Perhaps the biggest ongoing medical scandal of the past hundred years is the fact that it has been known since 1911 that Multiple Sclerosis is caused by a bacterium, and that the Big-Pharma-controlled medical-industrial complex covered this up in order to make money selling symptom relievers to MS patients. At the lower levels there is no cover-up at all, but simply human nature at work, as we wrote about here, to dispel the notion that we are “conspiracy theorists”. Since 1911, overwhelmingly much medical research has been conducted where living Borrelia bacteria were found in the brains of people who were diagnosed with MS.
Time and time again. By at least a dozen medical researchers. In at least ten countries. Since 1911 – the past one hundred years. Several older but also recent autopsy findings linked to in this article found that all deceased MS patients’ brains harbored living Lyme spirochetes. Even when tests, notorious for their large percentage of false negatives were used on living MS patients, staggeringly many tested positive for active Lyme borreliosis.
Then why isn’t this common knowledge? Surely, those thousands of MS experts and MS researchers can’t be all wrong?
Let’s examine the reality on the ground.
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I have to say that Lyme Disease is one condition that is almost always "ruled out" as a cause of symptoms before giving a diagnosis of MS ...at least in the past 5 years. We had a huge rash of people being undiagnosed around that time just because Lyme was so much in the news and symptoms were so similar.
ReplyDeleteAs far as the bacterial theories and treatment of MS with antibiotics long term...it certainly had its proponents in the past decade but now that diagnostic practices have been fine tuned and more and more people are being diagnosed at (or having the diagnosis confirmed) MS Centers, the arguments in this lengthy treatise are not particularly pertinent or true.
That being said, if anyone is not responding to MS therapies after a year of treatment with no missed doses, it is certainly reasonable to get another opinion. It is also not at all unreasonable to ask your primary care doc or neurologist about Lyme and ask to have a titre done to see if antibodies are present (meaning you have had it or been exposed to it).
Cherie C Binns RN BS MSCN