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  • Scientists focus on genetically engineering mice to cut Lyme disease transmission

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    Biologist Charles Darwin began crafting his theory of evolution on a trip to the Galapagos Islands, where he discovered animals had developed unique traits that varied from island to island. Nearly two centuries later, on a different island, scientists aren’t just observing evolution, they now have the technology to shape it. This past year, we met a team of modern-day Darwins on Nantucket, where they’re hoping to use genetic engineering to reduce the transmission of Lyme disease, a tick-borne illness found primarily in the Northeast and Upper Midwest, but also throughout the United States. The scientists’ target may surprise you. It’s not the deer often associated with the disease, or even the ticks, but wild mice, the main carriers of Lyme. It’s a first-of-its-kind approach, where scientists and locals are working together to decide whether to sculpt evolution.

    Thirty miles off the coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, is the island of Nantucket: a 14-mile-long, 3-mile-wide oasis known for its natural beauty, pristine shorelines, and protected landscape.

    But hidden is a scourge that’s afflicted 15% of its residents.

    Kevin Esvelt: The natural disaster in our area is not hurricanes, or tornadoes, or earthquakes; it is Lyme disease. It is the one plague that might be severe enough that communities might want to engineer a wild organism in order to get rid of it, or, at least, reduce the level, a lot. 

    Last October, deep in the island’s brush, we found MIT associate professor Kevin Esvelt, a pioneer in genetic engineering, waving a white flag in search of ticks.

    A tick

    60 Minutes


    These tiny vectors of Lyme disease were not hard to find.

    Kevin Esvelt: These are the big ones because these are largely adults.

    Jon LaPook: If the adults are this small, imagine the tiny, tiny what are they called, nymphs?

    Kevin Esvelt: Nymphs, yeah. We often think of poppy-seed sized.

    Esvelt’s collaborator is Sam Telford:, an epidemiologist at Tufts University who’s been studying ticks on Nantucket for the last 40 years. 

    Sam Telford: There’s a 50% chance, maybe more, that this is actually carrying Lyme disease.

    Jon LaPook: But you’re not afraid because it has to be embedded–

    Sam Telford: It has to be attached–

    Jon LaPook: –and attached–

    Sam Telford: –for– for more than 24 hours.

    Jon LaPook: Right, to– to infect you.

    Sam Telford: That’s correct.

    Sam Telford: These guys will swell up 50 to 100 times that size with blood. You know, it becomes that– that big.

    Jon LaPook: And that’s how you know when they’re engorged you know that they’ve been feeding on you.

    Sam Telford: If you see it that big, then you’re in trouble.

    The scientists aren’t here just to collect ticks; they’re interested in this critter.

    Jon LaPook: This is a wild mouse?

    Sam Telford: This is a wild white-footed mouse.

    Jon LaPook: And you’ve tagged it?

    Sam Telford: I’ve tagged it. So when I come back in April or May of next year, we get an idea of what over-wintering success is.

    Jon LaPook with Sam Telford and Kevin Esvelt

    Dr. Jon LaPook with Sam Telford and Kevin Esvelt

    60 Minutes


    Telford is tracking the mouse population on Nantucket as part of a novel project. The scientists want to use genetic engineering to interrupt a cycle of infection necessary for Lyme disease to flourish.

    White-footed mice are the main host of Lyme bacteria. When an uninfected tick bites an infected mouse, the bacteria transfer to the tick. When that infected tick then bites an uninfected mouse, the cycle continues.

    Deer don’t get infected but they help spread the disease because ticks embed on them to feed, then reproduce, with a single female tick laying as many as 2,000 eggs.

    Here’s Esvelt and Telford’s big idea: change the genetic makeup of the mice so they’re immune to Lyme. That way, the ticks that bite them won’t get infected. 

    Jon LaPook: You don’t have to kill the mouse in order to interrupt the cycle?

    Sam Telford: It’d be so much more economical and straightforward to just go out and poison all the mice, right, get rid of the mice. But then there’s a whole food chain that might depend on these mice that would be impacted. 

    Kevin Esvelt: The dream is that we can use new technologies to ensure that wild creatures can live in peace, playing their normal ecological role, but without causing disease that make people suffer.

    If Esvelt’s dream becomes a reality, 80-year-old Dr. Timothy Lepore might finally be able to retire. 

    Over the past 40 years, he’s been the island’s emergency room head, sole surgeon, even its medical examiner. Today, Dr. Lepore runs the only private practice on Nantucket, where he treats dozens of patients with Lyme disease each year.

    And yes, that’s a giant tick in his waiting room.

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: Being in private practice, it is– while not well-paid– it’s–

    Jon LaPook: You get paid in, like, what, chickens and doughnuts and–

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: We prefer lobsters, actually–

    Jon LaPook: Lobsters. 

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: Lobsters, clams–

    Jon LaPook: B–

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: –and scallops.

    Jon LaPook: But you’ll take– you’ll take anything, right?

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: I will take anything.

    Dr. Timothy Lepore

    Dr. Timothy Lepore

    60 Minutes


    Lyme disease can be treated with antibiotics, but if left untreated, the infection can spread to the heart, joints, and nervous system, as it did for 33-year old Shauna Asplint.

    Shauna Asplint: My body hurts all the time. 

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: Okay.

    Shauna Asplint: I don’t know if that’s from my Lyme’s disease, or what. My neck is stiff, my ankles are sore, and my hips.

    Asplint was first diagnosed with Lyme when she was 10 years old. A few years later, the left side of her face stopped moving, a residual effect from the disease is still noticeable today.

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: Let’s see you smile.

    Shauna Asplint: It’s a little off, and then if–

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: Yeah, no. It’s very nice.

    Shauna Asplint: –raise my eyebrows, it just doesn’t move.

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: We see people with facial palsies. We see little kids with swollen knees. We see people with Lyme rashes. So it alters people’s behavior and activities. 

    The problem on Nantucket can be traced back to 1926, when locals voted to import two female deer to the island to give a lone buck company. As the deer population grew, so did the ticks’.

    On top of that, by the 1950s, half the land on the island was put into conservation. The untamed brush and wild grasslands create an ideal ecosystem for Lyme’s hosts to thrive.

    Kevin Esvelt: We have a problem with tick-borne disease because we engineered the environment to maximize the number of ticks and maximize the number of mice that are the best hosts of Lyme disease. And it came back and bit us, literally. 

    A trip at age 11 to the Galapagos Islands sparked Esvelt’s lifelong obsession with evolution. In 2013, he was the first to propose that CRISPR, a revolutionary technology that enables scientists to edit DNA, could be used to change a species’ genetics in perpetuity, hacking the laws of inheritance.

    Kevin Esvelt

    Kevin Esvelt

    60 Minutes


    This idea led to the project they call “Mice Against Ticks” in the Sculpting Evolution lab Esvelt runs at MIT.

    For the last nine years, he and researcher Joanna Buchthal have been studying whether they could add a gene for an antibody that prevents Lyme infection to a mouse embryo that, as we see here, has progressed into two cells.

    Jon LaPook: Is it gonna be into one of those cells or both of them?

    Joanna Buchthal: So our technique involves injecting both cells to maximize the likelihood that we get the antibody gene in their DNA. 

    Buchthal and embryologist Zach Hill showed us how they genetically engineer lab mice.

    Joanna Buchthal: He’s gonna actually inject through the plasma membrane, and into the nucleus for both of these cells.

    Jon LaPook: How are you at darts?

    Zach Hill: Not very good.

    Jon LaPook: But you’re gonna hit the–the center of this…

    Zach Hill: A lot better at this, yeah–

    Zach Hill: Okay. So I already have an embryo set up on the– on the dish here.

    Zach Hill: So I’m just trying to find the nucleus here

    Jon LaPook: It is amazing to see this.

    Gene editing mice

    Zach Hill and Joanna Buchthal show Dr. LaPook their technique

    60 Minutes


    Joanna Buchthal: So that little burst that you can see in the nucleus in– is when he’s actually injecting the genome engineering tools directly into the nucleus where the DNA is.

    The injection mix contains both the antibody gene and CRISPR, which acts like molecular scissors. After CRISPR finds and cuts the targeted area of DNA, the cell inserts the gene into the mouse’s genetic code. When this mouse is born, it will be immune to Lyme disease, and so will its children.

    Jon LaPook: If I get a polio vaccine my kids aren’t gonna be immune to polio unless they get the vaccine too.

    Joanna Buchthal: That’s exactly right. So this is a heritable immunization.

    Jon LaPook: What do you mean by that?

    Joanna Buchthal: What we’re actually doing is we’re encoding immunity so that that immunity is passed on generationally. And every mouse that gets the antibody gene is actually immune.

    Jon LaPook: Typical, standard evolution happened very slowly, right, over thousands // maybe millions of years. Are you speeding up evolution here?

    Kevin Esvelt We are absolutely speeding up evolution. And that’s precisely why we have to be careful, because we are doing things that couldn’t happen naturally.

    The plan is to release thousands of engineered mice on Nantucket over time, starting during the winter months, when the native mouse population is low. But first, Esvelt needs community buy-in.

    He chose Nantucket, not only for its high rate of Lyme, but also for its tight-knit, well-educated community, with a tradition of town hall democracy.

    We saw this in action last fall when, for the 10th time, the scientists presented their latest findings to locals…

    Joanna Buchthal: So it appears that we have, indeed, produced the first heritably Lyme-immune laboratory mice capable of breaking the disease transmission cycle.

    …followed by a public Q&A.

    Resident 1: We have a huge population of field mice here. Shall we expect a larger population?

    Resident 2: Having had Lyme disease twice, I thought “what a cool idea.” But mice are kinda the foundation of the food chain. So tinkering with the food chain makes me a little cautious.

    Resident 3: How long before it’s actually gonna take effect and keep me from getting Lyme disease again?

    Jon LaPook: When you’re in these meetings//what’s that been like?

    Kevin Esvelt: Some people are really gung ho about this. Some people have deep reservations. But what I found heartening about this and Nantucket, in particular, is that pretty much everyone agrees that this is how we should go about developing these kinds of technologies, that it should not just be scientists in their laboratories get a clever idea and then, boom, it’s there.

    Dr. Timothy Lepore says he’s supportive of the proposal. But as an avid falconer, he wants more testing to be done to ensure there won’t be unintended consequences to the island’s ecosystem.

    Jon LaPook: Could a change in– in the field mouse lead to a change in the hawk?

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: Well, that’s the question. I don’t think so.

    Jon LaPook: But we don’t know–

    Dr. Timothy Lepore: But I think that has to be shown.

    Jon LaPook: Do you worry about fooling around with mother nature?

    Kevin Esvelt: Absolutely. But, on the other hand, I’m not terribly fond of mother nature, if she’s gonna give my kids disease. All of technology is saying to mother nature, “You’re beautiful. And we appreciate you very much and we need to conserve you. But we’re not always happy with the way things work, naturally. And so we’re going to change it.”

    Jon LaPook: But in this case, you’re changing the environment for everybody.

    Kevin Esvelt: This is, I agree, different because it’s hard for individuals to opt out. And I think that means we need to do the science differently because we need to ensure that people have a voice, early enough, to actually influence the direction that the technology is developed.

    If federal and state regulators agree, the team plans to first release the engineered mice in a small field trial on a private island, so they can better understand the ecological impacts before any potential experiments on Nantucket.

    Jon LaPook: What is the home run for you?

    Kevin Esvelt: I think it’s a field trial that works, it’s something that allows us to dramatically reduce the– the fraction of ticks that are infected, that doesn’t have anything obviously go wrong with the ecosystem. And then the community has a good discussion and then they decide. And I think there’s benefits as we discussed even if they say no. And then we walk away.

    Produced by Katie Brennan and Denise Schrier Cetta. Associate producer, Grace Conley. Edited by Aisha Crespo. 

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  • Flea and Tick Prevention 101: The Role of “Natural” or Essential Oils and Pesticides | Animal Wellness Magazine

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    Fleas and ticks are more than just a nuisance—they pose serious health risks to dogs, cats, and even humans, such as Lyme disease and flea allergy dermatitis. While many pet parents love the idea of natural solutions instead of harsh chemicals, it’s important to understand both the benefits and limitations of these methods for flea & tick prevention. Let’s look at what essential oils can repel pests and what else is needed for a comprehensive approach to eliminate the threat.

    Essential Oils Repel Fleas and Ticks

    Many natural remedies like essential oils work as natural insect repellants. In other words, they repel bugs, but they don’t kill them. These essential oils are often included in sprays, shampoos, and collars. Some of the most common essential oils used to combat fleas and ticks include:

    • Cedarwood
    • Lemongrass
    • Neem
    • Lavender
    • Rose geranium
    • Eucalyptus
    • Peppermint*

    *See below for an important note about essential oil safety concerns for cats.

    Limitations of Essential Oils

    While essential oils have their place in flea and tick prevention, they are not foolproof because of their efficacy, how long they work, potential toxicity, and ability to repel – but not kill – fleas and ticks.

    Inconsistent Treatment

    Unlike pesticide treatments, essential oil products may not have standardized dosages or proven efficacy. This makes their results unpredictable. In fact, the effectiveness of natural remedies can vary widely based on:

    • Concentration
    • Formulation
    • Quality
    • Environmental conditions
    • Lifestyle (for example, a dog who swims a lot versus an indoor cat)

    Short Duration of Protection

    Essential oils tend to evaporate quickly and may require frequent reapplication—sometimes multiple times a day—to maintain their repellent effect. Not only is this impractical for many pet parents, but it can also mean inconsistent protection.

    Safety Concerns

    Some essential oils, including eucalyptus, peppermint, and rose geranium, can be toxic to animals, especially cats. Essential oils must always be diluted for use with animals and never applied directly to the skin. Always consult a veterinarian before using any essential oil product.

    Why a Pesticide Is Still Necessary

    Effective flea and tick protection requires a pesticide that kills fleas and ticks. Pesticides can be used in conjunction with essential oils and other botanicals. Pesticide-based flea and tick solutions are specifically designed to kill and repel pests reliably. They help protect dogs and cats from parasite-borne diseases and are:

    • Effective at targeting fleas and ticks as well as eggs and larvae
    • Long-lasting and reliable
    • Rigorously tested for safety and efficacy

    Before using any flea and tick product on your pet, talk to a veterinarian to choose the right one. Always read the label carefully and follow all the instructions.

    Try This Effective ADAMSTM Botanical Flea and Tick Spray

    ADAMS™ Botanicals Flea & Tick Pet & Home Spray is the best of both worlds for pet parents who want to help protect dogs and cats from pests with a gentle yet effective solution. It uses a plant-based pesticide (derived from botanicals) that is EPA-approved, meaning it has been tested for efficacy and evaluated for safety, and providing effective protection. Just spray it on your dog, cat, and household pet areas to protect against unwanted pests. It’s powerful enough to kill fleas and ticks but gentle enough for daily use and leaves your pet smelling fresh.

    Visit ADAMS to learn more.

     


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    Animal Wellness is North America’s top natural health and lifestyle magazine for dogs and cats, with a readership of over one million every year. AW features articles by some of the most renowned experts in the pet industry, with topics ranging from diet and health related issues, to articles on training, fitness and emotional well being.

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  • FDA brings lab tests under federal oversight in bid to improve accuracy and safety

    FDA brings lab tests under federal oversight in bid to improve accuracy and safety

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    WASHINGTON — Makers of medical tests that have long escaped government oversight will have about four years to show that their new offerings deliver accurate results, under a government rule vigorously opposed by the testing industry.

    The regulation finalized Monday by the Food and Drug Administration will gradually phase in oversight of new tests developed by laboratories, a multibillion-dollar industry that regulators say poses growing risks to Americans. The goal is to ensure that new tests for cancer, heart disease, COVID-19, genetic conditions and many other illnesses are safe, accurate and reliable.

    “The final rule announced today aims to provide crucial oversight of these tests to help ensure that important health care decisions are made based on test results that patients and health care providers can trust,” said FDA commissioner Robert Califf, in a release.

    Califf said inaccurate tests can lead to unnecessary treatment or delays in getting proper care.

    But in a significant move, the FDA decided that the tens of thousands of tests currently on the market will not have to undergo federal review. The agency said it will essentially grandfather those tests into approval to address concerns that the new rule “could lead to the widespread loss of access to beneficial” tests.

    Under the government’s plan, newly developed tests that pose a high risk — such as those for life-threatening diseases — will need to be FDA approved within 3 1/2 years. Lower risks tests will have four years to obtain approval.

    The FDA already reviews tests and kits made by medical device manufacturers.

    But labs, large hospitals and universities that develop their own in-house tests have been able to market them without each one undergoing agency review. The industry has resisted additional scrutiny for decades, saying it will stifle innovation and drive up costs.

    There are an estimated 80,000 medical tests currently available from about 1,200 labs, according to the agency’s estimate. They include tests for complex diseases, as well as simpler conditions like high cholesterol and sexually transmitted infections.

    In the 1970s and ’80s, most lab-based tests were “lower risk, small volume” products used mostly for local patients, according to the FDA.

    Over time, the tests have grown into a nationwide business, with labs processing thousands of blood, urine and other samples per week from hospitals and clinics. Others advertise directly to consumers — including some claiming to measure the risk of developing ailments like Alzheimer’s and autism.

    FDA officials have long voiced concerns about the accuracy of some tests, pointing to patients who have received inaccurate results for heart disease, Lyme disease and other conditions. Inaccurate tests can lead to patients getting an incorrect diagnosis, skipping treatments or receiving unnecessary medication or surgery.

    More than a decade ago, the agency drafted tougher guidelines for the industry, but they were never finalized. For years, U.S. labs have successfully lobbied Congress and other federal institutions against tougher regulation.

    When FDA released a draft of the new rule last September, a leading industry group argued the agency did not have legal authority to step into the testing market.

    The American Clinical Laboratory Association said Monday it “has grave concerns about this rule as a matter of both policy and law. The rule will limit access to scores of critical tests, increase health care costs, and undermine innovation in new diagnostics.”

    The group represents large testing chains such as Quest Diagnostics and LabCorp, as well as smaller labs and test makers.

    ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Bella Hadid Gives Health Update Following Lyme Disease Treatment: ‘I Am Okay And You Do Not Have To Worry’

    Bella Hadid Gives Health Update Following Lyme Disease Treatment: ‘I Am Okay And You Do Not Have To Worry’

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    By Tionah Lee, ETOnline.com.

    Bella Hadid is giving a rare look inside her years-long battle with lyme disease.

    On Sunday, 26-year-old model took to Instagram — after undergoing daily lyme disease treatment — to share some insight on her battle with the condition and healing journey. Alongside a long message were pictures of Hadid with various needles in her arms, in hospital rooms, medical reports, and at home getting treatment.

    “the little me that suffered would be so proud of grown me for not giving up on myself🫶🏼 Thankful to my mommy for keeping all of my medical records, sticking by me, never leaving my side, protecting, supporting , but most of all, believing me through all of this,” Hadid wrote. “Living in this state, worsening with time and work while trying to make myself, my family and the people who support me, proud, had taken a toll on me in ways I can’t really explain. To be that sad and sick with the most blessings/privilege/opportunity/love around me was quite possibly the most confusing thing ever.”

    Hadid, who was diagnosed with the vector-born disease in 2012 — continued with a message to her fans assuring them that she is okay.

    “one thing I want to express to you all is that 1: I am okay and you do not have to worry, ♥️and 2:I wouldn’t change anything for the world. If I had to go through all of this again, to get here, to this exact moment I’m in right now, with all of you, finally healthy, I would do it all again. It made me who I am today,” she added. “The universe works in the most painful and beautiful ways but I need to say that if you are struggling- it will get better. I promise. take a step away, stay strong, have faith in your path, walk in your truth and the clouds will start to clear up. I have so much gratitude for and perspective on life , this 100+ days of Lyme, chronic disease , co infection treatment, almost 15 years of invisible suffering, was all worth it if I’m able to, God willing, have a lifetime of spreading love from a full cup, and being able to truly be myself, For the first time ever I tried to pick the most positive pictures I could because as painful as this experience was, the outcome was the most enlightening experience of my life filled with new friends, new visions and a new brain.”

    Hadid’s message ended with a special thank you to her fans, and her team who have worked with her while she has taken an extended absence from modelling. The cover girl promised to make her return when she’s ready.

    “Thank you for the patience of the incredible company’s that I work for, my supporters and the people who continued to check in. My agents Jill and Joseph for protecting me. I love and appreciate you more than I can ever express,” she wrote.

    “Thank you to my genius Dr, and her INCREDIBLE team of nurses. I love you SO much!!! I’ll be back when I’m ready I miss you all so much I love you all so much.”

    In a follow-up post, Hadid gave a special shout-out to her pup.

    “And God Bless my Angel Glizzy P. Beans aka Petunia aka Beans For never leaving my side not for one second,” she wrote.

    The model’s note comes after ET learned that she was undergoing daily treatment and working on her health and not in rehab, as suggested by some reports.

    “Nine months ago, Bella decided she wanted to stop drinking, so she stopped,” the source told ET following false reports. “She has been sober for nine months and has never had an alcohol or drug problem. Bella is not in rehab.”

    Another source told ET, “Bella is taking some much-deserved time off to treat her Lyme disease. She is not in rehab and has never had an alcohol or drug problem.”

    Hadid’s sister, Gigi also shared an update about her sister, following fan speculation that she was returning to the fashion world.

    “Just wanna touch on this post from last week. Bella just finished a long and intense treatment for Lyme disease,” Gigi explained. “Didn’t want some to take my post as a promise she’ll be back for shows this next season.”

    Gigi added of her sister, “I’m so proud of her and excited for her comeback whenever she feels ready.”

    MORE FROM ET: 

    Bella Hadid Says She’s Almost 10 Months Sober In Return to Instagram

    Bella Hadid Seeking Daily Treatment for Lyme Disease

    Gigi Hadid Addresses Sister Bella’s ‘Intense’ Lyme Disease Treatment

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  • Growing number of meat allergy cases linked to tick bites, CDC warns

    Growing number of meat allergy cases linked to tick bites, CDC warns

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    Growing number of meat allergy cases linked to tick bites, CDC warns – CBS News


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    In a report released Thursday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that up to 450,000 Americans since 2010 may have developed alpha-gal syndrome, a potentially life-threatening meat allergy that is spread by tick bites. Meg Oliver has more.

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  • Ticks’ Secret Weapon

    Ticks’ Secret Weapon

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    In the three-plus decades I’ve been alive, I have never been bitten by a tick. Actually, that may be a lie, and I have no way of knowing for sure. Because even though ticks have harpoonlike mouthparts, even though certain species can latch on for up to two weeks, even though some guzzle enough blood to swell 100 times in weight, their bites are disturbingly discreet. “As a kid, I would have hundreds of ticks on me,” at least several of which would bite, says Adela Oliva Chavez, a tick researcher at Texas A&M University. And yet she would never notice until her aunt would pick them off her skin.

    The secret behind tick stealth is tick saliva—a strange, slippery, and multifaceted fluid with no biological peer. It keeps the pests’ bites bizarrely itch- and pain-free, and allows them to feed unimpeded by their hosts’ immunity. As climate change remodels the world, spit is also what’s helping ticks enter new habitats and hosts—bringing with them the many deadly viruses, bacteria, and parasites they so often import.

    For all their dependency on blood, ticks almost never eat. In their sometimes-multiyear life span, they may feed only once in each stage: larva, nymph, and adult. Which means, as my colleague Sarah Zhang once wrote, each meal must count for an awful lot. Unlike mosquitoes and other bloodsucking bugs that can get away with a dine and dash, ticks must linger on flesh for days or even weeks—an extended feast that requires them to essentially graft onto the host’s body like a temporary limb.

    For the entirety of that process, saliva is key. When a tick first bites, its spit lines the wound with a gluelike substance that cements its mouth in place. Once secure, the tick deploys a fleet of spit-borne compounds that dilate its host’s vessels, while simultaneously battling the bodily compounds that would normally prompt the injury to clot, heal, or tingle with pain or itch. Under most circumstances, such an onslaught of foreign molecules would instantly marshal the body’s immune cavalry. But ticks have workarounds for that too. Their saliva is an anti-inflammatory and an analgesic; it can disable the alarms that cells send to one another, preventing them from coordinating an attack. Spit can even reprogram immune cells so that they never complete their development or receive the cues they need to gather at the scene.

    All of these strategies can also ease the way for bacteria, viruses, and parasites that the tick swallows from one host, then deposits into the next. With tick saliva breaching the skin barrier and keeping the immune system in check, all the pathogens have to do is come along for the ride. “Tick saliva is like a luxury vehicle that delivers them to the site of infection and rolls out the red carpet,” says Seemay Chou, the CEO of the biotech start-up Arcadia Science. Studies have shown that multiple pathogens get an infectious boost when chauffeured by spit, spilling more efficiently into the skin of newly bitten hosts. Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease, will even slather parts of tick saliva onto itself like a cloak, essentially rendering itself invisible to bodily defense. Ticks’ infectious cargo may even egg each other on: Saravanan Thangamani, at Upstate Medical University, in New York, has found evidence that ticks simultaneously carrying Borrelia and Powassan virus may end up injecting more of the latter into fresh wounds.

    Already, ticks spread more pathogens to humans and their livestock than any other insect or arachnid. And the risks ticks pose may only be growing, as warming temperatures and human meddling with wildlife allow them to expand their geographic range and infiltrate new hosts. In North America, lone-star ticks and black-legged ticks have been orchestrating a concerted march north into Canada. At the same time, the percentage of ticks carrying infections is also increasing, Thangamani told me, and for decades now, case counts of Lyme disease and tick-borne encephalitis in several parts of the world have been on a steady rise. As cold seasons shrink, the periods of the year when ticks bite—usually, the warmest months—are expanding too. “Many, many places are getting filled up with ticks,” says Jean Tsao, an entomologist at Michigan State University. “And they’re going to get more.”

    It helps that many ticks aren’t picky about whom they carry or bite. Some species, as they push into new places, have picked up new pathogens in the past few years—Bourbon virus, heartland virus—that pose additional threats to us. Many tick species are also relatively indiscriminate about their hosts: Within its lifetime, a single deer tick may “feed very happily on reptiles, avians, and birds,” says Pat Nuttall, a virologist and tick researcher at the University of Oxford. Their spit is intricate enough that it can be tailored to counteract the defenses of each species in turn. Transfer a tick from a rabbit to a human or a dog, Oliva Chavez told me, and it will take notice—and adjust its saliva, quite literally to taste.

    Vaccines to combat Lyme and other tick-borne diseases have long been in development. But many researchers think the more efficient tactic is going after the tick itself—a strategy that could, at best, “stop the transmission of several pathogens at once,” says Girish Neelakanta, a tick biologist at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. Anti-tick immunity is possible: Studies have documented guinea pigs, cattle, rabbits, goats, and dogs developing sustained defenses against the arachnids after they’ve been bitten over and over again—even reactions that can help the animals detect a bite immediately, and sweep the pest away.

    But spit is a slippery target for bodily defenses to hit. The substance doesn’t just shut down immune responses. It also reformulates itself constantly so that it can keep evading the host’s defenses—as often as every few hours, faster than most of the immune system can keep track. By the time the body has prepped an assault on one salivary ingredient, the tick has almost certainly swapped it out for the next. “It’s a game that the tick is playing, a catch-me-if-you-can kind of thing,” says Sukanya Narasimhan, a tick researcher at Yale. To outcompete the tick’s tricks, Narasimhan thinks it will be key to develop a vaccine that triggers the body to respond to tick bites fast, “as soon as a tick attaches,” she said, ideally by targeting the saliva’s first ingredients.

    As ticks continue their takeover, it’s hard not to develop at least some grudging respect for their pluck. Some scientists even think that studying, or perhaps mimicking, their saliva could lead to other breakthroughs. Copycatting the spit’s immunosuppressive tendencies could be useful for the treatment of asthma, or for drugs that assist in organ transplants; imitating its anticoagulant properties could help keep life-threatening clots at bay. Some tick-saliva ingredients have even prompted investigations into their potential as cancer therapy. Ticks, after all, have been studying mammalian bodies for millions of years, all in hopes of subterfuge; under their tutelage, Chou, the Arcadia Science CEO, hopes to learn more about the molecular pathways that drive the urge to itch.

    Ticks aren’t invincible, though, and some of the same global changes now easing their entry into new habitats could eventually hinder their progress. Already, they are fleeing parts of the planet that have grown too hot, too humid, too flooded, too razed with wildfires for them or their preferred hosts to survive, including certain inhospitable pockets of the American South. A tick decline could be good for us. But it would also be a symptom of a planetary scourge that has grown worse. Ticks, undoubtedly, “will continue to adapt,” Thangamani told me. And yet they, too, have their limits—further, but not that much further, beyond our own.

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    Katherine J. Wu

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  • I Have Lyme Disease & Long COVID: 6 Things Helping My Immune System Rebound

    I Have Lyme Disease & Long COVID: 6 Things Helping My Immune System Rebound

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    From whole foods to compression boots.

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    Danielle Pashko

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  • Hungry ticks can use this static trick to land on you and your pets

    Hungry ticks can use this static trick to land on you and your pets

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    NEW YORK — Hungry ticks have some slick tricks. They can zoom through the air using static electricity to latch onto people, pets and other animals, new research shows.

    Humans and animals naturally pick up static charges as they go about their days. And those charges are enough to give ticks a boost to their next blood meal, according to a study published Friday in the journal Current Biology.

    While the distance is tiny, “it’s the equivalent of us jumping three or four flights of stairs in one go,” said study author Sam England, an ecologist now at Berlin’s Natural History Museum.

    Ticks are “ambush predators,” explained Stephen Rich, a public health entomologist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    They can’t jump or fly onto their hosts, he said. Instead, they hang out on a branch or a blade of grass with their legs outstretched — a behavior known as “questing” — and wait for people or animals to pass by so they can grab on and bite.

    It seemed that ticks were limited to how far they could stretch on their “tippy toes,” England said. But now, scientists are learning that static charges may help expand their reach.

    “They can now actually end up latching onto hosts that don’t make direct contact with them,” he said.

    The researchers looked at a species of tick called the castor bean tick, which is common across Europe. This bloodsucker and its cousins are major culprits in spreading diseases to animals and humans, including Lyme disease, and are most active in warm months.

    Researchers found that when they charged up electrodes and placed them near young ticks, the creatures would whiz through the air to land on those electrodes.

    A normal level of static — the charge that fur, feathers, scales or clothes pick up with movement — could pull the critters across gaps of a fraction of an inch (a few millimeters or centimeters), according to the study. While those distances may seem small to us, for a tiny tick, they represent a big leap, England said.

    In the future, there might be ways developed to reduce that static, experts said. But for now, Rich said people should keep using classic tick prevention measures, including repellents, to keep themselves safe from bites.

    ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • How to protect yourself from ticks and Lyme disease, according to experts

    How to protect yourself from ticks and Lyme disease, according to experts

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    Experts say ticks are out earlier this year and sticking around longer than usual thanks to warming temperatures — making it more important than ever to be aware of how to avoid their potentially disease-carrying bites.

    In Connecticut, for example, ticks are already showing up in greater numbers this year, Goudarz Molaei, a tick expert for the state, told The Associated Press. Since Jan. 1, more than 1,000 ticks have been sent in for the state’s testing program, the second-highest number in recent years.

    “It’s going to be an above-average year for tick activity and abundance,” Molaei warned. 

    To help you prepare, here’s what you should know about protecting yourself:

    Which ticks carry Lyme disease?

    Lyme disease is caused by borrelia bacteria, which humans usually contract from the bite of a tick carrying the bacteria.

    Ticks that can carry borrelia bacteria live throughout most of the United States, though Lyme disease is most common in the upper Midwest and the northeastern and mid-Atlantic states. 

    An estimated 476,000 Americans are diagnosed with Lyme disease each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

    Different types of infected ticks can spread other bacteria, viruses and parasites that make people sick. For example, black-legged ticks, also called deer ticks, can carry more than Lyme-causing bacteria. They can also spread babesiosis, anaplasmosis and Powassan virus disease.

    What do tick bites look like?

    A tick bite may look like a “tiny, itchy bump on your skin” similar to a mosquito bite, according to the Mayo Clinic. But some people may not even notice they’ve had a tick bite. 

    Being bitten doesn’t necessarily mean you have a tick-borne disease. However, if the tick was carrying the bacteria that causes Lyme disease, early symptoms usually happen within 3 to 30 days after a bite, the Mayo Clinic explains.

    A bull’s-eye-shaped rash is a common sign, Bryon Backenson, an assistant professor at the University of Albany School of Public Health, recently told CBS News

    “It’s a rash that doesn’t always look just like a bull’s-eye, but it’s a red patch. It’s relatively large, usually at least 2 inches or so across,” he explains. “Oftentimes it doesn’t hurt or itch, it’s just there.”

    What are the symptoms of Lyme disease? Is there a treatment?

    Early symptoms of a Lyme disease infection may include: 

    • headache
    • fatigue
    • muscle aches 
    • joint aches or stiffness
    • chills
    • fever
    • swollen lymph nodes

    “Early diagnosis and proper antibiotic treatment of Lyme disease is important,” the CDC advises. “Patients treated with antibiotics in the early stages of the infection usually recover rapidly and completely.” However, the health agency notes some people may experience lingering symptoms, and that more research is needed on the disease.

    Without treatment, the Mayo Clinic warns the illness can get worse, with more severe symptoms developing over a period of several weeks or months.

    There is no Lyme vaccine on the market for people in the U.S., but one is being tested.

    Does bug spray work on ticks?

    There are several methods to protect yourself from ticks, both before you go outside and once you return indoors. Here are some expert tips: 

    Know where to expect ticks: “Ticks live in grassy, brushy or wooded areas, or on animals. Spending time outside walking your dog, camping, gardening or hunting could bring you in close contact with ticks,” the CDC says, adding many people get ticks from their own yard or neighborhood.

    Wear long-sleeved clothing: “It’s easier said than done, of course, when it’s really warm out,” Backenson admits. He says lighter-colored clothing can also help you more easily spot the small parasites. Also consider wearing long pants tucked into your socks in tick-infested areas.

    Prep yourself and your clothing: Consider insect repellant if you’re going to be outdoors for an extended period. The CDC advises using an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)-registered insect repellent containing DEET or other insect-repelling ingredients listed on the organization’s website. 

    You can also pre-treat your clothing. For example, Backenson suggests treating things like your gardening shoes and hiking gear. The CDC recommends using products containing 0.5% permethrin, which can remain protective through several washings.

    Once home, take a shower: The CDC says showering within two hours of coming indoors has been shown to “reduce your risk of getting Lyme disease and may be effective in reducing the risk of other tickborne diseases.” Showering can also help wash off unattached ticks.

    Do a tick check: “If you check yourself every 24 hours when you’re getting into the shower… you can really find these ticks and pull them off,” Backenson says.

    During tick checks, the CDC advises looking in spots that ticks can hide, including:

    • under the arms
    • in and around the ears
    • inside the belly button
    • behind the knees
    • between the legs
    • on the hairline and scalp

    Having someone help check your back and scalp, where you might have trouble seeing yourself, is also a good idea.

    What are the best ways to kill ticks?

    Worried you’re bringing ticks inside via your clothes?

    Putting your outdoor clothes in a hot dryer for about 10 minutes is “enough to kill a tick,” Backenson says.

    If you find a tick on you, you’ll want to remove it quickly and correctly.

    “Don’t wait to have it removed,” Backenson says. “With a fine-point pair of tweezers, get as close to the skin as you possibly can and gently and firmly pull straight up and that tick will pop right out.”

    After removing the tick, the CDC suggests cleaning the bite area and your hands with rubbing alcohol or soap and water.

    You should also never crush a tick with your fingers. Instead, the CDC says to dispose of a live tick by putting it in alcohol,
    putting it in a sealed bag, wrapping it tightly in tape or flushing it down the toilet.

    Lastly, keep an eye on the area. If symptoms occur, see a doctor. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • How to avoid Lyme disease during tick season

    How to avoid Lyme disease during tick season

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    How to avoid Lyme disease during tick season – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Scientists say tick season is starting earlier and lasting longer — increasing the risk of contracting illnesses like Lyme disease. Bryon Backenson, an assistant professor at the University of Albany School of Public Health, shared tips for staying safe from ticks.

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  • Judge threatens to report lawyers for disciplinary action for slowing jailed 1/6 defendant’s case

    Judge threatens to report lawyers for disciplinary action for slowing jailed 1/6 defendant’s case

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    A federal judge in Washington, D.C., is threatening to report two attorneys for possible disciplinary action for delaying the trial of a man who has been jailed on charges that he assaulted police officers during the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the U.S. Capitol.

    U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, questioned in court papers filed Thursday whether attorney Joseph McBride was being sincere when he said last summer that he needed to push Christopher Quaglin’s October trial; McBride claimed that he had not yet recovered from a case of COVID-19 that he had contracted in May 2022, and that he had chronic Lyme disease, and treatment and recovery would take two to three months.

    McBride said in his filing that his physicians had advised that he “needs to take an aggressive course of action to eradicate and neutralize this condition.”

    But the judge noted that at the same time, McBride — who represents several Jan. 6 defendants — continued to do media interviews and spoke in October to a Republican county committee about his fight for the “January 6 political prisoners.” In November, McBride tweeted a picture of himself on the beach at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort and another photo inside Trump’s 2024 campaign announcement party, McFadden wrote.

    “While lawyers — like all citizens — are entitled to speak freely, these public representations by McBride call into question the genuineness of his need for a medical continuance because of his inability to represent Quaglin last October,” McFadden wrote.

    McFadden ordered McBride — who has since withdrawn from Quaglin’s case — and another attorney for Quaglin, Jonathan Gross, to file a response by April 10 as to why the judge should not refer them to the court’s committee on grievances, which investigates complaints against attorneys. The judge set a hearing for April 18.

    In response to a journalist’s tweet about the judge’s order, McBride tweeted: “EVERYONE SHOULD SHOW UP FOR THIS TO HEAR THE TRUTH. LET’S GOOOOO!”

    McBride withdrew from Quaglin’s case this month — just weeks before the man’s new April trial date — because McBride said he needed to focus on another Jan. 6 case headed to trial at the end of March. McBride told the judge that Gross would take over Quaglin’s case, saying the switch wouldn’t prejudice the defendant and that the other attorney “knows Quaglin’s case well.”

    Soon after taking over the case, however, Gross told McFadden he planned to ask for the trial to be pushed again. McFadden wrote that Gross told the judge “that he does not practice criminal law and that he is not competent” to be Quaglin’s lead attorney at trial in just a few weeks.

    “Quaglin’s attorneys have now delayed this trial multiple times to the detriment of their client, who remains detained, and to the inconvenience of his co-defendants and the Government who seek a speedy resolution to this matter,” McFadden wrote. “Indeed, the Court has doubts that McBride’s initial continuance request was made in good faith.”

    McBride said in a text message Friday that he denies the “insinuations” in McFadden’s order about his representations to the court about his medical condition and continuance requests. McBride said he will respond to the court and looks forward to “displaying the truth and achieving a favorable resolution.”

    McBride also said his client believed the judge had so much personal animus toward McBride that Quaglin didn’t think he could get a fair trial.

    “As such, Mr. Quaglin asked me to step aside and help Mr. Gross take over the case — which is exactly what I did,” McBride wrote.

    Gross did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

    Quaglin is being held at the D.C. jail, where Georgia Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and others on the Committee on Oversight and Accountability visited Friday as some conservatives continue to try to portray Jan. 6 defendants as “political prisoners.”

    Of the 20 Jan. 6 defendants held in D.C. as of earlier this month, 17 were accused of assaulting officers at the Capitol, according to Just Security blog, which obtained a recent D.C. Department of Correction list. Six of the defendants have pleaded guilty to assaulting, resisting or impeding officers and two others have been convicted at trial.

    A spokesperson for the D.C. jail didn’t immediately respond to a request Friday from The Associated Press for an updated list of Jan. 6 defendants locked up there.

    Quaglin, of North Brunswick, New Jersey, is accused of attacking several police officers trying to protect the Capitol from the angry pro-Trump mob that halted Congress’ certification of President Joe Biden’s victory.

    Authorities say Quaglin attacked officers with a stolen riot shield and sprayed them with a chemical irritant. He faces charges including assaulting an officer using a dangerous weapon.

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  • I Was Sick For Years — A Diagnosis Brought Both Grief & Relief

    I Was Sick For Years — A Diagnosis Brought Both Grief & Relief

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    For anyone living with a chronic condition, I believe mindset is so important. Trusting that your body can heal and that you can get better is so crucial—at least this way of thinking is what ultimately got me through my journey. Even if your diagnosis is something incurable, that doesn’t mean you’re not able to live a full life.

    Personally, I feel like I’m a lot healthier now—even with all of my autoimmune conditions—than I was before I got sick. I feel like my life is more aligned, and I’m doing the right things for my body, rather than pushing myself beyond a breaking point. 

    I’ve been able to share my learnings from my own experience to hopefully help others, as well. Since I was on a strict meal plan for my autoimmune conditions, I put together a meal plan for myself. After doing this successfully, I decided to turn it into a cookbook and a meal plan online, so other people could use my framework if they’re in a similar situation. 

    This work is a celebration of the idea that even after chronic illness, you can take your experience and do something great—even help others in the process.

    Ultimately, I believe it’s so important to maintain hope—and you can have a pretty awesome life once you do find your right path to heal.

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    Erika Schlick

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  • Q&A: Shania Twain talks rebuilding confidence with new album

    Q&A: Shania Twain talks rebuilding confidence with new album

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    LOS ANGELES — Shania Twain felt the need on her new album to empower herself the same way she has uplifted listeners with hits like “Man! I Feel Like a Woman” and “She’s Not Just a Pretty Face.”

    So she set aside all feelings of self consciousness — appearing braless for the album’s artwork and letting listeners unabashedly hear her surgically repaired voice — on “Queen of Me.” Throughout the album’s 12-tracks, the 57-year-old country pop superstar confronts her physical vulnerabilities with authority in ways meant to uplift fans, and herself.

    Twain’s sixth studio album is her first since having open-throat surgery in 2018 to strengthen her vocal muscles after a long battle with Lyme disease. During the pandemic, the singer said she went into her “writing cave” at home to hone her songwriting skills and penned three albums worth of music with a clear understanding that her powerful vocals might not last forever.

    In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Twain spoke candidly about the album, which is out Friday, regaining her confidence, singing during throat surgery and preparing for her global upcoming tour, which kicks off April 28.

    Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.

    ___

    AP: How do you define your new album, “Queen of Me”?

    TWAIN: Self empowerment is about managing your mindset. Controlling your own mood. Your frame of mind. It just turned into “Queen of Me.” I’m my own boss. I’m the boss of me. I have to tell myself how to think. What to think. It became the theme of the whole album. It ended up representing that uplifting mode of myself.

    AP: Before I listened to your album, I was expecting ballads. But it’s a more upbeat experience. What made you choose that route?

    TWAIN: It was all happening in a mode of lifting my own spirit up. I wanted music that was going to make me want to dance. Even some of the songs that are a little more, for example, “Brand New Me” or “Pretty Liar.” Those are songs that would have maybe stayed more in the melancholy vibe more ballady. But because I was really relying on my songwriting during that time to make me feel a positive energy, everything pretty much turned into this more poppy, dancey, beat-driven, upbeat-driven sounding album.”

    AP: You seem liberated on your album cover. Was that your intent?

    TWAIN: That was the entire intention. You know, throw away the bra. I did a lot of nude photography in that session. That’s obviously a partial nude. I wanted to be on a horse. One of the places I feel most liberated is riding a horse. You can fly. It’s very empowering. It’s like you take this unbridled posture to bridle your freedom. It’s like facing a fear, facing something that’s uncomfortable, getting myself out of my comfort zone — especially on a horse. That’s freedom.

    AP: I heard you sang during surgery. Is that true?

    TWAIN: Yes, I had to be awake, so that I could sing and speak. It was horrible. I’m not going to lie. But there was no way around it. It was the only way. The decision to do the surgery was quick for me, but the recovery was quite long and very very painful. They literally had to stretch the larynx, move everything over and put these crutches in there. You’re singing and you speak, so they understand that you have symmetrical closure — which I didn’t have before.

    AP: What’s been your thoughts after the surgery?

    TWAIN: I may not have it forever. Just with age, the effect of it just might not stand up. So I’ve got to take advantage of it now, enjoy it, get out on the stage, make more records, because I’m not sure I would go through it again.

    AP: I’m sure that’s tough to hear. Do you think about when your voice might go again?

    TWAIN: I don’t think about it. I don’t worry about it. I focus on how to manage my voice the way it is now. For example, before the surgery, it was like a two-hour warmup and so much physical therapy. I just couldn’t sustain it. That’s why I decided to have the surgery. The surgery has reduced all of that to about 20 minutes, which is very normal. That’s ideal. But if I’m not singing for even a week or maybe two weeks, it takes me two to three days to get that voice going again. It’s more work than I had to do before, but it’s worth it.

    AP: What was the first sign of your singing confidence?

    TWAIN: The true confidence was three weeks after the surgery. I made a sound and there was resonance. Instant resonance. I’m like, “Oh, my God. I feel it. I feel it working.” It was a small window, but that kind of put the fire under my butt, too, and I said, “All right, no more excuses.” You’ve got this and you’ve got the best technology available. Top notch surgeon. All the physiotherapy education you need. Get out there and do it.

    AP: With your retooled vocals, how are you mentally getting ready for your tour?

    TWAIN: When I now go out on that stage, I am not afraid of the criticism. I’m not going to be perfect. My voice is not what it used to be. I sing differently. There’ll be holes in it. I’m not the same body I used to be. All these things. But I go out there with the confidence that I’m the best I can be and that I’ve worked hard to be my best. I just am not afraid of the criticism. I’m there for the people that are embracing me for who I am. I will get out there and do my best to make everybody happy, as I always do.

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  • Study Confirms Memory, Concentration Issues After Lyme Disease

    Study Confirms Memory, Concentration Issues After Lyme Disease

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    Nov. 15, 2022 – People who have been treated for Lyme disease, but continue to have symptoms, have changes in their brains that confirm the memory and concentration problems many of them have reported, a new study has found. 

    Many people with what’s known as post-treatment Lyme disease – or PTLD – complain about problems with memory and concentration, which sometimes come with fatigue, muscle pain, insomnia, and depression. 

    To understand potential changes in brain function that might explain these cognitive difficulties, researchers used specialized imaging techniques to compare the brains of 12 adults with PTLD and 18 adults with no history of Lyme disease. 

    The researchers found changes in the white matter of the brains of those with PTLD. White matter is found in the deeper brain tissues and contains nerve fibers that are extensions of nerve cells.

    “We found that … white matter function increased while participants with PTLD were performing a cognitive task,” says lead investigator Cheri Marvel, PhD, an associate professor of neurology and psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.

    “I think if patients heard this, they might feel validated that there is a biologic basis for their persistent symptoms, even if there is no good way to treat the cognitive difficulties yet,” she says. This may be similar to what patients with long COVID experience, Marvel says.

    The study was published online Oct. 26 in the journal PLOS One.

    ‘We Could Begin to Connect the Dots’

    “Objective biologic measures” of PTLD symptoms “typically can’t be identified using regular MRIs, CT scans, or blood tests,” senior author John Aucott, MD, director of the Johns Hopkins Lyme Disease Clinical Research Center, said in a news release.

    Because of the number of people affected by this condition — 10%-20% of the nearly half a million Americans who contract the disease each year — the researchers felt they needed to “expand” the evaluation methods.

    “We were motivated by the persistent complaints of cognitive difficulties by patients who have been treated for their Lyme disease, with a lack of data to explain the reason behind these symptoms,” Marvel says.

    It seemed logical “that if there were cognitive and neurological symptoms involved, then the brain may reveal something about this. Then we could begin to connect the dots between the patient experience and the underlying mechanisms driving them,” she says.

    To investigate, Marvel’s team used functional magnetic resonance (fMRI), an imaging technique that measures blood flow to areas of the brain, often while specific tasks are performed — in this case, short-term memory tasks that involved memorizing and recalling capital and lowercase letters as well as the alphabetical order of multiple letters.

    Those with PTLD performed more slowly on some of the memory tasks, although their slower speed did not affect the accuracy of their performance.

    The researchers found unusual activity in the white matter of the frontal lobe — an area of the brain involved in cognitive tasks, such as memory recall and concentration — in the PTLD group. 

    Typically, this type of tissue sees less blood flow, compared to gray matter in the brain, and is responsible for moving information around the brain and “delivering” it to the gray matter. The amount of activity they saw “is unusual to observe with the MRI methods we used, and we did not see such activity in the healthy control group,” Marvel says. 

    Sign of Healing?

    To confirm the finding, the investigators used a second imaging technique called diffusion tensor imaging in all 12 PTLD patients and 12 of the 18 people without PTLD.  The imaging technique detects whether there is water moving within the brain tissue and what direction it goes. 

    In the patients with PTLD, the researchers found what’s called axon diffusion – or leakage – from the white matter was tied to better brain function. The water that was diffusing was found in the same white matter regions that the first imaging test had identified.

    “This led us to speculate that the white matter changes are a healthy response to Lyme disease’s effect on the brain,” Marvel says. She suggests that the increased white matter leakage “may be a marker of healing during PTLD and represent a healthier outcome.”

    In the meantime, the researchers want to work with other experts to answer their remaining questions, she says. 

    “It is important for clinicians to know that PTLD leads to real, quantifiable brain changes and that patients’ cognitive complaints may be a direct consequence of these brain changes, rather than a side effect of other symptoms, such as fatigue, for example,” Marvel said. 

    Commenting on the study for this report, John Keilp, PhD, an associate professor of clinical psychology at Columbia University in New York City, says it is an “important, carefully executed study that expands upon earlier brain imaging studies of patients with PTLD” using “state-of-the-art brain imaging and analysis methods.”

    The researchers “have shown us a way forward to examine these patients and this disorder in greater detail as we attempt to unlock the uncertainties surrounding the physiological basis of these patients’ symptoms,” says Keilp, who heads the neuropsychology laboratory in the division of Molecular Imaging and Neuropathology at the New York State Psychiatric Institute.

     

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  • An Untreated Tick Bite Made Her the ‘Bionic Woman’

    An Untreated Tick Bite Made Her the ‘Bionic Woman’

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    Oct. 7, 2022 — Exploring the woods, hiking, summer camp, and regular trips to the dog park were all normal activities growing up in New Jersey. Meghan Bradshaw described herself as a healthy, active young girl with an affinity for the great outdoors. But things changed when she began having sporadic, unrelated health problems like exhaustion, dizzy spells, and body aches. After seeing a wide variety of medical specialists to uncover the root of these issues, her lab results were always inconclusive.  

    Unbeknown to Bradshaw and her doctors, her illness stemmed from a parasite. Bradshaw had contracted Lyme disease, a bacterial infection that can come from the bite of a blacklegged tick — also known as a deer tick — if it stays attached to your body for 36 to 48 hours. Symptoms can include memory loss, joint pain, drooping muscles on one or both sides of your face, and tingling or numbness of your body parts. 

     

    Bradshaw’s health continued to worsen as she bounced from the East Coast to the West Coast in her early 20s for work as a retail manager at Nordstrom. It wasn’t until she took a job promotion in Nashville that her illness became debilitating and left her bedridden. She could no longer perform everyday tasks like holding a toothbrush or washing dishes. 

    Bradshaw’s knees began filling up with fluid. Her doctor diagnosed her with rheumatoid arthritis, which is the closest thing he could think of to explain her “mystery” illness. She had to have her hips replaced at 26 years old.

    “It [the disease] was deteriorating every joint in my body,” Bradshaw, now 29, says. “I was a shell of myself. It was terrifying.” 

    One specialist referred Bradshaw to a functional medicine doctor, who began asking questions about her upbringing. Upon discovering Bradshaw was from New Jersey, where blacklegged ticks are extremely common, her doctor asked a question that changed everything. 

    “Have you ever been tested for Lyme disease?” 

    Bionic Woman

    Fast forward a few years. Bradshaw has now had 16 of her joints reconstructed and eight joint replacements, all because of the late detection of Lyme disease. She is preparing to have both elbows replaced, along with her second surgery on each hand, all of which should be completed within the next year. Hopefully then, she’ll “catch a break.” But there will likely be more surgeries down the road to replace her joint replacements, she says. 

    Bradshaw’s experience is extremely rare for Lyme disease patients, says Glenn Gaston, MD, an orthopedic surgeon at OrthoCarolina in Charlotte. Only a small number of Lyme disease patients develop arthritis, especially if it’s treated early, says Gaston, who operated on Bradshaw’s hands. If a patient does get arthritis, it usually only affects one joint, which is often the knee.

    “I have never even heard or read in a textbook a case to the degree of Meghan’s, of having to have multiple joint replacements and multiple surgeries, particularly at such a young age,” Gaston says.

    When asked why Bradshaw’s Lyme disease diagnosis remained a mystery for so long, Gaston says the disease can be hard to detect.

    “The biggest reason I see for delayed detection and treatment of Lyme disease is primarily because it’s not often in the forefront of the minds of clinicians, particularly depending on where a patient lives,” he says. “If they live in Connecticut, which is where Lyme disease comes from (Lyme, Connecticut), it’s more plausible that they’re going to think about it early. The further you get from the epicenter of the diagnosis, the less physicians think about it in their differential.” 

    If you remove the tick before 48 hours, you likely won’t get the disease. Ticks can be as small as a poppyseed, so spotting them can be hard. But one major sign of a tick bite is a rash that looks like a bull’s eye. If you catch it early, Lyme disease can be treated and cured with antibiotics. But with late detection (like Bradshaw’s), treatment and recovery become much more difficult. Good news: A vaccine to treat Lyme disease is currently in phase III clinical trials with drugmakers Pfizer and Valneva. 

    Dwelling on what life could have been like if, early on, doctors had asked questions about her upbringing has been one of the most difficult things for Bradshaw to come to grips with. 

    “I have severe medical trauma and I relive it every 3 months after another traumatic surgery,” she says. “It’s constantly going through the grief cycle.” 

    Bradshaw is often nicknamed the “bionic woman,” which she finds endearing.

    “I use humor as a coping mechanism,” she says. “I have to laugh about it. Because if I don’t laugh, I cry, and this is healthier for me.”

    Newfound Purpose

    Great health care is one major source of gratitude for Bradshaw. Her surgeries and medical care have racked up over $1 million dollars of medical costs, of which her insurance covered the majority, and she paid the rest out of pocket. Bradshaw often speaks publicly about the lack of access to quality health care for certain marginalized communities, like LGBTQ+ individuals, immigrant groups, and people of color.  

    “I’m very fortunate I’ve had access to improvement of my conditions,” she says. “A lot of people don’t have a means to an end.”

    While it could be easy to become angry, or even resentful, for her late diagnosis, Bradshaw has shifted her focus toward tick-borne disease awareness advocacy, which has been “very healing” for her.

    “I can look in hindsight and see all of the things that were wrong in my path and in this experience,” she says. “I’m like, ‘Here is how it should be. And here’s how we can fix it.’ I want to be apart of that.” 

    Bradshaw recently co-founded a nonprofit organization, Tick JEDI Coalition (JEDI stands for “juvenile educational defense initiative”) that strives to put tick safety education into mainstream health science curricula. 

    “Children should be learning this [tick safety] as a fundamental life skill, the same way they learn about handwashing,” she says.

    Meghan’s Tips

    To help avoid late detection of Lyme disease, or any other illness, Bradshaw gives these tips. 

    You know your body better than anyone.

    “Doctors are incredibly brilliant, talented, and knowledgeable about many things. But at the end of the day, everyone is still human. There may be times that you have something that is beyond the scope of their knowledge. If the doctor you see is not the right fit, and you are able to access care elsewhere, do your research and find someone who may be a good fit.”

    Utilize patient support groups.

    “I think there’s a lot you can learn from other individuals and their experiences, both good and bad things. I found them incredibly helpful in my own experience.”

    Have a support person.

    “There have been many times, especially at the beginning of my journey, where I was so emotionally distraught dealing with these things. My parents were there to take notes and take in everything for me. Have a support person because it’s hard to do these things alone.”

    Editor’s note: Here’s more information on Lyme disease .

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  • The Holistic Sanctuary Announces Exciting Plans to Expand Over Next 4 Years and Save More Lives

    The Holistic Sanctuary Announces Exciting Plans to Expand Over Next 4 Years and Save More Lives

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    World-class holistic medical spa, The Holistic Sanctuary, is planning on growing with four new, revolutionary centers around the world.

    The Holistic Sanctuary is proud to announce its exciting plans to grow the number of cutting-edge luxury centers it has over the next four years, allowing it to help even more patients in need of its pioneering treatments.

    After a decade of revolutionizing the holistic health field and saving lives, The Holistic Sanctuary, which currently has a state-of-the-art facility in Baja California (Mexico), plans to open another center in Tulum, Mexico, as well as an additional three centers in several other locations around the world.

    Holistic Sanctuary Tulum is well on its way to opening its doors in 2021, which will be followed by plans to open other centers in Tulum (2021), Malibu (2022), London (2023) and Dubai (2024).

    The Holistic Sanctuary is a world-class holistic medical spa that uses cutting-edge technology and advanced therapies from around the world to cure, heal, and reverse illnesses and diseases that Western medical professionals have said are incurable. By using a combination of natural therapies, they help people to recover from a variety of different conditions such as depression, addiction, PTSD, stress, anxiety, and more.

    Johnny Tabaie, CEO and Founder of The Holistic Sanctuary, said: “We are incredibly excited that we will soon be able to help even more patients around the world. We’ve taken holistic healing to a whole different level, and our intention has always been to heal patients using natural, effective, holistic and other alternative therapies that give results in real-time, without having to medicate people with addictive drugs.

    “We simply transform people’s lives; we give them a fighting chance at a good quality of life. We get people off prescribed medications, heal the underlying cause of PTSD, depression, trauma and even addiction, then send them back home healthy, thriving, happy and whole again.”

    More information on The Holistic Sanctuary’s luxury drug rehab centers can be found at https://www.theholisticsanctuary.com/luxury-rehab-centers/

    In addition to its growth plans, the organization has also announced that by the end of 2020 it will have the first AIDS and cancer research center that will strive to cure diseases like this using revolutionary stem cell technology. It will also be able to treat other autoimmune conditions such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, Lyme disease, neuropathy, multiple sclerosis (MS) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).

    This kind of cutting technology has been around for the last 30 years, revolutionizing how illnesses like these are treated through the discovery of isolated stem cell genes that have been proven clinically to show it has cured two patients suffering from AIDS and cancer. One has been clear for 10 years now, with the other being cured last year. This is a new, paradigm-shifting approach that is pushing western medication treatment to the side.

    To learn about how stem cell technology is used by the centers, more information can be found here: https://www.theholisticsanctuary.com/stem-cell-therapy/

    Learn more about The Holistic Sanctuary’s Mexico stem cell center here: https://www.theholisticsanctuary.com/stem-cell-therapy/mexico/

    The Holistic Sanctuary has an 80% success rate at healing patients that are either on medications, alcohol, street drugs, or suffer from mental health disorders such as PTSD, depression, anxiety and trauma. See more information on what treatments are used for these:

    ·      Depression – https://www.theholisticsanctuary.com/treatment-centers/depression/

    ·      PTSD – https://www.theholisticsanctuary.com/treatment-centers/ptsd/

    “We’ve incorporated holistic medicine and methodically weaved it with sacred plant medicine to have a better synergistic never before seen outcome. In the last 10 years, we have therapeutically, safely and humanely given people sacred plant medicines like Ibogaine, DMT, Changa, 5-MEO, Kambo, Psilocybin, mushrooms, and much more,” added Tabaie.

    The organization is looking for investors and partners to help finance and push this revolutionary vision forward. For more information about The Holistic Sanctuary and investor relations, please send an email or call +1-310-601-7805 or visit their website at www.theholisticsanctuary.com.

    About The Holistic Sanctuary

    The Holistic Sanctuary is a world-class holistic medical spa that uses cutting-edge and advanced therapies from around the world. It uses powerful modalities to cure, heal, and reverse illnesses and diseases that Western medical professionals have said are incurable. It is not a drug rehab, more along the lines of a luxury treatment center that transforms lives. It helps people to recover from depression, any type of addiction, PTSD, stress, anxiety, as well as other mental health problems. The centers use a combination of natural therapies to help people recover mentally, physically and emotionally. Unlike mainstream doctors, rehabs, and treatment centers, The Holistic Sanctuary avoids the use of outdated theories, ineffective therapies and addiction to toxic medications and drugs. Instead, it addresses the root causes of these illnesses, improves physical and mental health and alleviates the illnesses.

    Media Contact

    Company Name: The Holistic Sanctuary

    Contact Person: Investor Relations

    Email: info@theholisticsanctuary.com

    Phone: +1-310-601-7805

    Address: 1212 Wilshire Blvd.

    City: Beverly Hills

    State: California

    Website: www.theholisticsanctuary.com

    Source: The Holistic Sanctuary

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