Hola Miguel.
Como siempre, gracias por tu contestación. No sabes el gran alivio que me has dado con ella. Estaba hoy para ir a hablar con la doctora para que me suspendiese las perfusiones de hierro, porque el lunes me pusieron otra y ayer estuve todo el día fatal y luego por la noche empecé con una de mis típicas reacciones de Herx, que todavía estoy con ella. Por tanto, lo que me dices, creo que se está ratificando. ¡Qué bien si no me empeora el hierro (como hace con otras infecciones) y me resulta beneficioso incluso!....
Muchas gracias de nuevo y un abrazo.
Montse.
--- El lun, 6/10/08, Miguel Angel Ramírez <ramirezortega@...> escribió:
De: Miguel Angel Ramírez <ramirezortega@...> Asunto: Re: [Lyme-E] Perfusión de hierro Para: lyme_y_otras_zoonosis_cronicas_espanol@yahoogroups.com Fecha: lunes, 6 octubre, 2008 11:39
Hola Montse,
Las Borrelias tienen una peculiaridad respecto al resto de Bacterias y es que no necesitan hierro para su supervivencia como el resto de los mortales, pueden pasar sin él, así que su suplementació n no te va a perjudicar como ocurriría en el resto de infecciones.
Además, según los investigadores que lo descubrieron, un exceso de hierro es extremadamente tóxico para las Borrelias, si esto es así entonces puede que lo que hayas notado sea en realidad un Herx.
Saludos,
Miguel
Friday, May 26, 2000
WRITER: Phil Williams, 706/542-8501, pwilliam@franklin. uga.edu CONTACT: Frank Gherardini, 706/542-4112, frankg@arches. uga.edu
JUST-PUBLISHED RESEARCH SHOWS FOR THE FIRST TIME THAT LYME DISEASE BACTERIUM DOES NOT REQUIRE IRON TO INFECT HOST
ATHENS, Ga.--New research from scientists at the University of Georgia, just published in the journal Science, demonstrates that Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease in humans, is the first pathogenic bacterium identified that does not need or use iron.
"All bacterial pathogens described to date have developed specialized systems to acquire iron from their hosts,"said microbiologist Frank Gherardini. "Current dogma states that to be successful in humans, bacteria must overcome strict iron limitations that the human body imparts on them. Although iron is abundant in humans, the amount of
free iron is well below the levels required to support the growth of most bacteria. To our surprise, we found that B. burgdorferi doesn't even require iron. In fact, iron is extremely toxic to it."
Understanding how these bacteria are able to successfully colonize humans and cause disease will ultimately lead researchers to more effective ways to prevent and control the disorder.
Some 30 years ago, doctors were puzzled by a large number of arthritis cases in children who lived in and near Lyme, Conn. After exhaustive study, they discovered that the disorder, which has symptoms that vary in kind and severity, was caused by a bacterium transferred to humans from the bite of the deer tick, Ixoides scapularis. Since then, there have been major efforts to understand the bacterium and its life-cycle, and Gherardini's lab has been involved for a number of years, publishing many papers on the
subject. Gherardini's graduate student James E. Posey was co-author on the paper published today in Science.
Borrelia burgdorferi is a spiral-shaped organism called a spirochete. Some scientists believe that Lyme disease came from Europe a century ago but was only recently detectable when it became more common. A resurgent deer population-along with mice, the reservoir host for the bacterium, coupled with increased outdoor activities by humans, has helped insure increased occurrence and spread of the disease.
The first symptom of Lyme disease is usually a red rash that often resembles a bull's eye. This rash, which can be small or cover a person's entire back, appears within a few weeks of a tick bite when the spirochete is introduced into the human host. The infection spreads to different parts of the body and is often accompanied by such symptoms as fatigue, body aches, headache, fever and a stiff
neck. Treatment with antibiotics in early stages of the disease is effective in most cases.
The Lyme disease microbe is extremely difficult to isolate or culture, so most doctors look for evidence of the rash at the site of the tick bite or antibodies to B. burgdorferi in the blood. Despite available tests and therapies, many cases go undiagnosed for months. Humans with late-stage Lyme disease are largely out of luck, and doctors can only treat the symptoms. Though people don't die from Lyme disease, the attendant joint discomfort and other symptoms can create ongoing misery. That's why laboratories are still working hard to understand the ways in which Borrelia infects and survives in its hosts.
Until recently, Gherardini said, standard wisdom held that all bacterial pathogens require iron. The new finding probably doesn't indicate that Borrelia evolved, though natural selection, a life-cycle designed
not to need iron. On the other hand, natural selection pressure on the entire genome clearly made it possible for Borrelia to exist without iron, though why remains unclear.
The studies in Gherardini's lab were helped immeasurably by the fact that the genome for Borrelia burgdorferi has been completed, so scientists know the location of the bug's genes on its chromosomes- and what these genes do.
The proof the researchers needed came slowly and painstakingly. First, they showed that the activities of several common iron-dependent enzymes were undetectable in cell extracts. Second, they found no iron-containing proteins in the bacterium during an analysis of the complete genome sequence. Third, B. burgdorferi grew normally in the presence of high levels of iron-limiting compounds, and fourth, the bacterium doesn't appear to alter gene expression in response to iron-limiting conditions. Finally, by using mass
spectroscopy and radioactive iron transport techniques, they found that the levels of iron inside the cells of B. burgdorferi are 1,000-fold less than those measured in other pathogenic bacteria.
"Uptake experiments using iron suggest that B. burgdorferi does not transport iron and there are less than five atoms of iron per cell," said Gherardini. To date, Lactobacillus planatarum, a free-living soil bacterium, is the only other organism for which experimental data demonstrate that iron is not required for growth. Apparently, B. burgdorferi belongs to a unique category of pathogenic bacteria that use a novel strategy to overcome iron limitation in the human host.
Just how this new discovery can be used in developing either new vaccines or new therapies for those infected with Lyme disease is not yet clear. While a vestigal iron pathway may still exist in Borrelia burgdorferi, simply adding iron to a
diet or as a medical therapy would do little good. Still, because other metals such as manganese are used by the bacterium, the discovery of how iron is unneeded by the bug could point toward an entirely new way to limit the occurrence and severity of the disease in humans.
"The ultimate goal of the bacterium is not to wipe out the host," says Gherardini. "It's just to find another place to live. This should tell use a lot about how they do that."
The good news is that probably far less than 1 percent of all ticks are infected with B. burgdorferi, though in some areas, more than half harbor the microbe. Gherardini said anecdotal evidence is that in Georgia, few, if any, strains of B. burgdorferi have been isolated from ticks.
If you discover a tick on your body, pull it out gently with tweezers, being careful not to squeeze the tick's body, then apply an antiseptic to the bite. Studies by National
Institutes for Health-supported scientists indicate that a tick must be attached to its host for many hours to transmit the Lyme disease bacterium.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 11:25 AM
Subject: [Lyme-E] Perfusión de hierro
|
Hola a todos, ¿qué tal?.
Me gustaría saber si alguno de vosotros padece déficit de hierro y si sabéis si hay alguna relación con Lyme.
Actualmente, estoy recibiendo hierro en perfusión lenta, ya que desde hace muchos años tengo déficit de hierro, pero en la última revisión tenía los depósitos de ferritina casi vacios. Hice la primera el lunes pasado y me encontrado peor de los síntomas de Lyme. Me he informado y he visto que está contraindicada la perfusión de hierro en pacientes con infecciones agudas o crónicas....
¿Conocéis algo del tema?, porque tengo que volver a hacer tres perfusiones más, de momento, y la verdad, no estoy convencida de ello.
Muchas gracias. Saludos a todos.
Montse. | |