this end, the committee has a history of promoting the

> term " medical

> quackery " at every opportunity because its use resonates loudly as an

> alarm to the public.

> The authors know that libelous remarks directed against specific

> physicians or groups are

> very difficult to prosecute and that their public indignation makes

> for good journalistic copy

> without fear of reprisal.

>

> n) Further, the committee states that " no other spirochetal illness

> including.tertiary syphilis is

> managed in an analogous fashion. " Syphilis, caused by treponema

> pallidum, has a formidable and sinister history for causing human

> illness in past centuries, and in recent times has experienced a

> renaissance associated with the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Unlike Borrelia

> burgdorferi, treponema pallidum has only one host, the human, whereas

> Borrelia burgdorferi has many hosts. For the record, we use a " tongue

> in cheek " byword when

> referring to treponema pallidum, which we refer to as " Lyme's DUMB

> Cousin. " We use this

> droll term based on comparative genomic profiling among spirochetal

> and other bacterial

> species, which makes Borrelia burgdorferi the clear winner in the

> microbial genetic

> lottery.

>

> o) The authors compare the duration of treatment for Lyme disease to

> that of tuberculosis,

> another predominantly intracellular infection. We are amused at the

> implications by the

> authors that tuberculosis is treated successfully for a relatively

> limited period of 6 months,

> compared to LBC which " may go on for years " . However, in the not so

> distant past,

> tuberculosis used to require 18 months or more of antibiotics. When

> better drugs became

> available and pulsed antimicrobial programs were employed, therapy

> was made more

> efficient and shorter in duration. Of interest, pulsed therapy is

> precisely the treatment

> methodology employed by the Jemsek Specialty Clinic and other Lyme-

> literate physicians in

> treating " chronic Lyme disease " . Furthermore, as experience is

> gained, treatment programs

> using combination antimicrobials, as is the case for tuberculosis and

> HIV/AIDS among many

> other complex infections, is also allowing for more efficient therapy

> of shorter duration in

> LBC.

>

> p) In terms of persistence, dozens of articles support this notion,

> including some of the authors'earlier works. From a purely

> observational basis, if Borrelia burgdorferi is so easily dealt with

> in the infectious state, why does it proliferatively persist in hard-

> shelled ticks, various small and large mammals, and humans (not the

> end host).

>

> Why is it revered by microbiologists as the most uniquely and

> lavishly genetically-endowed bacterium on the planet, and why is it

> being so heavily patented by Universities, researchers and others,

> including the majority of the members of the committee who performed

> the NEJM review?

>

> q) Approaching the stratosphere of arrogance, the committee goes on

> to summarize Lyme

> disease into 4 convenient categories, like shoeboxes lined up in a

> row for shoeless and

> illiterate providers, without vote or consensus via any authorized

> committee or organization

> which would consummately arrive at these " categories " ; and yet these

> were blithely

> published by the NEJM. So, because they must be addressed, we will do

> so.

>

> i. They do not accurately encompass the majority of Lyme disease

> patients.

>

> ii. They choose to ignore patients who present to their physicians

> with clear erythema

> migrans rashes and other clinical symptoms of Lyme disease, but who

> are told they " do

> not have Lyme " , because the physicians do not recognize its clinical

> manifestations, or

> are relying on surveillance criteria definitions, and inaccurate

> laboratory testing.

>

> iii. These individuals are then not treated, and go on to develop

> Lyme disease in a chronic

> form.

>

> iv. They also do not address patients who are misdiagnosed with other

> illnesses such as

> MS, ALS, RA and CFS.

>

> v. The committee assumes at all points that patients are treated

> appropriately for their

> illness, and yet in fact, most patients receive little or no

> treatment, which is why they

> remain chronic.

>

> vi. In patients with positive serology and no objective symptoms, the

> Bb-associated illness

> may be subclinical, as research proves that Bb remains dormant within

> the body for

> extended periods of time, from months to years after infection. Some

> of the committee

> members' own research clearly states this.

>

> vii. Category 4 disease, as newly crafted and defined by the Lyme

> Cabal, has had an

> embarrassingly small number of treatment trials upon which to draw

> these conclusions.

> Further, in eschewing the study and expansion of the scientific and

> clinical horizons for

> the innumerable issues which remain to be addressed in this illness

> complex, the

> authors make it clear that they are content to remain entrenched in

> their existing dogma

> perhaps until it is " time to announce the Lyme epidemic " and bring

> out the new tests

> and vaccines.

>

> The most prominent of the studies mentioned above was performed by

> Dr. Mark Klempner, a committee member who also happens to be on the

> editorial

> board of the New England Journal of Medicine. If the NEJM is an

> objective medical journal, we ask why this fact was not made

> prominently apparent for its readership.

>

> r) The committee is disdainful about antibiotic therapy

> causing " considerable harm " to patients,

> but fails to mention that all medical treatments have inherent risks.

> This allowance by the

> editor of the NEJM is in and of itself, unpardonable. Further, the

> authors fail to present a balanced representation of the patient

> populations in question. They fail for example, to

> mention that untreated and dismissed chronic Lyme patients commit

> suicide at alarming rates

> due to the hopelessness and agony associated with this illness.

>

> s) The committee members claim those running clinical studies have

> had " difficulty " securing

> patients who meet the criteria of their obviously biased studies -

> such as the elimination of

> 500 people who were excluded because they lacked a " substantiated

> history of Lyme

> disease. " Substantiated by what account? Most Lyme patients have no

> substantiated history

> of Lyme disease because doctors are missing the diagnosis and failing

> to treat these

> patients.more circular logic. Again, the committee is myopic in

> arriving at its conclusions

> about the scarcity of patients, either those " well-documented " or who

> develop " clinically

> significant problems " after " conventional treatment. " We would like

> to provide the benefit

> of the doubt to the Lyme Cabal and pray that their glossing over and

> misinterpreting/ignoring

> or trivializing consistent and debilitating patient issues are not

> intentional.

>

> t) There are untold thousands of individuals in our country and

> around the world who live

> unfulfilled and tortuous lives due to the political situation

> surrounding LBC and consequent

> access to quality care issues. A symptom of the rudimentary state in

> which we find ourselves

> is made evident by the authors suggesting that eligibility criteria

> for controlled trials require

> symptoms be " severe enough to interfere with the patient's ability to

> function " . This line of

> reasoning is simply astounding in its unsophistication and

> insensitivity. The committee's statements about controlled trials and

> documented disease history is admirable and would be more so if the

> medical community was fully engaged in an environment in which, as in

> HIV research, the best minds were involved and funded in the pursuit

> of the study of this illness

> complex. Patients know what has made them better and it is highly

> insulting to patients who

> are denied care or who had irreversible adverse health consequences

> to themselves or their

> loved ones because of suspect motivations by those who now hold

> power...almost

> certainly the patient's interest is not the primary concern in this

> story.

>

> IN SUMMARY

> Open attempts to intimidate the Connecticut Attorney General,

> physicians, and patients are not

> lending credibility to those who are perpetrating this behavior.

> Nevertheless, the politicization of an illness for which many people

> are tragically suffering, and who are afforded very little credence

> by the scientific community when evidence shows their illness is

> real, and who are subjected to increasingly narrow treatment options,

> may indeed be approaching not only anti-trust violations, but

> scientific fraud on a grand scale.

>

> The public confusion comes not just from the myriad of symptoms or

> the restrictive definition of the illness itself, but also from

> physicians and patients who are well aware of the illness within

> their own bodies, and who are confounded by the unwillingness of the

> scientific community to embrace a medical illness of such major

> significance. Rather, many perceive an increasing plaintive and

> obvious disregard for the welfare of thousands of patients by a small

> number of individuals entrenched in power and trapped within their

> logic loops, whether these loops are genuinely believed, or

> contrived. Inaction is

> somehow justified on the basis of a lack of double-blind, randomized

> studies. Regrettably, there also appears to be a barrier to

> publication of dissenting views by the editors and reviewers of

> established journals. The public, including some physicians, do know

> how to read, after all, and patents and a pattern of interpretative

> reversal in research opinions speak volumes about the truth of LBC.

> So does successful resolution of symptoms through open-ended, long-

> term antibiotic treatment of Lyme disease.

>

> In this complex illness, therapy is most often successful, i.e. life

> restoring, when it is patterned on an increasingly sophisticated

> understanding of the many interwoven issues involved in the illness,

> and in the successful integration of therapies which address the

> immunosuppressive, multi-systemic, polymicrobial disease complex

> which is LBC.

>

> Most of us deeply involved in patient care don't care who takes

> credit for change, and realize that traditional powers must engage

> for this to happen. We encourage this at every opportunity.

> Physicians and patients are earnestly waiting for the truth to be

> revealed, and we hope that this truth will arise from the medical

> community in a proactive and vigorously engaged manner. LBC is just

> part of what is driving an epidemic of unwellness and chronic illness

> in this country. The paradigm of medicine and chronic illness must

> change over time...too

> many of us are sick and getting sicker.

>

> [1] Feder HM Jr, BJB, O'Connell S, Shapiro ED, Steere AC,

> Wormser GP, and the Ad Hoc

> International Lyme Disease Group*. NEJM. 2007 Oct 4;357(14):1422-

> 1430. A review article

> [2] Wormser GP, Dattwyler RJ, Shapiro ED, Halperin JJ, Steere AC,

> Klempner MS, Krause PJ, Bakken

> JS, Strle F, Stanek G, Bockenstedt L, Fish D, Dumler JS, Nadelman

> RB. " The Clinical Assessment,

> Treatment, and Prevention of Lyme Disease, Human Granulocytic

> Anaplasmosis, and Babesiosis:

> Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of

> America. " Clinical Infectious

> Diseases 2006;43:1089-1134.

> ----------------------------------------------------------

> ----------

>

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CDC- Center for Destroying Credibility?

another interesting paper identifying another unknown Borrelia here

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0GVK/is_7_11/ai_n14787819/print.

This points to Lyme Borreliosis possibly being a complex of infections when vectors are multiply co-infected.

R

[infections] Lyme> > > I know you guys don't really follow the polrtical scene in Lyme- but > here's a Dr.s rebuttal to a recent article about Lyme... and this Doc > is REALLY putting his lisence on the line going against the big guys- > There's been investigations of several Drs. who prescribe long term > abx for Lyme.> > Barb> > http://www.jemsekspecialty.com/files/NEJM-Response.pdf> > Responding to a New England Journal of Medicine> Critical Appraisal of "Chronic Lyme Disease"> Read The Full NEJM Article Online> > This is an opinion piece by Dr. ph Jemsek, in consulting > collaboration with other experienced> colleagues. It is not intended to reflect an exhaustive critique of > the many shortcomings of the "Feder"paper, but rather an attempt to > highlight the most glaring incongruities and perplexing logic flows > contained within what is considered a shameful and politically-> motivated article. The purpose of this critique is to place > disparaging opinion about persistent disease associated with Lyme > Borreliosis on full exhibit.> > The subject of "Chronic Lyme Disease" was once again presented in a > prominent journal setting in a recently published "review" in the > October 4 NEJM article by Feder et al. As seen in several previously > published reviews, opinions, and guidelines, the tenor of the > publication is dismissive to physicians who feel that Borrelia > burgdorferi, the causative agent of Lyme disease, may be responsible > for persistent illness which requires long-term antibiotics and a > myriad of other treatment considerations and measures. It seems to > patronize the opinions of these physicians, opinions which are backed > by hundreds> of scientific publications and galvanized by countless clinical > encounters with desperate and> marginalized patients.> > Published "reviews" on Lyme disease, similar to the Feder article, > seldom offer any new or credible insight into clinical or scientific > issues, and therefore their purpose and timing must be questioned. > This article clearly echoes the stilted logic and highly suspect > content promoted by the portion of the 2006 IDSA Guidelines which > dealt with this subject matter and whose authors may come under anti-> trust> investigation. The repetitive arguments promoted by a select group of > researchers and/or self-proclaimed "ad hoc" committee members -"the > Lyme Cabal", as we will refer to them, includes the high-ranking > members of the CDC's Vector Borne Branch, and Mead, and do > nothing to further our understanding of what is making our population > chronically ill.> > In the absence of new ideas and with a history of rejecting > meaningful dialogue with those who may> disagree with them, Feder and associates appear to simply reshuffle > authors and rearrange their template of imperial arguments for this > most recent article. Again they employ the same indecipherable, > distorted, and circular logic which they have displayed in the past, > and appear to play favorites with their facts.> > Many of the authors cited are known to have ties to patented business > ventures dealing with, among> other things, future testing and vaccine development in Borreliosis-> related ventures. We have serious concerns about propriety and > integrity issues for both the Lyme Cabal constituents and for the > NEJM, which has a heretofore irreproachable standard of excellence in > publishing medical science. > > We also express serious concerns about the health of our population > in terms of the continuing scientific "ambiguity" surrounding this > disease complex, which we term Lyme Borreliosis Complex (LBC).> > The review begins by indicating an important fact - that Lyme disease > is a serious public health problem which is "complex", but the tone > of the article immediately thereafter becomes and remains, > dismissive. LBC is trivialized through consistent application of > journalistic phrasing techniques designed to give the reader a sense > that the authors are annoyed that there is a fuss about this issue, > and that their views have not been accepted without reservation.> > Examples of these methods of literary intimidation and the abusive > misuse of factual material are scattered throughout the text and are > briefly portrayed as follows:> > a) This "serious public health threat" which is "complex" > will "usually respond well to> conventional antibiotic therapy." The committee fails to provide > evidence of what response is> measured and by what methods.> > B) They further state that a "minority of patients" have symptoms > which remain after> "resolution.after antibiotic treatment." Again, this assumes that all > patients are diagnosed> and treated, which is simply not fact, and again this statement > defaults to the committee's> inflexible criteria for diagnosis and treatment.> > c) The committee further considers symptomatic illness as "usually > mild and self-limiting", and> defines these patients as having "post-Lyme disease syndrome", an > arbitrary term adopted by> the Feder camp years ago and thoroughly associated with ill-defined, > non-organic illness> through repetitive indoctrination with this brand of pseudo-> scientific jargon on the> unsuspecting medical community. "Mild and self-limited" is counter to > the characterization> of numerous other reports, and contradicts the authors' opening > remarks of a "serious and> complex" illness. The terms "mild and self-limited" are subjective, > and craftily inserted to> prejudice the biased opinions which follow.> > d) After the initial paragraph, the word "complex" is no longer > mentioned, as if the authors feel readers will forget the reference > as it is plowed under by subsequent disparaging remarks.> > e) The committee stated that their review is "not the objective > manifestations of late Lyme> disease but rather the imprecisely defined condition referred to > as `chronic Lyme disease.'"> > i. `Objectivity is in the eye of the beholder. The more skilled and > experienced the observer becomes, the better the tools available with > which to measure; the better the> understanding of the elements which comprise the universe of the > subject matter at> hand, the more "objective" the manifestations of the illness complex > will become.> ii. The committee is derelict in not being more forthright about > issues of objectivity; if> objective measures are wanting, why not make efforts to improve them? > The practice of> medicine is suffering mightily as our practitioners increasingly rely > upon guidelines and "cookbook" medicine, and not on what the patient > communicates. We physicians are> becoming more robotic, and why is that so? The physician must > constantly listen to,> and learn from the patient, especially when "testing" fails both > provider and patient.> > iii. The committee stumbles over the precise definition of an illness > they initially state is> "complex" and proceeds to wantonly blur the debate further by talking > about, "not the> objective manifestations of Lyme disease", but rather "chronic Lyme > disease". This is> classic double-speak on their part.> > f) The committee targets a "small number of practitioners", not a > subtle reference, the> terminology of which is assuredly designed to reduce the number and > significance of those> with opposing viewpoints. The committee appears to mock physicians > who "suggest" that> persistent B. burgdorferi may require long-term antibiotic treatment, > or that it may be> "incurable". They do so in such manner that suggests a whimsical > allusion to futility, and> implies in parallel analogy that patients who embrace this view are > equally futile in their> thinking.> > g) Declarative and unsubstantiated statements dominate the "review" > as in "the opinion of the> committee is that Lyme disease includes a broad array of illnesses or > symptom complexes for> which there is no reproducible or convincing scientific evidence of > any relationship to B.> burgdorferi infection". First, note that this is an opinion but, in > the setting of the Lyme Cabal> publishing in the NEJM, this opinion equates to dictum and also, in > our collective opinion,> equates to an abuse of power by those who hold power in this setting. > The lack of "evidence"> reference, which glides so easily on the NEJM page, is easily > countered by well-documented> literature references indicating that the world at large is held > hostage to unreliable and stifled> testing which severely limits the ability of the practitioner to > provide laboratory data in> support of this aforementioned "complex illness".> > h) In the very near future, we predict that many of the Lyme Cabal > will find it hard to explain> the more than 200 patents they hold for better testing, vaccine > development, and other> business interests in the expanding universe of Borreliosis-related > disease. Further, it may> prove exceedingly difficult for the Cabal to explain why their > involvement with these patents> have been largely undisclosed, when the science at hand could have > benefited the untold> thousands whose lives have been unalterably changed by this chronic > illness.> > i) Late in the publication, the committee uses the political and > inflammatory term "Chronic> Lyme Disease" as the heading of a new section, instead of their > preferred term, "late Lyme> disease". We ask the obvious question of why the choice to begin a > section with something> the committee says does not exist.> > j) The committee further makes vague and imperial comments about > those diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease, as somehow > being "substantively" different than those with other "recognized" > infectious diseases. We are disturbed that a NEJM editorially-> approved article would accede to a reference which equates > to "intellectual cement" in academic medicine.> > At what point did the US academic universe decide that they had a > handle on the mysteries of> medicine? Over 90% of the most prominent chronic illnesses, e.g. MS, > RA, Crohn's, etc.,> have no know cause. This is hardly a position from which to exude > scientific arrogance.> Diagnoses are, and always will be, integrally associated with varying > clinical criteria, test> interpretations, and physician judgment. Testing was designed to > serve the will of the> clinician and now it seems that the tail wags the dog. Generational > change in medicine> historically shows that 50% of what we hold as fact today will > change, but which 50%?> > k) A disclaimer by an organization is an attempt by the rule makers > to absolve all recriminations> in perpetuity. To wit, as our authors and their alter egos at the > IDSA suggest, (and as some> of the committee's authors who took part in the 2006 Lyme Guidelines > stated): "It is> important to realize that guidelines cannot always account for > individual variations among> patients. They are not intended to supplant physician judgment with > respect to particular> patients or special clinical situations". Why then would these > committee members attempt to> minimize the role of physician judgment in the diagnosis of any > illness, especially a disease> with the devastating impact of persistent Lyme disease? Clearly the > committee is deemphasizing> clinical judgment and experience because they don't fully appreciate > the roots> of their discipline - the patient. This is a highly disturbing and > dangerous thought for the> profession of medicine and for the population which it serves.> > l) The committee criticizes the "lines of reasoning" to support a > diagnosis of Lyme disease in those who do not show antibodies against > B. burgdorferi in serum, particularly given the "the> well-known immunogenicity of lipoproteins". They claim > these "theories" of antibody negativity with LBC are not well-> supported by scientific data. They fail to acknowledge that> the testing reagents used in traditional labs are limited to only one > strain (B31) in a disease in> which multiple Borrelia burgdorferi strains may play a role. They > ignore the welldocumented> altered life forms of Borrelia species, (e.g. CWD forms, cysts, and > blebs), none of which manifest lipoproteins. They fail to acknowledge > the intracellular habitat of both helical and cyst forms, and the > disturbing ability of the B31 spirochete to penetrate a series of> neuronal and glial cell lines, as described in the 2006 Livengood CDC > paper published in the> summer of 2006. They fail to hypothesize or consider the notion that > patients with LBC may> have highly dysfunctional innate and adoptive immunologic effects.> > As if not satisfied with yet another highly creative and biased > interpretation of the data, the authors then turn to > criticize "specialty labs" as not "FDA approved". The FDA, which by> the way acknowledges that current testing is unreliable, has nothing > to do with credentialing> labs unless a product is marketed, a convenient oversight by the > authors. This "shoot the> messenger" approach ignores the highly suspect and arbitrary > manipulation of data and> policy which took place at the 1994 Dearborn meeting and left the > world without Osp A and> B bands as qualifying criteria for diagnosis. This is a particularly > mystifying situation since> the ill-fated and ill-conceived LYMErix vaccine promoted by several > of the Lyme Cabal was> based on the Osp A, or kda band 31, lipoprotein antigen.> > Most significantly, the authors fail to mention that much of the > research done by several of> the authors of their own committee, (when closely examined), supports > the opposite view of> what they express. Perhaps they should go back and re-study their > own, earlier research. As> stated previously, many in the Lyme Cabal are involved in various > side-interests which> include, but are not limited to, the patenting of diagnostic tests > and/or components thereof,> which we have referred herein. Therefore, we and others are concerned > that these individuals> might have a vested interest in dismissing any diagnostic or > treatment modalities contrary to> their "recommendations". > > m) The committee uses "shock value" terminology to describe a > minority group who treat Lyme> disease - a handful of practitioners utilizing "unconventional" > or "dangerous" methods to treat Lyme, as if they are the collective > majority. The mainstream of providers does not fit> their characterization, so these inferences are wholly > unsubstantiated, unwarranted and> malicious. To this end, the committee has a history of promoting the > term "medical> quackery" at every opportunity because its use resonates loudly as an > alarm to the public.> The authors know that libelous remarks directed against specific > physicians or groups are> very difficult to prosecute and that their public indignation makes > for good journalistic copy> without fear of reprisal. > > n) Further, the committee states that "no other spirochetal illness > including.tertiary syphilis is> managed in an analogous fashion." Syphilis, caused by treponema > pallidum, has a formidable and sinister history for causing human > illness in past centuries, and in recent times has experienced a > renaissance associated with the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Unlike Borrelia > burgdorferi, treponema pallidum has only one host, the human, whereas > Borrelia burgdorferi has many hosts. For the record, we use a "tongue > in cheek" byword when> referring to treponema pallidum, which we refer to as "Lyme's DUMB > Cousin." We use this> droll term based on comparative genomic profiling among spirochetal > and other bacterial> species, which makes Borrelia burgdorferi the clear winner in the > microbial genetic> lottery.> > o) The authors compare the duration of treatment for Lyme disease to > that of tuberculosis,> another predominantly intracellular infection. We are amused at the > implications by the> authors that tuberculosis is treated successfully for a relatively > limited period of 6 months,> compared to LBC which "may go on for years". However, in the not so > distant past,> tuberculosis used to require 18 months or more of antibiotics. When > better drugs became> available and pulsed antimicrobial programs were employed, therapy > was made more> efficient and shorter in duration. Of interest, pulsed therapy is > precisely the treatment> methodology employed by the Jemsek Specialty Clinic and other Lyme-> literate physicians in> treating "chronic Lyme disease". Furthermore, as experience is > gained, treatment programs> using combination antimicrobials, as is the case for tuberculosis and > HIV/AIDS among many> other complex infections, is also allowing for more efficient therapy > of shorter duration in> LBC.> > p) In terms of persistence, dozens of articles support this notion, > including some of the authors'earlier works. From a purely > observational basis, if Borrelia burgdorferi is so easily dealt with > in the infectious state, why does it proliferatively persist in hard-> shelled ticks, various small and large mammals, and humans (not the > end host). > > Why is it revered by microbiologists as the most uniquely and > lavishly genetically-endowed bacterium on the planet, and why is it > being so heavily patented by Universities, researchers and others, > including the majority of the members of the committee who performed > the NEJM review?> > q) Approaching the stratosphere of arrogance, the committee goes on > to summarize Lyme> disease into 4 convenient categories, like shoeboxes lined up in a > row for shoeless and> illiterate providers, without vote or consensus via any authorized > committee or organization> which would consummately arrive at these "categories"; and yet these > were blithely> published by the NEJM. So, because they must be addressed, we will do > so.> > i. They do not accurately encompass the majority of Lyme disease > patients.> > ii. They choose to ignore patients who present to their physicians > with clear erythema> migrans rashes and other clinical symptoms of Lyme disease, but who > are told they "do> not have Lyme", because the physicians do not recognize its clinical > manifestations, or> are relying on surveillance criteria definitions, and inaccurate > laboratory testing.> > iii. These individuals are then not treated, and go on to develop > Lyme disease in a chronic> form.> > iv. They also do not address patients who are misdiagnosed with other > illnesses such as> MS, ALS, RA and CFS.> > v. The committee assumes at all points that patients are treated > appropriately for their> illness, and yet in fact, most patients receive little or no > treatment, which is why they> remain chronic.> > vi. In patients with positive serology and no objective symptoms, the > Bb-associated illness> may be subclinical, as research proves that Bb remains dormant within > the body for> extended periods of time, from months to years after infection. Some > of the committee> members' own research clearly states this.> > vii. Category 4 disease, as newly crafted and defined by the Lyme > Cabal, has had an> embarrassingly small number of treatment trials upon which to draw > these conclusions.> Further, in eschewing the study and expansion of the scientific and > clinical horizons for> the innumerable issues which remain to be addressed in this illness > complex, the> authors make it clear that they are content to remain entrenched in > their existing dogma> perhaps until it is "time to announce the Lyme epidemic" and bring > out the new tests> and vaccines. > > The most prominent of the studies mentioned above was performed by > Dr. Mark Klempner, a committee member who also happens to be on the > editorial> board of the New England Journal of Medicine. If the NEJM is an > objective medical journal, we ask why this fact was not made > prominently apparent for its readership.> > r) The committee is disdainful about antibiotic therapy > causing "considerable harm" to patients,> but fails to mention that all medical treatments have inherent risks. > This allowance by the> editor of the NEJM is in and of itself, unpardonable. Further, the > authors fail to present a balanced representation of the patient > populations in question. They fail for example, to> mention that untreated and dismissed chronic Lyme patients commit > suicide at alarming rates> due to the hopelessness and agony associated with this illness.> > s) The committee members claim those running clinical studies have > had "difficulty" securing> patients who meet the criteria of their obviously biased studies - > such as the elimination of> 500 people who were excluded because they lacked a "substantiated > history of Lyme> disease." Substantiated by what account? Most Lyme patients have no > substantiated history> of Lyme disease because doctors are missing the diagnosis and failing > to treat these> patients.more circular logic. Again, the committee is myopic in > arriving at its conclusions> about the scarcity of patients, either those "well-documented" or who > develop "clinically> significant problems" after "conventional treatment." We would like > to provide the benefit> of the doubt to the Lyme Cabal and pray that their glossing over and > misinterpreting/ignoring> or trivializing consistent and debilitating patient issues are not > intentional.> > t) There are untold thousands of individuals in our country and > around the world who live> unfulfilled and tortuous lives due to the political situation > surrounding LBC and consequent> access to quality care issues. A symptom of the rudimentary state in > which we find ourselves> is made evident by the authors suggesting that eligibility criteria > for controlled trials require> symptoms be "severe enough to interfere with the patient's ability to > function". This line of> reasoning is simply astounding in its unsophistication and > insensitivity. The committee's statements about controlled trials and > documented disease history is admirable and would be more so if the > medical community was fully engaged in an environment in which, as in > HIV research, the best minds were involved and funded in the pursuit > of the study of this illness> complex. Patients know what has made them better and it is highly > insulting to patients who> are denied care or who had irreversible adverse health consequences > to themselves or their> loved ones because of suspect motivations by those who now hold > power...almost> certainly the patient's interest is not the primary concern in this > story.> > IN SUMMARY> Open attempts to intimidate the Connecticut Attorney General, > physicians, and patients are not> lending credibility to those who are perpetrating this behavior. > Nevertheless, the politicization of an illness for which many people > are tragically suffering, and who are afforded very little credence > by the scientific community when evidence shows their illness is > real, and who are subjected to increasingly narrow treatment options, > may indeed be approaching not only anti-trust violations, but > scientific fraud on a grand scale.> > The public confusion comes not just from the myriad of symptoms or > the restrictive definition of the illness itself, but also from > physicians and patients who are well aware of the illness within > their own bodies, and who are confounded by the unwillingness of the > scientific community to embrace a medical illness of such major > significance. Rather, many perceive an increasing plaintive and > obvious disregard for the welfare of thousands of patients by a small > number of individuals entrenched in power and trapped within their > logic loops, whether these loops are genuinely believed, or > contrived. Inaction is> somehow justified on the basis of a lack of double-blind, randomized > studies. Regrettably, there also appears to be a barrier to > publication of dissenting views by the editors and reviewers of > established journals. The public, including some physicians, do know > how to read, after all, and patents and a pattern of interpretative > reversal in research opinions speak volumes about the truth of LBC. > So does successful resolution of symptoms through open-ended, long-> term antibiotic treatment of Lyme disease.> > In this complex illness, therapy is most often successful, i.e. life > restoring, when it is patterned on an increasingly sophisticated > understanding of the many interwoven issues involved in the illness, > and in the successful integration of therapies which address the > immunosuppressive, multi-systemic, polymicrobial disease complex > which is LBC. > > Most of us deeply involved in patient care don't care who takes > credit for change, and realize that traditional powers must engage > for this to happen. We encourage this at every opportunity. > Physicians and patients are earnestly waiting for the truth to be > revealed, and we hope that this truth will arise from the medical > community in a proactive and vigorously engaged manner. LBC is just > part of what is driving an epidemic of unwellness and chronic illness > in this country. The paradigm of medicine and chronic illness must > change over time...too> many of us are sick and getting sicker.> > [1] Feder HM Jr, BJB, O'Connell S, Shapiro ED, Steere AC, > Wormser GP, and the Ad Hoc> International Lyme Disease Group*. NEJM. 2007 Oct 4;357(14):1422-> 1430. A review article> [2] Wormser GP, Dattwyler RJ, Shapiro ED, Halperin JJ, Steere AC, > Klempner MS, Krause PJ, Bakken> JS, Strle F, Stanek G, Bockenstedt L, Fish D, Dumler JS, Nadelman > RB. "The Clinical Assessment,> Treatment, and Prevention of Lyme Disease, Human Granulocytic > Anaplasmosis, and Babesiosis:> Clinical Practice Guidelines by the Infectious Diseases Society of > America." Clinical Infectious> Diseases 2006;43:1089-1134. > ----------------------------------------------------------> ---------->

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You can definitely talk here. Don't worry if you encounter some strong bias either for or against the lyme dx. Which test did you take? Did you test positive on the western blot or on one of the other more controversial methods out there? What are your docs suggesting you do? Do they think it's an old or new infection? pennyamydent9 <amydent9@...> wrote: I got a positive lyme result today.if anyone here wants to chat about lyme

info please contact me offgroup.or is it ok to talk here?amy

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