Dancing with Fireflies

Thoughts on life, Lyme, and more

Archive for the month “October, 2011”

Chronic Fatigue and Lyme Disease study

Check out this article!

March 26th, 2011; Vol.179 #7

    Tired, sure, but is it from Lyme disease or chronic fatigue?
A scan of spinal fluid proteins reveals distinct signatures for two conditions
    By Nathan Seppa

MOLECULAR TELLTALESProteins in the spinal fluid may help diagnosis. This diagram depicts proteins found in three groups: people who have been treated for Lyme disease, chronic fatigue syndrome patients and healthy volunteers. While 1,605 proteins show up in all three groups (gray), 738 other proteins show up only in people with chronic fatigue syndrome (red) and 692 proteins crop up only in people in the Lyme group (green).

Proteins found in the spinal fluid may serve as biomarkers to help doctors cut through the clutter of symptoms that show up in two groups of patients — those with chronic fatigue syndrome and others with lingering effects from Lyme disease. Different sets of proteins discovered in the two groups indicate these are distinct and distinguishable disorders and that both involve the central nervous system, researchers report in the February PLoS One.

“This provides strong evidence of a biological component” in these conditions, says study coauthor Steven Schutzer, a physician and immunologist at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, in Newark. “There are abnormalities in the spinal fluid, which is really a liquid window on the brain.” But he cautions that the findings represent a first step in seeking biomarkers for the conditions and don’t reveal whether these different protein signatures cause the syndromes or result from them.

Chronic fatigue is a baffling condition marked by prolonged and severe tiredness that isn’t resolved by rest. Its cause is unknown and is often difficult to diagnose and treat. Women are most commonly affected.

Lyme disease results from infection by Borrelia burgdorferi, a bacterium spread by deer ticks. It is treatable with antibiotics, but infections can go unnoticed, delaying treatment. Also, despite clearing the bacterial infection, some patients continue to have longer-term symptoms, including fatigue. Scientists have wondered whether such post-treatment Lyme problems are a form of chronic fatigue, but a connection has never been ascertained.

In the new study, Schutzer and his colleagues analyzed spinal fluid samples from three groups — 11 healthy people, 43 diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome and 25 previously treated for Lyme disease but who were still experiencing cognitive problems and fatigue.

Analysis of the fluid samples detected more than 2,600 proteins in each group. Most of the proteins appeared in all three groups. But 692 proteins turned up only in the Lyme patients and 738 others showed up only in the chronic fatigue group.

Some of the condition-specific proteins may ultimately serve as biomarkers, Schutzer says. Identifying 20 or 30 proteins that show up consistently in a condition — but not in healthy people — could form the basis of a diagnostic test for the ailment.

“I think this a great first step,” says Joseph Breen, a biochemist at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md. “What’s exciting is that it looks like they’ve been able to tease out differences” between groups of people with these conditions. This finding will need to be validated in more spinal fluid samples from greater numbers of people who have these conditions, he says. A test using blood samples would be even better, since blood is more easily obtained, Breen says.

The new data also provide leads for other researchers to investigate, such as discerning functional roles of proteins that show up in only one condition. This could shed light on the molecular biomechanisms underpinning symptoms seen in patients, Schutzer says.

Obstacle race?!? With Zombies?!?

This is a repost from my other blog: Morning Tempest.

 

OK, I just learned about a new race that is happening across the country.  And if I’d known about it sooner, we would have been out there too. But there’s a new style of 5k, the Obstacle Course Zombie Race.  This is a little more hardcore me to run..err.. walk.  But I know plenty that would be into it. Talk about reasons to crawl through tunnels, leap into mud, and run around screaming! Zombies are chasing you and want your Braaaainss and flag.

Here’s how it goes:  “Runners will navigate a series of 12 obstacles throughout a 5K course in an attempt to reach the finish line —   all while avoiding zombies.”

You are given a flag and you try to get to the end of the race with your flag.. and life.

How cool is that?

Friends, Ryan Hogan and Derrick Smith, created this race for those who love the challenge and the zombie craze and it’s taking off! The race is filled with” hundreds of volunteers in zombie makeup and wardrobe try to “kill” the racers capture-the-flag style. Wait.. hundreds? Umm.. scary.”We have a bunch of little twists throughout the race,” Smith says. “While most courses are just one route, we have multiple ways for racers to reach the finish. It makes it more exciting.”

And to make it more fun, at the end of the  race, you get to celebrate survival (or zombie transformation) with live entertainment and music, local celebrities, vendors, food, and of course, beer!

That’s even better!

So, next year.. we are going to be out there.  Who’s with us?

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Moving into the darker months

Jack-o-latern

Image via Wikipedia

Halloween is my favorite time of the year.  I love all things Halloween, the decorations, scary movies, and the candy!  But unfortunately as Halloween grows closer, the weather gets cold.  But here in Maryland the Summer does not go gently, it flings wildly from hot to cold from day-to-day. And while I know that cold weather doesn’t really bring on colds, the crazy weather does bring on migraines and sinus issues. 

I’ve been having a few Lymie issues due to the weather.  Headaches are the worst part.  Living with aches and pains is common, but for me.. I get optical migraines or aura migraines, which take out my vision, leaving me unable to focus on anything.  It’s not a fun event when that happens.  But when I am keeping an eye on it, it’s not too difficult to stop before it gets ugly.  However this weekend I wasn’t so lucky and ended up with a whopper and landing in bed for the afternoon.

Thankfully, the pain is just about over with a few pains bouncing around in there from time to time. But it makes me look harder at my triggers.. diet drinks, florescent lights, loud noises, and not eating.

Now I can get back to work with the webshop and work on some of my Halloween decorations that I have been putting off doing for a while.

I wonder if procrastination is also a Lymie symptom. I doubt it..

 

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