Lyme Disease
An Epidemic Whose
Time Has Come

By Dr. Leon Hecht, N.D.

Lyme Disease (LD) is a bacterial infection resulting from a tick bite and is the fastest spreading emerging epidemic in the United States. Black legged ticks (deer ticks) infect humans, while deer and white-footed mice are the primary carriers of this bacterial infection. A recent study showed 50% to 70% of the deer ticks in the Durham/Lee woodlands are infected with Lyme disease.

Signs of an initial LD infection include flulike symptoms (sore throat, headache, body aches and pains, fever, nausea) while a rash occurs in less than 50% of cases. Having a bull’s eye Lyme rash is a definitive diagnosis of LD and should be treated immediately with antibiotics.

Chronic Lyme disease is an infection lasting greater than 1 year. Fatigue is the most universal presenting symptom, along with headaches, fevers and flushes of heat, body aches, muscle and joint pain, brain fog, declining memory, tingling in extremities, and a sundry of other neurological, cardiac, eye and systemic symptoms. One of the most important clues of LD is that symptoms will wax and wane over time. These symptoms can be of recent onset or have begun years ago.

The diagnosis of LD is primarily a clinical diagnosis, meaning a “Lyme Literate Doctor” (LLD) can often diagnose you as having LD based on a carefully taken case history, your symptoms and a physical exam. Lab diagnosis is then used to confirm the LLD’s suspicion. A negative Lyme test does not mean you don’t have LD!

There is a significant difference in Lyme testing laboratories. A specialty lab called Igenex offers the most accurate testing for LD, while local labs offer a Lyme test that is 30% to 70% less likely to detect whether or not you have a Lyme infection.
A person newly infected with LD (less than 2 months) should take antibiotics immediately, as the more recent their infection, the more likely they will be cured by an antibiotic.

Conventional antibiotics are used to decrease the numbers of Lyme bacteria in an individual’s body. This will aid in the initial immune recovery and help them feel better; oftentimes the effect is only temporary.

Natural medicine treatment of persons with Chronic LD begins with the recognition that the patient has been ill for an extended period of time and it is likely many body systems are affected. Hormone assessment (adrenal, thyroid, testosterone, estrogen, progesterone, growth hormone) and balancing is necessary for optimal body functioning. Sleep disturbances are common and need to be addressed. A chronic Lyme infection suppresses the immune system. Nutrition and botanical medicine are crucial to immune recovery and stimulation. Specific plant medicines can assist in spirochete killing and immune stimulation. Often the digestive system needs support from repeated insults from antibiotics. Probiotics, antifungal botanicals, and digestive enzymes are essential. Anti inflammatory herbs can help quench the immune fires of infection, decrease pain, aching and fevers. Quercetin, curcurmin, ginger, bromelain, and others can be helpful. Intravenous nutritional therapy replenishes vitamin and mineral levels. Gentle detoxification and a low allergy diet are crucial to immune system recovery. Moderate protein and carbohydrate, high vegetable diets are necessary for optimal immune and digestive recovery. Resistance training (as appropriate) stimulates muscle, tendon and joint repair, immune stimulation, and hormonal balance. Brain fog (encephalopathy) is one of the most distressing symptoms and can be helped by treating the underlying infection and using brain nutrients, neurotransmitter precursors and hormones. Heavy metal testing and treatment is essential to optimal immune and brain functioning.

As you can see, chronic LD is a complex and multi system illness. Many persons with chronic LD have not been diagnosed and treated appropriately. Effective treatment of infected individuals is best accomplished in many cases using conventional antibiotics and natural medicine.

Dr. Leon Hecht III, N.D. received his doctorate of naturopathic medicine degree from Bastyr University of Natural Health Sciences in 1988. While he treats a wide variety of illnesses, persons with Lyme Disease constitute most of his practice. Dr. Hecht integrates antibiotic therapy with natural medicine including hormonal treatments, nutritional medical therapy, botanical therapies, intravenous nutrition, brain neurotransmitter nutritional therapy and healthy aging medicine.