Nederlandse Samenvatting:
Twee Amerikaanse artsen vinden dat nagenoeg al hun patienten met CFS, FMS positief testen op Borrelia Burgdorferi d.m.v. Westernblot testen. Sommige pati?nten testen pas positief na 5-10 keer. De pati?nten kwamen uit Houston, Texas en omgeving, een gebied dat normaal geen hoge prevalentie heeft van met Borrelia besmette teken. Dit gaf de 2 onderzoekers de conclusie dat er iets mis is met de huidige criteria van de CDC voor de “ziekte van Lyme” die volgens hun beter “Borreliose” kan heten. En dat Borreliose geen epedimie maar eerder een pandemie is.
‘Lyme disease’: ancient engine of an unrecognized borreliosis pandemic?
Diversified Medical Practices, Texas, Houston, USA. wth928@aol.com
Medical Hypotheses (2003) 60(5), 742–759
Summary
Unexpectedly we have found large numbers of chronically ill Borrelia burgdorferi PCR- and seropositive patients in Houston, Texas, a zoonotically ‘non-endemic’ area. In order to understand this finding prior to sufficient data availability, we chose to examine critically currently accepted but troublesome ‘Lyme disease’ concepts. Our method was to analyze each foundation ‘Lyme disease’ premise within the context of available medical and veterinary literature, then to reconstruct the disease model consistent with the preponderance of that data. We find the present conceptualization of the illness seriously truncated, with a high likelihood of two distinct but connected forms of human B. burgdorferi infection. The yet-unrecognized form appears to have a broader clinical presentation, wider geographic distribution, and vastly greater prevalence. We conclude that ‘Lyme disease’ currently acknowledges only its zoonosis arm and is a limited conceptualization of a far more pervasive and unrecognized infection state that must be considered a global epidemic.
Complete artikel in PDF formaat:
http://www.ilads.org/files/harvey.pdf