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How Lyme and babesia can contribute to anxiety

How Lyme and babesia can contribute to anxiety


Anxiety or Panic Attacks Got You Down? Relief is on the Way

IMG_1468This morning when I woke up, I realized that I actually felt refreshed.
I had not endured a night of constant shifting trying to relieve body pain. Or of bolting up eyes wide open at one a.m. and then finding myself stuck awake with raging insomnia for four or five hours. And the thing that struck me most this morning was, I felt at peace.
Lyme disease can affect every part of your body, and the brain often takes a big hit.  For me, one of the biggest symptoms has been crushing anxiety.
I wasn’t particularly surprised; when you’re in constant pain, can’t work, can’t dress or cook or do your own grocery shopping, you lost your sense of self and the worrying escalates. Will I ever feel ok again? How am I going to survive financially?
My worrying became debilitating, full-blown anxiety. A therapist helped me deal with it, and a prescription has taken the edge off on many tough days.
What I’ve learned is that the anxiety isn’t just triggered by the stress of this chronic illness, but by actual psyiological changes wrought by lyme and coinfections.
When I told my doctor that I haven’t needed my anxiety medication in weeks, he replied, “That’s good, it shows we are getting rid of the babesia.”  As medication has killed off this co-infection, anxiety is receding with the other symptoms.
Here’s an excerpt from an excellent article called  “Off-the-Charts Anxiety: Is a Tick Bite Making You Nuts?” from Rodale.com:
After treating thousands of patients with tick-borne disease in the past 20 years, it appears psychiatric symptoms are more commonly seen when there is a co-infection,” explains psychiatrist Robert Bransfield, MD, former president of the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS) and president of the New Jersey Psychiatric Association. Co-infections (when a tick passes along more than one disease) most often involve Lyme, babesiosis, a malaria-like infection that can cause fever, night sweats, and anemia; and bartonella (cat scratch fever), a bacterial infection that causes fever, headache, and raised skin rashes. Co-infections are most often culprits in tick-related panic attacks and anxiety, and these multiple infections from tick bites are quite common, occurring in an estimated 30 percent of cases.
Dr. Bransfield, who is also associate director of psychiatry at Riverview Medical Center in New Jersey (a state with a high prevalence of Lyme disease), points out that 240 peer-reviewed scientific articles demonstrate an association between Lyme and other tick-borne diseases and mental illness. For instance, a small study published in The Clinical Journal of Pain in 2005 found that patients experiencing panic attacks also suffered other symptoms not typical of standard panic attacks—extreme sensitivity to light, touch, and sounds, joint pain, mental fogginess, and migrating pain, all of which can be symptoms of Lyme disease—and those people tested positive for Lyme andbabesiosis, which, like Lyme, is on the rise in the U.S. Once treated with antibiotics for both diseases, the patients no longer experienced panic attacks.
This paragraph is particularly compelling with regard to other psychiatric impacts of lyme disease:
Another study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry in 1994 found that 40 percent of patients with Lyme disease develop neurological impairment, which may not surface for months or years after a tick bite. Psychiatric reactions included not only panic attacks, but also bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, dementia, obsessive-compulsive disorder, anorexia, and depression.
See the complete article for more details. And if you’re a lyme patient suffering with anxiety and panic attacks, take heart. As your lyme treatment starts to work, these symptoms, too, will fade. And that’s a marvelous feeling.