John Darcyn, 68 v, oireet alkoivat n. 8 v (artikkelissa mainittu sekä 5v että 8 v) sitten. Aiemmin urheilullinen mies ei enää kyennyt juoksemaan tai pyöräilemään. Hänellä oli voimakkaita kipuja. Hän yritti selviytyä niistä sisulla. Tauti kuitenkin eteni - hän menetti tasapainonsa, ei kyennyt vetämään paitaa päälleen, nostamaan kättään, paino aleni, uupumusta jne. Hänellä todettiin babesioosi ja borrelioosi. Tällä hetkellä hän käyttää antibiootti, amoksisilliinia 8000mg/vrk vointi on alkanut parantua ja hän on aloittanut metsälläkäynnit uudelleen.
Suom.huom. amoksisilliinia ei yleensä käytetä babesioosin hoitoon. Teho? Sen sijaan borrelioosin hoidossa antibioottia käytetään toisinaan.
http://www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/arti ... ck_check=1
Dutchess at center of rising tick threat - More ticks, people infected with babesiosis
John Darcy, 68, of Beacon, has suffered with the tick-borne illness, babesiosis, for more than five years. Darcy, who takes 8,000 milligrams of amoxicillin each day, is feeling better now and has regained the strength needed to pull back his compound bow for deer and turkey hunting. / Spencer
Ainsley/Poughkeepsie Journal
Written by
Mary Beth Pfeiffer
Poughkeepsie Journal
Babesiosis and the Blood Supply: LYME DISEASE -- Babesiosis and the Blood Supply. Video by Chrissie Williams
ABOUT THIS SERIES
This is part 8 in a Poughkeepsie Journal series on the prevalence and problems of Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses. Go to www.poughkeepsiejournal.com/lyme to read previous installments on treatment and testing and to view videos on Lyme disease and babesiosis.
Related Links
Babesiosis Monday graphic (2)
CDC Babesiosis Cases by County 2011
Dutchess tick-babesia study Bard-Cary
Lyme disease counting is uncertain, imprecise
Lyme treatment guidelines flawed, researcher says
EXCLUSIVE: DICEY PATH TO LYME DISEASE DIAGNOSIS
CDC researcher answers questions on disease, tests
Where foxes thrive, Lyme disease doesn't
Tick research lags in war vs. Lyme
Editorial: Lyme disease must get a focused attention on patients
REPLAY: Lyme disease chat
Lyme Disease: Antibiotics fuel debate
Lyme disease: Writer has a bout
New tick-borne threat emerges
Lyme disease: Dutchess leads nation in cases
When John Darcy began to get sick some eight years ago, it was in slow, painful increments. An outdoorsman and athlete for years, the Beacon resident, now 68, found he could not jog or bike as far. Aging, he thought. He suffered soreness he had never known. Push through it, he told himself.
But soon he was losing his balance. He lacked the strength even to pull back his bow. He could not dress himself or lift his arm to shave.
As he lost weight and vitality, Darcy was prodded and tested for everything, it seems, but the thing it turned out to be: a burgeoning disease called babesiosis.
“It was never even mentioned,” said Darcy, 68, a retired Beacon IBMer and correction officer, who was also diagnosed with Lyme disease in a one-two tick-borne punch. “I never even heard of the word.”
That may change. Someday, perhaps not so far into the future, the so-called “emerging” malady known as babesiosis may join Lyme disease as another environmental scourge wrought by the tiny and insidious black-legged tick. And Dutchess County is at the crest of this gathering wave.
Dutchess ranks first
In 2011, Dutchess ranked first in New York state and 13th nationally in per-capita rate of the disease, according to statistics released exclusively to the Poughkeepsie Journal by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The county had the nation’s third-highest number of cases, which rose from 4 in 2002 to 53 in 2011.
“The Hudson River Valley has eclipsed Long Island for Lyme disease and babesiosis,” said Dr. Alan MacDonald, a long-time Lyme researcher and Long Island pathologist. “You’re up to your neck in ticks that carry babesiosis.”
Babesiosis is a disease, like malaria, most often linked to a protozoan parasite called Babesia microti, though other strains cause illness too. It is usually treated with antibiotics and anti-malarial drugs.
Just why the disease is emerging now – long after Lyme disease hit– may have something to do with what scientists call “reservoirs” of infection: birds and mammals that infect the ticks that in turn bite people.
BORRELIOOSI JA BABESIOOSI
Valvojat: Jatta1001, Borrelioosiyhdistys, Bb