Nathan Covington

Nathan Covington

pdfThis diet (click to download PDF) is intended to "starve out" yeast (Candida), which is common with Lyme, as a yeast overgrowth is a known side-effect of taking antibiotics.  I like to call it a diet for "healthy human beings" - as it would likely help with treating a variety of illnesses.  

 

 

See Also:

https://organicdailypost.com/3-foods-to-avoid-if-you-have-lyme-disease/

https://organicdailypost.com/lyme-disease-natural-treatment/

 

Saturday, 09 July 2016 14:45

Lyme Rash Identification

Examples of Lyme Rashes:
FEWER THAN 50% OF PATIENTS WITH LYME DISEASE RECALL ANY RASH.

More Photos:

http://www.medicinenet.com/image-collection/lyme_disease_picture/picture.htm

Saturday, 09 July 2016 14:45

Tick Removal

How to Properly Remove a Tick:

Improper removal of ticks greatly increases the risk of acquiring tick-borne infections. Squeezing the tick or putting substances on the tick to try to make it "back out" may aggravate it enough that it injects into you whatever disease organisms are inside it.

Saturday, 09 July 2016 14:45

Physical Fitness

Yoga and meditation are possibly the most helpful techniques when dealing with Lyme.  

I've written and shared my own experience with Lyme disease before (and Spooky2 / biofeedback) and I found this really good video about COVID and the similarities w/ Lyme:

Saturday, 09 July 2016 14:45

Nutritional Supplements for Lyme

Based on pdfDr. Burrascano’s guide (page 27), the following supplements may be helpful in treating (managing) Lyme disease:

  • Vitamin C
  • Probiotics (Kefir, Pharmanex Pro Bio)
  • Multi-Vitamin (Pharmanex LifePak)
  • CoQ-10 (Researched Nutritionals, take with food)
  • Alpha lipoic acid (facilitates entry of CoQ-10)
  • Vitamin B (complex)
  • Essential Fatty Acids (Krill oil, plant oil)
  • Magnesium (with potassium, MgK)
  • Vitamin D
  • Milk thistle
  • Cranberry
  • Ginkgo biloba

Please be sure to read the guide in its entirety, as Dr. Burrascano goes into many details about how and why you should be taking each of these.  Please note that while you can purchase these items from a standard grocery store, you may want to research higher-quality options. 

Further Reading: Salt/C Plus Protocol

Saturday, 09 July 2016 14:45

Treatment Guide

Updates:

PENTAGON MAY HAVE RELEASED WEAPONIZED TICKS THAT HELPED SPREAD OF LYME DISEASE: INVESTIGATION ORDERED

Treating 'Chronic' Lyme With Antibiotics Doesn't Work: Study (added 12/17/18)

 

pdfDr. Horowitz' Lyme Disease Questionnaire (self test)


Dr. Burrascano, a graduate of New York University School of Medicine, practiced Internal Medicine with a strong interest in Tick-borne diseases for over 20 years. During that period, he became known as one of the worlds leading experts on diagnosing and treating Lyme and associated tick-borne diseases. He wrote 16 editions of a Lyme Disease treatment guide, most recently published in 2008.  Here is a link to download the PDF:

pdfDiagnostic Hints and Treatment Guidelines for Lyme Disease

 

Lyme disease is a Multi-Systemic Disease caused by the bacteria called Borrelia burgdorferi (Bb) which normally is a bacterial spirochete (spiral) shape. Lyme Disease Symptoms

General Early Lyme disease Symptoms & Signs :
The Erythema Migrans (EM) rash is only found in 50% of patients at the site of the bite. The classic bulls eye rash is a type of EM rash that has a central clearing and is found in about 9% of cases. Some patients have no rash at all. Other types of rashes anywhere on the body - signals disseminated disease. Fever & Flu like Symptoms/Illness.

Musculoskeletal: joint pain or swelling or stiffness, muscle pain, shin splints, neck or back stiffness, migrating muscle pain or cramps, TMJ, neck creaks & cracks, tender soles.

Reproductive: testicular pain/pelvic pain, menstrual irregularity, unexplained milk production (lactation), sexual dysfunction or loss of libido.

pdfCardiac/Pulmonary: Chest pain or rib soreness, shortness of breath, heart palpitations, pulse skips, slow pulse, heart block, heart murmur, valve prolapse.

Neurological: muscle twitching, headache, tingling, numbness, burning or stabbing sensations, facial paralysis (that looks like Bell’s palsy), dizziness, poor balance, increased motion sickness, light-headedness, wooziness, difficulty walking, tremor, confusion, difficulty thinking/concentrating/ reading, forgetfulness, poor short term memory, disorientation (getting lost, going to wrong place), difficulty with speech, double or blurry vision, eye pain, blindness, increased floaters, increased sensitivity to light or sound or smell, buzzing or ringing in ears, ear pain, decreased hearing or deafness, difficulty swallowing, seizure activity, white matter lesions, low blood pressure.

Neuropsychiatric: mood swings, irritability, depression, disturbed sleep (too much, too little, early awakening), personality changes, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), violent outbursts, paranoia, panic/anxiety attacks, hallucinations.

Gastrointestinal: Nausea or vomiting, difficulty eating, change in bowel function. Constipation, diarrhea, gastritis, abdominal cramping, irritable bladder or bladder dysfunction, cystitis.

Other: fever, sweats, or chills, weight change (loss or gain), fatigue, tiredness, hair loss, swollen glands, sore throat, difficulty swallowing, swelling around the eyes, & swelling in feet.

Material provided by Lyme Disease Association, Inc.

 

Last week, the U.S. House of Representatives quietly passed a bill requiring the Inspector General of the Department of Defense (DoD) to conduct a review into whether the Pentagon experimented with ticks and other blood-sucking insects for use as biological weapons between 1950 and 1975.

If the Inspector General finds that such experiments occurred, then, according to the bill, they must provide the House and Senate Armed Services committees with a report on the scope of the research and "whether any ticks or insects used in such experiments were released outside of any laboratory by accident or experiment design," potentially leading to the spread of diseases such as Lyme.

Coffee enemas, $13K “photon” therapy, endless antibiotics—all unproven, dangerous. 

Tick season is upon us, prompting fresh warnings about bites that can transmit Lyme disease. But in a report published Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a group of doctors isn’t warning about the disease—instead, the group is warning about possible treatments.

Alternative medical treatments for so-called “chronic Lyme disease” are all unproven and potentially harmful—some even deadly—the group warns. That group includes doctors from across the country, including the University of Colorado, the CDC, Yale University, Stanford, and the University of California, San Francisco. In the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the doctors reveal chilling accounts of five patients who pursued such bogus treatments. What followed was years of heart-wrenching suffering, avoidable life-threatening infections, and death.

“Patients and their health care providers need to be aware of the risks associated with treatments for chronic Lyme disease,” the doctors declare. The case reports certainly offer a heart-wrenching PSA.

[Full Article]

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