valentinelynx
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So I have a question. Why not take this study at face value? What if antibiotics really don't work, maybe because the participants really didn't have Lyme? It doesn't mean it's all in your heads, though I can see the worry that some people might jump to that conclusion.
But what if all the belief, attention, time, money being spent on chronic Lyme is actually contributing to the real cause and effective treatments continuing to be elusive?
The study in no way shows that "antibiotics don't work." They trailed two regimens that no one who actually treats Chronic Lyme disease would actually use: too short a treatment period, wrong doses and mono therapy rather than using multiple antibiotics at high doses.
If someone published a study that showed that 3 months of doxycycline did not cure "chronic tuberculosis" (there is no other kind...) no one would eagerly accept this as conclusive evidence that antibiotics don't work for TB! Likewise, a trial of AZT alone for HIV treatment would fail to suppress HIV sufficiently to save lives, but this does not mean that antivirals are useless in HIV! A certain amount of empiric therapy is needed to identify protocols that are likely to be effective and then these must be tested with controlled trials. There is a lot of experience in the "Lyme Literate" world on what treatments appear to work. If clinical researchers really want to contribute to the science of treatment, they would consult with the experts treating Lyme on the front lines and test the protocols that appear to be working.
For starters, they could try the ILADs Clinical Guidelines, which according to Lorraine Johnson of Lymedisease.org (who is also an author of the Guidelines) are "the first Lyme guidelines which comply with the Institute of Medicine’s new standards for rigorous evidence assessment and patient engagement in the development process." The ILADs Guidelines have been accepted by the the National Guideline Clearinghouse, which has removed the IDSA guidelines.
One of the recommendations of the ILADs Guidelines (recommended with "very low-quality evidence, meaning it is based on expert opinion, a common basis of recommendation in guidelines, and an indicator of the strong need for specific research on the recommended treatment) is as follows: "For patients with significant impairments and/or a minimal or absent therapeutic response, a combination of oral antibiotics, injectable penicillin G benzathine or iv. ceftriaxone (with the latter two used alone or in combination with other agents) is preferred. For patients who experienced disease progression despite earlier therapy, treatment with injectable penicillin G benzathine or iv. ceftriaxone, alone or in combination with other antibiotics, is advisable."