collecte section Bourgogne

https://www.helloasso.com/associations/association-france-lyme/collectes/section-bourgogne

A must read for those with chronic fatigue syndrome and clinicians who want to treat cause rather than symptom.#ME/CFS

Tim Roberts

A must read for those with chronic fatigue syndrome and clinicians who want to treat cause rather than symptom.#ME/CFS

This latest publication by Cecile Jadin (The Crazy Journey of a Medical Chameleon by Cecile Jadin 2019) brings to our attention the important learnings in clinical microbiology and pathology previously described in vivid detail in medical journals that are now obscure to the modern medical curricula and overlooked by the modern search engines. This is the life-work of an experienced and brilliant clinician written through the eyes of an artist with a classical education, and draws on Jadin’s earliest life experiences living in the African jungle collecting ticks for her father Jean-Baptiste Jadin’s ground breaking work on insect-transmitted parasitic disease. Jadin the senior, along with his colleagues Charles Nicolle, Paul Giraud, Philippe Bottero, Hans Zinsser, published a litany of scientific and clinical papers that stressed the multiple clinical outcomes from intracellular microbial infections with the organisms we now know as rickettsia, chlamydia and mycoplasma, ehrlichia, anaplasma, and wollbachia. Jadin the younger unlocks these findings to open new treatments for chronic disease.
In this fascinating book Cecile Jadin takes us through the lives of 24 patients as their diverse symptoms and diagnoses eventually lead to their passing. Through their heart-wrenching clinical journeys Jadin drives hard her thesis of underlying infection as the unifying factor that should be searched for and treated. She uses the analogy of a chameleon to draw to our attention the underlying infection masking at each turning point in the pathology of the individual a modern diagnosis based on signs and symptoms, but ignoring the possibility of underlying chronic infection. The allegory, the illusions, the painted word pictures that draw on a schooling in the classics are at times hard to follow but the journey is one that should be made by all of us who need to be reminded of the many different pathologies that can arise from an intracellular parasite. Modern medicine is currently being taught this same lesson as the corona virus pandemic reveals the many different pathologies the virus can induce in the young, the compromised and the elderly. Our specialists rarely leave their specialization. Their strongly held clinical treatments that treat symptoms and repair damage with little concern for underlying causation are the underlying target of Jadin’s angst.

For those of us who find that time to read from cover to cover is limited and rare, I recommend starting the book at the Epilogue, because it is here that the true message of this brilliant clinician is encapsulated in just a few pages. Then to the Prologue which delightfully and concisely sets the direction before one plunges into the colourful and evocative clinical histories of some of her patients. For those clinicians and patients who read this impressive work from cover to cover, it is Prologue and Epilogue that should then be read a second time to truly appreciate the greatness of clinical wisdom that lies in the wildly active brain of Dr Cecile Jadin.