Lyme As Related To Other Diseases
- Lyme neuroborreliosis and dementia
- Lyme-Associated Parkinsonism
- Lyme Disease Misdiagnosed as Alzheimer’s, Parkinsons
- Lyme and Autism
- Multiple Sclerosis and Lyme Disease
- Distinct Cerebrospinal Fluid Proteomes Differentiate Post-Treatment Lyme Disease from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Pericardial manifestations of Lyme disease
New Strains
- Borrelia Bissettii~ A different Lyme Species That May Produce False Negatives
- Highly Divergent Vertebrate and Ixodes scapularis Ticks Reveals Novel americanum, Dermacentor variabilis, and Virome Analysis of Amblyomma
Click Here for Different Articles and Publications on Different Tick Infection Strains
Persistant Lyme
- Formation of ‘dormant’ Borrelia stages
- Monkey-Persistant Lyme Research
- The Case For Chronic Infection: Evidential persistence of Borrelia species post antibiotic exposure in vivo and in vitro
- New class of Toll-like receptor 2 ligands capable of enhancing autoimmunity
- Long-Term Antibiotic Therapy Improves Persistent Symptom
- 73 peer-reviewed studies showing that Lyme disease can persist or relapse despite antibiotic therapy
- Research on Seronegativity- Why we get false negative tests
- Lyme Disease Medical Literature Summaries
Click here for articles and publications related to Persistance of Lyme Disease
Research Showing Transmission of Other Than Ticks
- Transmission from Saliva is Now Proven, Doesn’t Need to Come from the Gut Ruling out the “72 hour attachment Rule”
- The hypothesis that Lyme disease spirochetes were transmitted via the salivary gland route was confirmed when spirochetes were actually identified in tick saliva
- First Study on Birds as Hosts
- Severe Human Granulocytic Anaplasmosis Transmitted by Blood Transfusion
- Detection the infection with Babesia spp. Cytauxzoon felis and Haemobaronella felis in stray cats in Mosul
- Ticks and mosquitoes as vectors of Borrelia burgdorferi
- Recovery Of Lyme Spirochetes By PCR In Semen Samples Of Previously Diagnosed Lyme DiseasePatients
- Adherence of Borrelia burgdorferi to the proteoglycan decorin
- Rickettsial Research – Fighting the Bites of Fleas, Lice, Mites and Ticks
- HARD SCIENCE ON LYME: Ticks can transmit infection the first day
- Clinical evidence for rapid transmission of Lyme disease following a tickbite
Click Here for articles and Publications related to Transmission of Tick Borne Infections
Lyme and Psychiatric Issues
- PSYCHIATRIC IMPACT OF LYME DISEASE
- Distinct Pattern of cognitive Impairment noted in Lyme Patients
- Ilads Psychiatric Brochure
- The Role of Neuropsychology Testing Lyme In Children
- The Neuropsychiatric Assessment of Lyme Disease
- References for Psychiatry and Lyme/Tick-Borne Diseases
- The Human Side Of Lyme
- Understanding The Puzzle Of Chronic Lyme
- Can Lyme Cause Psychiatric Disorders?
- Diseases Of The Mind
- Spinal Fluid and Brain Tests
- Higher Prevalence of Antibodies to Borrelia Burgdorferi in Psychiatric Patients Than in Healthy Subjects
IDSA Articles Denying Chronic Lyme
- A Critical Appraisal of “Chronic Lyme Disease
- Did Lymerix Cause Neurological Impairment in Recipients?
Click Here for more IDSA/CDC Related Articles
Click Here to Read how the Research Contradicts what the IDSA and CDC say about Lyme Disease
Pediatric and Adolescent Lyme
General Lyme Articles
- Amy Tan- Lyme Disease
- A Disease In Disguise
- Treatment Of Lyme Disease
- Lyme Disease and Psychiatric Disorder
- Spirochete Adhesin DbpA Influences Spirochetal Binding to Decorin
- Analysis of the dbpBA Upstream Regulatory Region Controlled by RpoS in Borrelia burgdorferi
- Late Stage Neuropychiatric Lyme Borreliosis Differential Diagnosis and Treatment
- Lyme Disease- A Neuropsychiatric Illness
- Musical Hallucinations In Patients With Lyme Disease
General Lyme Research
- Rickettsial Research – Fighting the Bites of Fleas, Lice, Mites and Ticks
- Spirochete Adhesin DbpA Influences Spirochetal Binding to Decorin
- Clinical effects of fluconazole in patients with neuroborreliosis
- Compounding for Lyme disease
- Carbamazepine in the Treatment of Lyme Disease–Induced Hyperacusis
- Functional Brain Imaging and Neuropsychological Testing in Lyme Disease
- Regional Cerebral Blood Flow and Cognitive Deficits in Chronic Lyme Disease
- Seasonal correlation of sporadic schizophrenia to Ixodesticks and Lyme borreliosis
- The Underdiagnosis of Lyme in Adults and Children
- More IDSA and other Lyme Related Info
- Intracranial aneurysms in three patients with disseminated Lyme borreliosis: cause or chance association?
Coinfections
- Bartonella spp. Bacteremia and Rheumatic Symptoms in Patients from Lyme Disease–endemic Region
- Bartonella: A New Frontier in Chronic Disease
- Detection and Identification ofEhrlichia, Borrelia burgdorferi Sensu Lato, andBartonella Species in Dutch Ixodes ricinusTicks
- Isolation of a New Subspecies, Bartonella vinsoniisubsp. arupensis, from a Cattle Rancher: Identity with Isolates Found in Conjunction withBorrelia burgdorferiand Babesia microti among Naturally Infected Mice
- Persistence of Bartonella spp. stealth pathogens: from subclinical infections to vasoproliferative tumor formation
- Bartonella quintana-induced Vulval Bacillary Angiomatosis
- Blood smear analysis in babesiosis, ehrlichiosis, relapsing fever, malaria, and Chagas disease
- Bartonellosis
- Babesiosis Surveillance — 18 States, 2011
To Keep up to Date on Research Visit Tick Borne Research on Facebook
No matter what article I click on above, all that comes up is “404 not found.” Am I doing something wrong??
When that happens, it means the people who originally posted the articles have removed them or somehow reorganized their website and they now have a different link. AFter trying to keep up with the changing links for ten years and finding they change them almost yearly, I have given up… the best thing to do is to copy the title and post it in the google search so if the article still exists online you can find it. Sadly, Lyme research seems to disappear quickly