Subject: Allen Steere on Treatment Failure in a Third of the Cases
(Now Mysogydiagnosed)
Date: Jul 2, 2009 8:16 AM
Allen Steere on Treatment Failure in a Third of the Cases:
“At the time of examination, chronic neurologic abnormalities had been
present from 3 months to 14 years, usually with little progression.
Six months after a two-week course of intravenous ceftriaxone (2 g
daily), 17 patients (63 percent) had improvement, 6 (22 percent) had
improvement but then relapsed, and 4 (15 percent) had no change in
their condition. CONCLUSIONS. Months to years after the initial
infection with B. burgdorferi, patients with Lyme disease may have
chronic encephalopathy, polyneuropathy, or less commonly,
leukoencephalitis. These chronic neurologic abnormalities usually
improve with antibiotic therapy.”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=DetailsSearch&Term=2172819[uid]
Allen Steere treating with long-term antibiotics:
http://groups.google.com/group/scilyme2/browse_thread/thread/4ee5cac02971ab0d/11a79a69b305dbe8?hl=en&lnk=gst&q=Allen+Steere+Lyme+ceftriaxone#11a79a69b305dbe8
Calling antibiotics ^^antiinflammatories. It must be paradoxical
because Chronic Lyme is a disease of immune suppression or de-
activation of the normal immune response
http://www.actionlyme.org/PAM3CYS_IMMUNE_SUPPRESSION.htm
and activation of viruses of all kinds,… resulting in the New Great
Imitators and badly cloned lymphocytes that are pseudo-leukemic:
http://www.actionlyme.org/BIOMARKERS2.htm
Since Steere’s kind of Lyme is ONLY a bad-knee and “patients generally
feel well except for their arthritis symptoms”:
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.1086/432733
If you notice, 5 times Allen Steere reported that treatment failed in
about 1/3 of the cases.
If Steere’s Dearborn criteria of a case later excluded 85% of all
patients according to Gary Wormser (in order to come up with an "85%
safe and effective vaccine"), and if only 1 in 10 or 1 in 12 cases are
ever reported (Robert Schoen at the 1998 FDA meeting), and if we take
CDC’s numbers to be true and only 20,000 of these are reported per
year for the last 10 years, then how many disabled people is that?
20,000 / 0.1 / 0.15 / 0.33 = 40,404,040
How many people would be disabled or chronically ill if Yale deployed
their scientifically valid Flagellin method (in 1991)?
http://www.actionlyme.org/SV_PPT_2_files/v3_document.htm
20,000 / 0.1 / 0.944 = 2,118,644
Do you ever wonder if part of the reason they committed this fraud
with the testing was because they thought if so many people became
sick, they would be screaming for Yale’s vaccine? But that the crooks
didn’t consider the effect of their campaign to say “there is no such
thing as Lyme,” and that all of us “Chronic Lyme victims were CRAZY
and not sick?”
38 million extra unwell, miserable people is believable *now* because
everywhere you go 2 out of 5 people have Chronic Lyme in some form.
Everywhere *I* go the*teenagers* behind the cash registers tell me,
“Lyme is a permanent infection; you never get rid of it; it might
come back.” This is what the teachers are telling them in high
school.
And they say it in the way of the newly-revealed-to-oneself that one-
is-an-adult-and-obviously-smarter-than-their-own-personal-adults.
That 40 million Unnecessarily-Extra-Hurtin-Units is probably a real
number but nearly half of them are mysogydiagnosed with Feminozalgia
because they made the mistake of trusting their doctors not to play
with their heads:
http://www.actionlyme.org/081030.htm
http://www.actionlyme.org/PHILLIPS_JE_PERVERT.htm
IDSA’s and Steere’s Other Treatment Failure Reports
Allen Steere on treatment failure (1/3 of the cases were positive even
with the bogus OspA primers):
http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/121/8/560
Allen Steere on treatment failure:
http://www.annals.org/cgi/content/full/121/8/560
CDC Officer Alan Barbour on antibiotic treatment failure:
”When using Borrelia to cure Syphilis, we recommend using high
passage strains:”
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=373079&blobtype=pdf
Allen Steere on treatment failure:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=DetailsSearch&Term=8769624[uid]
Mark Klempner on ceftriaxone’s failure to kill intracellular
spirochetes:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=DetailsSearch&Term=1634816[uid]
Alan Barbour on treatment failure, especially as regards spirochetes
in the brain:
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=8913478
Yale Pathology Department on treatment failure of the pregnant,
seronegative mother:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Congenital_Brain_Infection_of_Newborn_Resulting_in_Death.htm
CDC, SUNY-SB, the Mayo Clinic and Tulane all participate in the
Liegner Autopsies and find persisting spirochetes (DNA or staining)
after multiple courses of treatment:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CDC_Spirochetes_Brain_Liegner_Autopsy.htm
All the known worldwide experts gathered in 1975 to talk about
spirochetal diseases:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Biology_of_Parasitic_Spirochetes1976.htm
"The ability of the borrelia, especially tick-borne strains to persist
in the brain and in the eye after treatment with arsenic or with
penicillin or even after apparent cure is well known (1). The
persistence of treponemes after treatment of syphilis is a major area
which currently requires additional study (3,5,10,11)."
IDSA’s Russell Johnson who wrote the book about the above 1975
conference:
http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=4,721,617.PN.&OS=PN/4,721,617&RS=PN/4,721,617
"The chronic forms of the disease such as arthritis (joint
involvement), acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans (skin involvement),
and Bannwart's syndrome (neurological involvement) may last for months
to years and are ***associated with the persistence of the
spirochete.*** A case of maternal-fetal transmission of B. burgdorferi
resulting in neonatal death has been reported. Domestic animals such
as the dog also develop arthritis and lameness to this tick-borne
infection. For every symptomatic infection, there is at least one
asymptomatic infection. Lyme disease is presently the most commonly
reported tick-borne disease in the United States." --
The patent also says:
"The infection may be treated at any time with antibiotics such as
penicillin, erythromycin, tetracycline, and ceftriaxone. ***Once
infection has occurred, however, the drugs may not purge the host of
the spirochete but may only act to control the chronic forms of the
disease.*** Complications such as arthritis and fatigue may continue
for several years after diagnosis and treatment."
IDSA on the Treatment of Syphilis:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?Db=pubmed&Cmd=DetailsSearch&Term=2682964[uid]
"Recent evaluations of ceftriaxone for early syphilis therapy are
promising; however, the optimal dose and duration of therapy are
unknown."
http://www.actionlyme.org/IDSA_TMTSYPHILIS.htm
And this list does not include all the older data about how
spirochetal diseases are incurable:
http://www.actionlyme.org/RICOCHRON.htm
"[Real] scientists are *fiercely* independent. That's the good
news."-- NIH's Top Fool, Anthony Fauci