| > As for Lyme disease: The actual infection can be treated with a standard course of antibiotics. The infection does not persist indefinitely, although some people experience long-lasting effects after the infection is gone. I don't think it's possible to make an absolute statement like this with 100% certainty given the current state of the art. Lyme is a spirochete, and there also seems to be real research suggesting it can grow biofilm to make it antibiotic resistant or resurgent. There are patients who test positive under CDC criteria, take antibiotics, and never see a transition from IgM to IgG. There are also patients who test postive under CDC criteria, take antibiotics, see a transition, but still experience symptoms (what you would call 'long-lasting effects'). In some cases patients in that situation have extreme gland swelling that when biopsied, seem to contain Lyme. Like all of medicine, I think it's squishier than what you're describing. There is also a lot of crazy shit on the internet, but like you say, that's because people are genuinely suffering and have no alternatives. |
100% certainty is an impossibly high bar in any hard science
This is the problem with chronic Lyme communities: They fixate on the "what if", no matter how small the probabilities. Many of these patients might very well have entirely treatable yet unrelated disorders, but their fixation on the chronic lyme infection theories keeps them focused on the wrong treatments. Many doctors have tried endless treatments with high-dose antibiotics, but the clinical studies consistently show no difference vs. placebo. We all need to move on from the chronic lyme infection theory unless/until someone provides real evidence to the contrary.
> There are patients who test positive under CDC criteria, take antibiotics, and never see a transition from IgM to IgG.
That was me. I tested positive under the CDC criteria, but followup IgG tests were negative. I lucked into a very astute infectious disease specialist who was as up-to-date on the research as I could have hoped for, and she even took the time to walk me through the various theories and studies.