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Post by Admin on Nov 18, 2016 12:51:13 GMT -5
CHARLES E. HOLMAN FOUNDATION It depends on whether you ask the IDSA and the majority of mainstream medicine or whether you ask seasoned Lyme disease specialists who stay abreast of medical literature. We believe that there is no way to differentiate brain lesions as seen on MRI and it is the belief of the CEHMDF that anyone getting an auto-immune diagnosis should be questioning the possibility of infectious cause. She should be worked up for Lyme disease and especially if she has the symptoms. The treatment would be opposite of the immunosuppressive therapies used to treat autoimmune disease. Many patients with a high ANA (anti-nuclear antibodies) indicative of auto-immune illness have noted these levels returns to normal once their Lyme disease is sufficiently treated. You can find lots of information about Lyme patients misdiagnosed with MS if you do a google search. It's unfortunately very common.
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Post by Admin on Sept 21, 2017 5:41:28 GMT -5
tick tock
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