Doxycycline: A life line

Over the years I have tried many things to restore my lyme ridden body back to health. At this point I have figured out the things that work for me and the things that just left a bigger hole in my pocket. One of the the most important tools in my medicinal arsenal has been good old doxycycline at low doses over long periods of time. This part is important! I, like many lyme patients, suffer from horrific herxheimer reactions when put on large doses of antibiotics. I have tried so many different ones, but the one that allowed me to live a semi normal life and feel much better has been 100mg of doxy two times a day. Usually you would take more than this dosage because it is only bacteriostatic at 200 mg a day, and becomes bacteriacidal at 400-600mg a day.

I could never tolerate the larger doses, I just simply got too sick to stand it. But eventually I stayed on the 200mg a day for about a year at one point and I began to feel better and better. I am not cured, but after many trial and error episodes I have realized that this drug works best to keep me going. It is my fall back, it is my love. I always relapse when I come off of antibiotics, always. So while I still search for a cure, I know I have my trusty doxy to use and maintain a better quality of life. I think the reason I do so well with this regimen is because it is bacteriostatic (stops the lyme from growing, but is not killing it off actively), so over time my load gets less and less without creating a massive die-off in my body because of the slow kill off effect. And of course I begin to feel better because of the lower load in my body. This may be helpful to those of you still suffering. Doxy also seems to cause few side effects in my body, which is another important positive aspect to this regimen. I don’t get yeast infections from it, but I do take it with nystatin daily. While this is obviously not the best way to live, total dependence on medication, it is my reality right now and as I embrace it, I get to forget about lyme for a little while, take my little blue pills and live! I hope this helps.

Bee Venom Therapy for Lyme Disease

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I have been using bee venom for my lyme for about three years now. It has been an absolute staple in my treatment process and I wouldn’t give it up for the world. The benefits I receive from this therapy are extraordinary and I am also able to be autonomous in my use of the therapy, meaning free from the medical system to use it. Bee venom is active against the spirochete that causes lyme, the protein called mellittin is the active agent that makes this natural remedy an antibacterial, but the benefits for people with the lyme complex doesn’t stop there. The most prominent benefit I personally receive is the extra energy the venom gives me. I like to call it nature’s crack because It helps with fatigue so much! It is a potent painkiller and natural anti-inflamatory which is obviously helpful for the pain and arthritis symptoms that lyme can cause. It is also reportedly a natural mood elevator and has antidepressant qualities. All around this therapy is 100% worth the energy it takes to get set up and start using it. The set up is what takes the time, but once you train yourself and have your supplies you are free to treat yourself indefinitely. It is also feasible to maintain long term treatment with venom because it is not harmful to your system, unless of course you are allergic to bee venom. I am not a physician and am not giving medical advice, this is simply information that I have acquired in my personal journey through lyme disease that I hope will be useful to others.

What is involved in starting Bee Venom therapy?

1.Read about it and educate yourself! You must carefully and gradually ramp up on the dosage, it is a process.

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2000/07/23/bee-venom-lyme.aspx

www.beevenom.com

2. Find a physician, natural or allopathic, who is willing to go through the initial process, prescibe it for you, test against allergy, and teach you how to inject yourself. This also means you need to be able to inject yourself (have the stomach for it) or have a loved one who is willing to learn it and do it for you three times a week. I much prefer to be self sufficient and do it myself! It is much more convenient this way in the long run.

3. Gather your supplies:  

  • Prescription
  • Needles, 1.0 cc 29 gauge
  • Venom, venex forte or venex
  • How to manual from    www.beevenom.com
  • Pure acetone and cotton balls
  • Epipen, in case of anaphalaxis
  • Procaine or Lidocaine,Preservative free

4. Get on a schedule three days a week. I did Monday, Wednesday, and Fridays. Make sure you have the manual from www.beevenom.com and learn how to slowly ramp up with one bee sting up to five, and properly mix the venom and procaine or lidocaine.

You must obtain the venom, you can do this using live bees and maintain a hive so they are available to you. This route circumvents the medical system entirely, but it is a timely and energetic endeavor, and it is painful!

I personally obtain my venom from a harvester who is an expert in his field. You can check out his website and get the venom from www.beevenom.com. The venom is harvested and put into homeopathic remedy viles which you use a needle to draw your venom from. You do need a prescription for your first order, that way the doctor can test you against an allergic reaction, and safely prescribe you the venom. However, once you obtain your prescription and KNOW you are not allergic, you can be taught to give yourself the injections.

I asked my pain management doctor if he would be willing to do all of this for me several years ago, and because I have been in so much pain, he agreed to try this alternative therapy on me. When you do the injections, you mix the venom with a numbing agent called lidocaine or procaine, which must be preservative free. You need a script for the venom, numbing agent, and for the needles. You also need to purchase pure acetone from a beauty supply store like Sally’s. You clean your skin and the bottles before injecting the venom with acetone because alcohol will render the venom inactive and it cannot be used. The doctor you choose can teach you how to do “subcutaneous” injections on yourself. The needle is very thin and is inserted just beneath the skin, to me it is relatively painless procedure. If you have lyme brain and fatigue, this may seem like a lot, but once again I tell you, from my experience with this natural remedy, it is worth it. I believe this therapy has played a role in keeping the degeneration that lyme can cause at bay in my system, and it has helped me to maintain a better energy level. I can accomplish more and get a boost of energy if I am really fatigued. At first, I did the injections three times a week, and now I do them twice a week as a maintenance program.

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2000/07/23/bee-venom-lyme.aspx

http://www.neuraltherapy.com/LymeDiseaseBeeVenom.pdf

http://www.dancingbeeacres.com/Lyme.html