The most well-known tick borne disease in the USA is Lyme Disease, caused by the bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi and similar strains (garinii, afzelli, mayoni), transmitted via tick bite through Blacklegged and Deer ticks. Tick Borne Relapsing Fever (TBRF) is a more severe disease with a much higher fatality rate (10%) when left untreated, caused by different strains of Borrelia and transmitted by soft ticks, with the exception of B. miyamotoi, which can be transmitted by both hard and soft ticks. After a tick bite, about 25% of Lyme Disease infected individuals experience a bullseye rash.
If you don’t realize you were bitten, your infection(s) will become late stage and cause debilitating symptoms that will only worsen with time. If you do realize you were bitten and head to the doctor – The doctor will take into consideration your history of a tick bite, your symptoms, and order some tests. Testing with an ELISA followed by a Western Blot interpreted by CDC standards is the most common method of testing for Lyme Disease today. The coinfections are most commonly tested via immunoblot. The problem is, this method of testing is outdated, highly inaccurate, and misses 56% of Lyme Disease cases, leading to many undiagnosed, misdiagnosed, and untreated patients. A Western Blot alone can be more accurate if it’s interpreted by different standards than the CDC’s. Companies like IGeneX and DNA Connexions are striving to bring more accurate testing methods to the general public, too.
If you caught the infection in the very early stages (which is very unlikely, because knowledge of these infections is so poor), you have about an 80% chance of full recovery.
Knowledge of late-stage Lyme Disease (untreated Lyme Disease that is past the first few weeks of infection) and Post Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (the term for ongoing symptoms after antibiotic treatment) is just starting to grow, but there is still no FDA cleared or approved treatment for either condition.
Most likely, your doctor will tell you that your infection isn’t related to your ongoing symptoms. They might refer you to a specialist or two for symptom control. All while the bacteria continue to wreak havoc on your body.
Medical students receive very little education on Lyme Disease in all their years of study. And virtually nothing about other tick-borne infections. If you have Lyme Disease and/or a coinfection, you probably know more about the subject than your doctor does, unless you’re seeing a Lyme Literate practitioner.
Your other option is to self-treat. Several all-in-one treatment plans exist for Lyme Disease and coinfections, such as Cowden, Byron White, Vital Plan, and BioPure.
Buhner’s books are extremely thorough and scientific. I guarantee you won’t be able to make it through the entire bibliography section at the end of the book, no matter how much you love to research.
Moreover, the herbs he includes have a high success rate for helping Lyme and coinfection sufferers reach remission. Approximately 75% of people recover completely, 10-15% are relieved of most or all symptoms, 5-10% are relieved of some symptoms, while only 5% have no response.
*I contracted Bartonella Henslae along with Lyme Disease in 2015 through two tick bites. My infections were systemic and late-stage before I got my test results back and discovered what was wrong. In 2019, I contracted a severe case of Tick Borne Relapsing Fever and did not get diagnosed until several months later, due to a black mold fiasco at our house that we thought was the problem. I treated with Stephen Buhner’s Bartonella, Lyme, and TBRF protocols and now I’m taking a maintenance dose of those same herbs. I have gone from almost completely bedridden to having my Lyme Disease very under control, able to work, go to college, and live a full life. I can’t recommend Stephen Buhner’s herbal treatment plans enough.
*Note: This herbal regimen is designed to be followed until all symptoms resolve. When you have remained symptom-free for a fair amount of time, you have likely reached remission. Testing to monitor progress is not a good approach. You will likely retain antibodies to the bacteria for life. So, the only way to differentiate between an active or past infection is whether or not symptoms are present, not by re-testing.
Bull’s eye rash (one-third of those infected), multiple Bull’s eye rashes (one-fifth of those infected), acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans (late stage), continual low grade fever; high fever, chills, or sweating (generally indicates bacterial coinfections); general flu-like symptoms, frequent headaches, neck stiffness, regular muscle and/or joint pain, severe unremitting headache (generally indicates coinfections), bell’s palsy (usually in children), mental confusion or difficulty in thinking, disorientation, getting lost, going to wrong places, lightheadedness, wooziness, mood swings, irritability, depression, disturbed sleep, fatigue, tiredness, poor stamina, blurry vision, floaters, and/or light sensitivity.
Similar symptoms to the ones above, but can often occur in a relapsing/remitting pattern, with high fever being more common. Tick Borne Relapsing Fever has a fatality rate of 10% when left untreated and can cause sepsis and septic shock.
IGeneX (Lyme Disease)
IGeneX (TBRF)
DNA Connexions
Vibrant Wellness
Armin Labs (a great option for people in Europe)
Walk-in-Lab
*Alternate criteria for interpreting Quest Diagnostics or LabCorp Western Blot test results
Note: Under each of the below herbs, I will include links to the prepared tincture, bulk dried, glycerin extract, and powdered versions. Mountain Rose Herbs has the best prices, so whatever Buhner herbs I can find there, I order. For more rare herbs, I order from Herbie’s Herbs. Hawaii Pharm sells a wide range of glycerin extracts.
Prepared tinctures are best for people who have no alcohol sensitivity and have more money to spend on treatment than time to make their own tinctures.
Bulk dried herbs are best for making tinctures or glycerin extracts at home, for people who have limited funds (this is 90% cheaper than purchasing prepared tinctures).
Glycerin extracts are best for people who have alcohol sensitivity but can tolerate trace amounts of alcohol and have more money to spend on treatment than time to make their own extracts.
Powdered herbs are best for people who have severe alcohol sensitivity and cannot tolerate trace amounts in glycerin extracts. The dose for powdered herbs is approximately 2x the dose for tinctures and glycerin extracts, so keep that in mind as you read the below protocol.
Reference: Stephen Buhner’s Healing Lyme 2nd Edition
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