The psychological effects of Lyme  disease 
_http://www.igenex.com/psychological_effects.htm_ 
(http://www.igenex.com/psychological_effects.htm) 
By Valerie Andews 
 
Can a tick bite drive you crazy? 
 
Doctors warn that Lyme disease may cause  personality changes 
 

A walk in the woods nearly cost Mike M. his sanity. After  receiving 
multiple tick bites, Mike broke out in an angry rash and his joints  began to 
ache. In the next few months, his behavior grew increasingly bizarre.  He was 
no 
longer able to read or concentrate, and became so anxious he couldn’t  
leave the house. Eventually, Mike was treated for chronic Lyme disease, an  
illness that can play havoc with the mind. 
 
 
Since its discovery in 1975, Lyme disease has reached epidemic  proportion 
in the United States. While the Centers for Disease Control reports  19,000 
cases of this tick-borne illness in 2002, the agency estimates that the  
actual number may be tenfold higher: 190,000—that’s four times the rate of new 
 HIV infections. 
 
 
“Lyme disease is a major problem yet, tragically, many people  fail to 
receive the proper treatment,” says Bernard Raxlen, MD, a Greenwich, CT,  
psychiatrist and secretary of the International Lyme and Associated Diseases  
Society (ILADS), a medical organization dedicated to ongoing research and  
increasing public awareness of this devastating illness. 
 
 
Lyme often begins with flu-like symptoms, headaches, fatigue,  swelling of 
the joints, muscle pain and gastrointestinal distress. Most  physicians have 
been taught to look for evidence of a tick bite and a red  bull’s-eye rash, 
yet fewer than half of all Lyme patients recall being bitten or  develop 
tell-tale skin eruptions. As a result many are misdiagnosed with other  
disabling illnesses such as chronic fatigue, fibromyalgia, or MS. 
 
As Lyme disease progresses, it can attack the nervous system,  producing 
learning disabilities, mood swings, anxiety and depression, panic  attacks, 
obsessive behavior, sudden rages and other psychiatric diagnoses. Says  
Raxlen, “When this happens, we’re looking at a completely different syndrome 
and  
one that is harder to cure.” 
 
 
A recent European study shows that psychiatric in-patients are  nearly 
twice as likely as the average population to test positive for Lyme, and  the 
National Institutes of Health are currently sponsoring a major study of  
neuropsychiatric Lyme disease in an effort to illuminate specific changes in 
the  
brain. 
 
 
Psychiatric Lyme has been linked with virtually every  psychiatric 
diagnosis and can affect people of all ages and from every walk of  life. A 
former 
honor roll student is diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder  and pegged 
as a “problem kid” because he can’t sit still in class. A lawyer has  to 
close her practice because she can’t concentrate and suffers from anxiety  
attacks. A young mother is so sensitive to noise that she can no longer 
tolerate 
 her baby’s cry and is afraid that she will harm her child. A retired 
salesman  develops a compulsive habit of writing all over everything—he covers 
everything  from the tablecloth to matchbooks with meaningless scribbles. 
 
 
Family members are baffled by these transformations;  counselors and 
physicians are consulted, often to no avail. While these  individuals may also 
have migrating muscles pain, headaches and problems with  their joints—common 
signs of Lyme—these symptoms are rarely picked up in a  mental health 
evaluation. And when traditional psychiatric medication fails to  produce a 
cure, 
the patient grows more desperate. 
 
 
The Search for a  Diagnosis 
 
 
“Most people come to see me because they’ve got something  wrong that 
nobody else can figure out,” says Debra Solomon, MD, a psychiatrist  who 
practices in North Kingston, RI. Fifteen years ago Solomon was confronted  with 
a 
medical mystery. More and more patients were coming in with the same  group 
of symptoms—fatigue, headaches, migrating joint and muscle pain,  accompanied 
by anxiety, depression, and memory problems. When one of her  patients 
turned out to have Lyme disease, she tested the others, and found that  nearly 
all were positive. 
 
 
Recent studies show that certain areas of Rhode Island have  the highest 
tick population in the world. Today many of Solomon’s patients come  from the 
island Jamestown, a small farming community where ticks are abundant.  Among 
her cases are: 
 
 
A college student in her early twenties who started hearing  voices. “She 
came from a good family and had no previous emotional problems,”  says 
Solomon. A businesswoman who suddenly became manic-depressive. “In periods  of 
high energy, she wouldn’t sleep and felt all-powerful. She’d start a new  
business and begin spending lots of money, then she’d crash.” A high school  
athlete had to drop basketball because he didn’t have the stamina and couldn’
t  get through his classes without falling sleep. “The teachers accused him 
of not  paying attention, but he didn’t have the concentration to do the 
work.” A  40-year-old book editor who was gaining weight and getting lame in 
her left leg.  “She couldn’t think or process information, and was worried 
about her job.”  “Lyme affects nearly every person on this island,” says 
Solomon, “yet each  person responds to it in very different ways.” 
 
 
How can a physician tell the difference between true mental  illness and 
symptoms linked to Lyme disease? With Lyme disease, a patient’s  psychiatric 
symptoms don’t quite fit the textbook definition. There is usually  no 
previous history of psychiatric illness. Symptoms often come in cycles.  
Patients 
usually do not respond well to psychiatric medication. And they often  
describe their problems in very physical terms. 
 
 
Lyme patients often say, “There’s a wall in my brain and I  can’t seem to 
move my thoughts from the back to the front.” “This arises from  
encephalopathy, an inflammation in the brain that affects cognitive function,”  
Solomon explains. 
 
 
Symptoms often worsen as the Lyme bacteria grow active and  begin to 
reproduce. At the same time, a patient may experience physical  symptoms, such 
as 
fatigue, muscle pain or headaches. Flare-ups are often  triggered by stress, 
as in the case of Bob C. who ran a shipping department for  a manufacturing 
company. Bob had dozens of people answering to him, but Lyme  disease made 
him anxious and unable to concentrate. Because he couldn’t think,  he lost 
his job, and his symptoms grew more intense. 
 
 
Family problems, economic changes, job loss, surgery, an auto  accident, or 
a bad case of the flu, can send Lyme patients into a sudden  tailspin. 
Along with antibiotics, these people need to rest—and do anything they  can to 
lessen their emotional load. 
 
 
The catch-22 is that chronic Lyme disease makes it hard to  think and 
perform one’s daily tasks. This inevitably causes financial hardship  and puts 
a 
strain on family relationships. 
 
 
Effects of Lyme Disease on  Marriages 
 
 
“My patients come in to talk about their marital problems and  are 
surprised to learn that they are linked to an organic illness,” says  Virginia 
Sherr, MD, a psychiatrist who practices in eastern Pennsylvania,  another 
region 
known for its high rate of tick-borne infections. Ninety percent  of Sherr’s 
patients test positive for Lyme disease. She then has the job of  
describing to them just how this condition can affect the mind and the 
emotions. 
 
 
Lyme disease can cause increasing irritability and dramatic  flares of 
anger, says Sherr. 
 
 
“Suddenly you hear bone-cutting verbal assaults from people  who are 
usually more measured and benign. They may have been harboring some  small 
grievance for years, then that hot spot comes to life and they spew out  all 
this 
venom. Such outbursts cause lasting wounds.” 
 
 
While some Lyme patients become verbally abusive, others lose  confidence 
and withdraw from social situations. Mary L. tried to explain to her  husband 
that she no longer had the stamina for dinner parties and that she  dreaded 
going out. The husband felt that she was faking it. “Mary’s husband and  
her internist, who knew little about Lyme disease, ganged up on her,” Sherr  
reports. “The doctor said, ‘You used to be so full of life, but you’ve less 
 yourself go completely. You’re not even trying!’” 
 
 
“Physicians who don’t know that Lyme causes personality  changes may be 
dismissive or sharply critical of the patient. Our goal should be  to educate 
couples and help them cope.” 
 
 
Sherr cites one devoted couple who are both infected with Lyme  disease. “
The man has major cognitive problems and the wife helps him with his  memory. 
She has bouts of extreme impatience, yet he gently guides her through  them.
” They have begun to weather the storm together—with the help of  
antibiotics and marriage counseling. 
 
 
Lyme Disease and Domestic  Violence 
 
 
“Lyme disease often strikes an entire families and the result  is a higher 
incidence of divorce, family dysfunction, and domestic violence,”  says 
Robert Bransfield, MD, a psychiatrist in Red Bank, New Jersey. “Tempers  flare 
and you see increasing conflict.” 
 
 
“Lyme disease is like an injury of the brain,” says  Bransfield. “Patient 
are less able to think things through, and tend to act  impulsively. A 
mother may suddenly lash out at her child and a husband may lose  control and 
abuse his wife. “We underestimate the role of infectious disease in  domestic 
violence,” he adds.
 
 
An aggressive response is more likely if, in addition to Lyme  disease, a 
patient has another tick-borne infection called Babesia.  More than one 
infection can be transmitted by the same  tick, and when Babesia is added to 
Lyme, this may make the patient  more aggressive. “It’s like putting a match to 
gasoline,” Bransfield says. 
 
 
Bransfield has testified in court on behalf of such patients  who have been 
accused of everything from assault to murder. (In one instance, a  patient 
killed his partner, killed the family pet, then killed himself.) 
 
 
People with Lyme disease alone usually don’t go to these  extremes. 
However, they may be irritable and prone to sudden  rages. Bransfield says 
young 
people are the most likely to act out.  “I’ve seen so many straight-A kids 
whose grades suddenly start to slip. Then  they rebel against the family and 
start fighting with their peers.” They can  also turn their rage against 
themselves. “I’m often on the phone with a teen in  a state of crisis,” says 
Bransfield, “Feeling suicidal comes in waves and these  reactions are very 
hard to predict. However, these kids generally improve after  being treated 
with antibiotics.” 
 
 
Schools are becoming more enlightened about the problems  caused by 
tick-borne diseases, Raxlen notes. In Newtown, CT, for example,  teachers are 
asked 
to report any sudden dips in grades or unusual behavior that  may be linked 
to Lyme disease. And many make special arrangements for at-home  tutoring 
while the student convalesces. 
 
 
Losing Control of Life 
 
 
When Lyme disease goes undiagnosed—or isn’t treated long  enough—it can 
bankrupt businesses and destroy whole careers. 
 
 
A CEO of an insurance company was diagnosed with Lyme disease  and given 
antibiotics—but he didn’t take them long enough. Months later, his  symptoms 
returned with a vengeance. He had ghoulish nightmares and woke up  drenched. 
At work, he felt anxious and couldn’t concentrate. Eventually he  forgot 
everything he’d learned about insurance. When he neglected to send in a  
disability payment on his own policy, the company denied his claim. “This man  
lost tens of thousands of dollars that would have helped him through his  
illness,” say Raxlen. “In the end, he had to sell his building and disband his  
business.” 
 
 
People with Lyme disease often have trouble keeping up with  ordinary tasks—
one Connecticut housewife walked into the library, dumped her dry  cleaning 
on the counter, and waited with increasing irritation for an attendant  to 
help her. Finally a friend walked up and asked, “Don’t you know where you  
are?” 
 
 
Lyme disease can also affect the part of the brain that deals  with signs 
and symbols—making it hard to read maps or drive from place to place.  A real 
estate agent with Lyme disease stopped at a traffic light. When the  signal 
turned green she didn’t move. An angry motorist yelled, “What’s the  
matter with you. Why can’t you go on the green?” The woman replied, “I’ve  
forgotten what green means.” 
 
 
“Lyme produces a microedema, or swelling in the brain,” says  Raxlen. “
This affects your ability to process information. It’s like finding out  that 
there’s LSD in the punch, and you’re not sure what’s going to happen next  
or if you’re going to be in control of your own thoughts.” 
 
 
ILADS physicians say these symptoms can be alleviated or  reversed with 
antibiotics, but stress that Lyme disease must be diagnosed early  and treated 
right away. 
 
 
Treating Lyme Disease 
 
 
Most doctors prescribe three to four weeks of antibiotics for  initial 
cases of Lyme disease. Yet according to the ILADS, this is not enough.  The 
Lyme 
bacteria has a “cloaking device” that enables it to hide in  the cells and 
body tissues. If it’s not completely eradicated,  symptoms will recur and 
with great intensity. To avoid relapses, ILADS  recommended six to eight 
weeks of antibiotics. 
 
 
When Lyme disease moves into a chronic stage, it’s more likely  to lead to 
neurological or psychiatric conditions. Chronic Lyme patients are  harder to 
cure and may need to take antibiotics—orally or intravenously—for  months 
as a time. In this case, ILADS recommends continuing treatment for at  least 
six to eight weeks after all symptoms are resolved. 
 
 
“Lyme disease is often misdiagnosed and it’s costing our  healthcare 
system untold millions of dollars,” says Raxlen. “No one is spared,  neither 
young nor old and each individual can display a puzzling array of  symptoms. 
This illness can have a wide-ranging affects on marriages,  families and jobs.”
 
 
 
RELATED ARTICLES
 
The World's Top Stealth Bug Ends Marriages, Friendships and  Jobs
Bartonella Promotes Addiction, Aggression and Character  Disorders
Dr. James Schaller, M.D.
_http://www.personalconsult.com/articles/schaller_articles/SchalArtStealthBu
gs.pdf_ 
(http://www.personalconsult.com/articles/schaller_articles/SchalArtStealthBugs.pdf)
 
 
Aggression and Lyme Disease
by Robert C. Bransfield,  M.D. Also includes - Deficits caused by LD that 
are sometimes associated with  increased risk for ggressive behavior; and more
_http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/Articles/AggressionAndLymeDisease.htm
_ 
(http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/Articles/AggressionAndLymeDisease.htm)   
_http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/Lymerage.html_ 
(http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/Lymerage.html)  
 
Lyme Disease and Psychiatric Disorders
Lyme Disease the  Cause of 1/3 of Psychiatric Disorders? - Edited from: 
What Psychiatrists Should  Know about Lyme Disease, ILADS
_http://www.hormoneandlongevitycenter.com/nss-folder/pictures/Lyme%20Disease
%20and%20Psychiatric%20Disorders.pdf_ 
(http://www.hormoneandlongevitycenter.com/nss-folder/pictures/Lyme%20Disease%20and%20Psychiatric%20Disorders.pdf)
 
 
Lyme, Depression, and Suicide
By Robert C. Bransfield,  MD
_http://www.canlyme.com/lyme_depression_suicide.html_ 
(http://www.canlyme.com/lyme_depression_suicide.html) 
_http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/Articles/LymeDepressionAndSuicide.htm
_ 
(http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/Articles/LymeDepressionAndSuicide.htm) 
 
Lyme Disease and Cognitive Impairments
by Robert  Bransfield, M.D. Includes sections on -- Introduction; Attention 
Span; Memory;  Processing; Imagery; Organizing and Planning; 
_http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/Articles/LymeDiseaseAndCognitiveImpai
rments.htm_ 
(http://www.mentalhealthandillness.com/Articles/LymeDiseaseAndCognitiveImpairments.htm)
  
 
Do Bartonella Infections Cause Agitation, Panic Disorder, and  
Treatment-Resistant Depression?
Posted 09/13/2007. James L.  Schaller, MD, MAR; Glenn A. Burkland, DMD; 
P.J. Langhoff
Comment - The Bartonella bacilli is the latest in a growing list of  
microbes to be implicated in anxiety and depressive disorders. Others include  
Streptococcus which is thought to cause the PANDAS variant of OCD, the Borna  
Disease virus, and the Lyme Disease bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi. 
Abstract  - _http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/562276_ 
(http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/562276) 
_http://www.anxietyins
ights.info/abstract__do_bartonella_infections_cause_agitation_panic_.htm_ 
(http://www.anxietyinsights.info/abstract__do_bartonella_infections_cause_agitation_panic_.htm)
 
 
Bartonella - Psychiatric Symptoms & Neurological  Symptoms
By James L. Schaller; MD, MAR, DABPN, DAAPM, CMI, CMR,  PA  
So why care about Bartonella?
First, it routinely causes  psychiatric symptoms that fail typical 
treatments. Antidepressants offer no full  cures. Anti-anxiety agents might 
just 
help 50%.  Individuals with  Bartonella can feel depressed, irritable, hostile, 
aggressive and can have rage  attacks and panic attacks. Hallucinations, 
strokes and seizures are possible but  not routine.Below are some examples of 
extreme disease from Bartonella. 
_http://www.personalconsult.com/articles/bartonellasymptoms.html_ 
(http://www.personalconsult.com/articles/bartonellasymptoms.html) 
 
Lyme Disease: A Neuropsychiatric Illness 
By Brian A.  Fallon, M.D., M.P.H., and Jenifer A. Nields, M.D. 
Am J Psychiatry 151:11,  November 1994 pp.1571-1580
Objective : Lyme disease is a multisystemic  illness that can affect the 
central nervous system (CNS), causing neurologic and  psychiatric symptoms. 
The goal of this article is to familiarize psychiatrists  with this 
spirochetal illness. CONTENTS- Objective; Method; Results;  Conclusions; 
Transmission; 
Distribution; Typical Clinical Manifestations of Lyme  Disease;  typical 
Neurologic Manifestations of Lyme Disease; Centers for  Disease Control (CDC) 
Criteria for Diagnosis; Laboratory Testing; CNS Laboratory  Tests for Lyme 
Disease; Neuropsychological Findings; Psychiatric Manifestations  of Lyme 
Disease; Reviews; Psychiatric Case Reports; Psychiatric Series;  Microbiology 
of B. burgdorferi; Pathogenesis of CNS Lyme Disease; Lyme Disease  and 
Syphilis; Future Directions in Research; Conclusions;   Table 1.  
Neuropsychological Test Results among Patients With Disseminated Lyme Disease;  
Table 2. 
Psychiatric Disorders in Larger Series of Patients With Lyme  Disease; 
References- many.
_http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/lymeart.html_ 
(http://www.angelfire.com/biz/romarkaraoke/lymeart.html) 
 
Ignore Bartonella and Stay Ill, Lose a Relationship or Job or Hurt  an Organ
Trivializing Bartonella attached to Red Blood Cells is  Ignoring TNT? 
Radically New 2008 Information about a Flea and Tick Infection  More Common 
than Lyme 
By Dr. James Schaller, MD. As you read this article,  Bartonella is making 
microscopic fat deposits in some human hearts. These will  undermine the 
normal pacemaker stimulation in their heart and cause death.  Others have 
Bartonella inside weakening blood vessel walls which might create a  stroke. 
Still others with Bartonella are struggling with an agitated depression  or 
aggressive rage that makes them prone to suicide. The psychiatric treatment  of 
a patient with Bartonella is highly specialized and most family physicians  
and psychiatrists do not know how to treat a patient suffering from  
Bartonella-caused psychiatric disorders. Bartonella is connected to red blood  
cells that are entering every human organ. Some are leaving their red blood 
cell 
 carriers and entering tissues next to capillaries all over the body. 
Bartonella  bacteria enter all organs and cause the following sample illnesses 
.....
_http://www.personalconsult.com/articles/bartonellanewinfo2008.html_ 
(http://www.personalconsult.com/articles/bartonellanewinfo2008.html)  
 
NEURO-COGNITIVE LYME DISEASE 
many links. Lyme disease  patients can experience symptoms such attention 
problems, short-term memory  loss, depression, panic attacks, personality 
changes, mood swings, and/or  learning disabilities. Literature on these 
manifestations is found below. 
_http://www.lymeinfo.net/neuropsych.html_ 
(http://www.lymeinfo.net/neuropsych.html) 
 
Ignore Bartonella and Die - Trivializing Bartonella is Like  Ignoring TNT
by Dr. James Schaller, M.D
They enter all organs and  cause the following sample illnesses: All 
Psychiatric  disorders, Numbness or Loss of Sensation, Dizziness, Headaches,  
Tremors, Irritability, Agitation, Aggression, Impulsivity, Oxygen Deprivation,  
Panic Attacks, Fainting, Muscle Spasms and/or Weakness, Joint Pain, Upper 
and  Lower G.I. Tract Disorders, Kidney, Bladder, and Urogenital Disorders. 
Also  common are: Fatigue, Sleep Disorders, Memory Problems, and Drowsiness. 
Obvious  physical symptoms such as Lumps in the Skin, Many types of Rashes, 
Polyps in or  on Major Organs, Ocular Disorders, e.g., Blurred Vision, Depth 
Perception, &  Retinal Damage. The reason Bartonella is so common is that it 
is found in many  vectors or insect carriers. Here are some sample vectors 
and  ways a  Bartonella infection can be passed.
_http://www.personalconsult.com/bartonella/publichealthalertv2no8.pdf_ 
(http://www.personalconsult.com/bartonella/publichealthalertv2no8.pdf) 
 
 
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: /pipermail/attachments/20091006/195385d7/attachment.html 
_______________________________________________
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org
http://sustainablelists.org/mailman/listinfo/sustainablelorgbiofuel

Biofuel at Journey to Forever:
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html

Search the combined Biofuel and Biofuels-biz list archives (70,000 messages):
http://www.mail-archive.com/biofuel@sustainablelists.org/

Reply via email to