Garlic, herbs help kill 'persister' Lyme bacteria December 4, 2018 @goldenoakfarm

One of my seldom done reposts of an article I felt was of great importance. This one because it uses herbs and garlic and spices and because this is the form I have of Lyme disease.

Lab-dish tests represent an early stage of research, clinical trials are next step
PUBLISHED ON December 3, 2018

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There are an estimated 300,000 new cases of Lyme disease each year in the United States. Standard treatment with doxycycline or an alternative antibiotic for a few weeks usually clears the infection and resolves symptoms. However, about 10 to 20 percent of patients report persistent symptoms including fatigue and joint pain — often termed "persistent Lyme infection" or "post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome" that in some cases can last for months or years. (Lennart Tange, Flickr/Creative Commons)

BALTIMORE — Oils from garlic and several other common herbs and medicinal plants show strong activity against the bacterium that causes Lyme disease, according to a study by researchers at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. These oils may be especially useful in alleviating Lyme symptoms that persist despite standard antibiotic treatment, the study also suggests.

The study, published October 16 in the journal Antibiotics, included lab-dish tests of 35 essential oils — oils that are pressed from plants or their fruits and contain the plant’s main fragrance, or “essence.” The Bloomberg School researchers found that 10 of these, including oils from garlic cloves, myrrh trees, thyme leaves, cinnamon bark, allspice berries and cumin seeds, showed strong killing activity against dormant and slow-growing “persister” forms of the Lyme disease bacterium.

“We found that these essential oils were even better at killing the ‘persister’ forms of Lyme bacteria than standard Lyme antibiotics,” said study senior author Dr. Ying Zhang, MD, PhD, professor in the Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology at the Bloomberg School.

There are an estimated 300,000 new cases of Lyme disease each year in the United States. Standard treatment with doxycycline or an alternative antibiotic for a few weeks usually clears the infection and resolves symptoms. However, about 10 to 20 percent of patients report persistent symptoms including fatigue and joint pain–often termed “persistent Lyme infection” or “post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome” that in some cases can last for months or years.

The cause of this lingering syndrome isn’t known. But it is known that cultures of Lyme disease bacteria, Borrelia burgdorferi, can enter a so-called stationary phase in which many of the cells divide slowly or not at all. The slow-dividing or dormant cells are “persister” cells, which can form naturally under nutrient starvation or stress conditions, and are more resistant to antibiotics. Some researchers have sought other drugs or medicinal compounds that can kill persister Lyme bacteria in the hope that these compounds can be used to treat people with persistent Lyme symptoms.

Zhang and his laboratory have been at the forefront of these efforts. In 2014, his lab screened FDA-approved drugs for activity against persister Lyme bacteria and found many candidates including daptomycin (used to treat MRSA) that had better activity than the current Lyme antibiotics. In 2015, they reported that a three-antibiotic combination — doxycycline, cefoperazone and daptomycin — reliably killed Lyme persister bacteria in lab dish tests. In a 2017 study they found that essential oils from oregano, cinnamon bark, clove buds, citronella and wintergreen killed stationary phase Lyme bacteria even more potently than daptomycin, the champion among tested pharmaceuticals.

In the new study Zhang and his team extended their lab-dish testing to include 35 other essential oils, and found 10 that show significant killing activity against stationary phase Lyme bacteria cultures at concentrations of just one part per thousand. At this concentration, five of these oils, derived respectively from garlic bulbs, allspice berries, myrrh trees, spiked ginger lily blossoms and may change fruit successfully killed all stationary phase Lyme bacteria in their culture dishes in seven days, so no bacteria grew back in 21 days.

Oils from thyme leaves, cumin seeds and amyris wood also performed well, as did cinnamaldehyde, the fragrant main ingredient of cinnamon bark oil.

Lab-dish tests such as these represent an early stage of research, but Zhang and colleagues hope in the near future to continue their investigations of essential oils with tests in live animals, including tests in mouse models of persistent Lyme infection. If those tests go well and the effective doses seem safe, Zhang expects to organize initial tests in humans.

“At this stage these essential oils look very promising as candidate treatments for persistent Lyme infection, but ultimately we need properly designed clinical trials,” he says.

— Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
via EurekAlert!

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I got diagnosed with lyme disease back in 2009. It got so bad I could hardly move. I took antibiotics for 30 days and it got better, and I never had any symptoms since.

Knowing what I know now, I would have probably treated myself holistically like how I'm treating my hyperthyroidism. I told a family doctor I thought I had lyme disease, and she refused to have me tested. She gave me a prescription for tendonitis. I saw a dermatologist who had me tested, and she called me right away and told me. I went back to the family doctor a month and a half later, and she started laughing when she told me I have lyme and she said knew she didn't order that test. She never even bothered to call me. Most doctors only want to treat symptoms and ignore the cause, because that makes them more money.

I think the Western healthcare system is deplorable, and the masses are brainwashed into thinking they need drugs for everything, and holistics are for crazy people and don't work.

Here in S. Fla there were a number of holistic doctors mysteriously murdered in a weekend. Dr Bruce which my grandfather use to see, i believe was 1st. Hmmmm

Ty for sharing this. Resteemed.

Very informative @goldenoakfarm

From what I have understood, it is a very misunderstood and under diagnosed disease.

Because there are so many variables to it: the person's physical history and body type, the type of Lyme (I think there are 15 varieties), and any co-infections (I think there's 13) that you may have gotten from the tick at the same time, it's very hard to diagnose from symptoms.

Couple this with very poor Lyme tests (50% incorrect) giving lots of false negatives and only working in a tiny window after infection, and only on certain phases of the spirocete cycle.

Yeah, that's how I got how I am....

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