Met CBD olie kom je er niet van lyme af hoor, het kan zelfs schadelijk zijn wanneer je lyme hebt:
http://www.cbdolie.org/wanneer-moet-geen-cbd-gebruiken/Sommige patiënten kunnen beter geen medische cannabis gebruiken. Mensen met de volgende aandoeningen of situaties hebben meer kans op bijwerkingen.
Schizofrenie, bipolaire stoornis of ernstige depressie
Hart- en vaatziekten, hoge bloeddruk, hartritmestoornissen
Kinderen en jongeren onder de 22 jaar
Zwangere vrouwen
Lyme Loonies, Part 2: When Mental Illness Is Physical Illness
Uit: Huffpost
2017
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/ly ... 20ad99c7e1Yesterday, I discussed how Lyme disease made me crazy, and I ranted about stigma assigned by people—including medical professionals—to those who have mental illnesses. Now I want to talk about the scapegoating not of patients, but of symptoms.
There is a condition called “general paresis of the insane” that is characteristic of progressive, untreated syphilis infections. Syphilis is caused by a spirochete-type bacterium, Treponema pallidum, that can infect the brain and nervous system. People who have untreated syphilis are known to become severely mentally ill as a result of this brain damage, and also suffer other neurological effects.
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Some skip the referral and simply prescribe antidepressants and antianxiolytics themselves. In cases of psychiatric symptoms being caused by latent infections, the masking of symptoms with psychiatric medications would facilitate ongoing damage to the patient by the untreated infection.
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https://www.holtorfmed.com/connection-l ... disorders/When Lyme disease affects the brain, it is often referred to as Lyme neuroborreliosis or Lyme encephalopathy. Unfortunately, only a small percentage of these patients will be properly diagnosed as having Lyme disease and most continue to have relatively unsuccessful treatment with psychiatric medications. Neuroborreliosis can mimic virtually any type of encephalopathy or psychiatric disorder and is often compared to neurosyphilis. Both are caused by spirochetes, are multisystemic, and can affect a patient neurologically, producing cognitive dysfunction and organic psychiatric illness. Such symptoms may be dormant, only surfacing years later. Unlike Treponema pallidum, the cause of syphilis, the causative agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, can be much more difficult to eliminate, diagnostic testing is less reliable, and interactive copathogens are major contributors in the pathophysiology.
The Lyme spirochete is slow growing and can be difficult to treat, so the patient should be treated with multi-system treatments that include appropriate antibiotics