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Lyme Disease

 

Summary of a Recent Article in
Ladies Home Journal

(from a Tracker on the Internet)

    The recent issue of Lady's Home Journal just had an article on Lymes (July 2001, page 41).
    According to the article, scientists have discovered that a deer tick bite deposits bacteria with several different coatings into your bloodstream; which may be why the current vaccine, Lymerix, is effective in just 75% of people. Even when it does work, its protectiveness is temporary.  The FDA has investigated the risks of Lymerix, finding that not only is it imperfect in effectiveness, but can cause long-lasting side effects, such as arthritis and memory loss.  So apparently these side effects are pretty well documented.
    The Center for Disease Control continues to recommend the vaccine to those who live or work in wooded, bushy or grassy areas and are between 15 and 70, but exclude pregnant women.  For women this is notable, for other than intuition, there is a bit of a time lapse between conception and confirmation of pregnancy; and no research on the effect if the vaccine is taken shortly before conception. 
    Apparently the CDC considers it is an acceptable risk of side effects to take the vaccine.  However, the side effects are not treatable with antibiotics. 
    For information, call the Lyme Disease Foundation at 800-886-5963, or go to www.lyme.org.  The article doesn't say who is the funder for these two information resources, so we don't know what the bias is for that information.
    The article advises removing the tick with blunt tweezers, tugging gently but firmly near the head; don't crush the body.  Swab the bite area with an antiseptic.  This information says it takes two days for the insect to transmit bacteria.

 

Lyme Disease

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