Neurological Lyme
Disease
Most people
think of swollen and painful joints when they think of Lyme
disease, if they think of anything at all. However,
when you look at the symptom
list, you can
see that every part of the body can be affected. The
frightening collection of neurological symptoms
experienced by many Lyme-disease patients is frequently
called “neuro-lyme”, but in fact only represents a
portion of the illness.
Lyme
spirochetes can invade the central nervous system within 24
hours of the tick bite,so it is not surprising that so many
neurological and psychiatric symptoms can be
manifested.
Through the
support of Time for Lyme, Inc, an affiliate of the Lyme Disease
Association, a national non-profit corporation, and of the Lyme
Disease Association itself and of private donors and
foundations, Columbia University is expected to establish the
first Lyme Disease Research Center in the United States. The
Lyme Disease Research Center will focus on the problem of
chronic Lyme disease, including the search for better
diagnostic tests and treatments, drawing upon the vast
resources of the Columbia University Medical Center. For more
information see Columbia
University's Lyme Disease Research
Center
Dr. Fallon is
Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at the Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeons and is also the
Director of the Lyme Disease Research Program at the New York
State Psychiatric Institute. A graduate of Harvard College, he
obtained his M.D. degree from the Columbia University College
of Physicians and Surgeons, as well as a Master's Degree in
Public Health Epidemiology from Columbia University. He is
probably the foremost authority on neurological Lyme
disease.
According to
Dr. Fallon, Lyme disease can be easily treated if caught
early. However, sometimes people don't get symptoms for
years after they are bitten, so they don't realize they
are infected.
Dr. Fallon
says it is a difficult illness to have, because doctors fight
among themselves about the accuracy of a patient's
diagnosis (whether or not they actually have Lyme Disease)
and also about how to treat the illness. Lyme also has a
fluctuating symptom pattern, so a sufferer might feel fine one
day, and not be able to get out of bed the next. Doctors
sometimes dismiss Lyme Disease as hypochondria, and it is often
misdiagnosed as a host of other disorders, including
depression. He says that common symptoms are fatigue,
numbness and tingling, headaches, sleep disturbances and
irritability. In addition, people can often get psychiatric
symptoms, including changes in mood, problems with anxiety, and
even, in rare situations, paranoia or full-blown
mania.
For more
information see www.neuro-lyme.com
.
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