(04.09.2015, 05:04)Hausel schrieb: Frage schreibt Horow. was in seinen Buch über Parasiten was?
Nein, Parasiten sind nicht wirklich sein Thema, aber er erwähnt sie und schreibt, daß man auf jeden Fall auch an Parasiten denken muß, vor allem, wenn Pateinten nicht besser werden und /oder anhaltende Symptome haben. Auf S.469 (s.u.) zählt er auf, mit welchen Mittel er behandelt, aber keine spezifischen Protokolle.
Hier grob das Inhaltsverzeichnis (Horrowitz Why Can’t I Get Better?)
Teil I
Identifying Lyme Disease
The Horrowitz Sixteen-Point Differential Diagnostic Map
Detecting and Treating Lyme Disease
Teil II
Lyme and Common Tick-Borne Bacterial Infections (Ehrlichia/Anaplasma, Bartonella, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Rickettsia, Tick-Borne Relapsing Fever, STARI, Tularemia, Brucellosis)
Lyme and Other Co-Infections: Parasitic, Viral, and Fungal Infections (Babesia, 20 Seiten/ Viral Infections, 3 ½ Seiten/ Candida and other Fungal Infections, 3 Seiten/ Morgellons Disease, 2 Seiten)
Lyme and Immune Dysfunction
Lyme and Inflammation
Lyme and Environmental Toxins
Lyme, Functional Medicine, and Nutritional Therapies
Lyme and Mitochondrial Dysfunction
Lyme and Hormones
Lyme and the Brain
Lyme and Sleep Disorders
Lyme and Autonomic Nervous System Dysfunction/POTS
Lyme and Allergies
Lyme and Gastrointestinal Health
Lyme and Liver Dysfunction
Lyme and Pain
Lyme and Exercise
Mediation, Mind Training, and Medicine
Solving the Mystery of Lyme and Chronic Diseases
S.396 Common parasitic infections include
giardiasis, amebiasis, cryptosporidium, hookworm, pinworm, roundworm (including filariasis), and strongyloides. We have found that certain patients with resistant symptoms of MSIDS improved once intestinal parasites were discovered and treated. These infections are all treated differently and, unfortunately, testing for many of these parasites may be unreliable, as is the case with testing for Lyme disease and associated co-infections. It is therefore important that we understand the limitations of standard gastrointestinal testing and examine other methods for determining the parameters of gastrointestinal health.
S.397 Parasites: We need to check MSIDS patients for intestinal parasites if they suffer from resistant symptoms despite standard treatment protocols. These parasites can increase symptoms of Lyme-MSIDS, and often go undetected. The majority of our patients are now co-infected with babesia, a blood-borne parasite, and Babesia can suppress the immune system allowing other parasitic infections to emerge. Parasites can also cause GI symptoms similar to yeast overgrowth … confusing the clinical picture. They can be difficult to pick up on standard ova and parasite testing, and we have found the presence of hidden parasites on CDSA testing from specialized laboratories when local laboratories were negative.
S.469 Regimens including
biltricide, ivermectin, pyrantel pamoate (PinX), and Alinia have been effective in certain patients with not only gastrointestinal symptoms, but also fatigue, headaches, and myalgias resistant to classical tick-borne therapy. Dosing for these regimens is based on the patient’s body weight.