First, the good news…

In my last update I described the medical tests that I was scheduling. I’ve had them all, and they all came back clean.

Arsenic: I re-did the arsenic test that had come out so high during the summer and this time it came back normal. This confirmed my hunch that the high levels on the previous test were the result of the Chinese medicine I’d been taking before the test.

CT scan: a year and half ago, long before I received the Lyme diagnosis, much of my worry about my symptoms centered around a recurrence of cancer. (I’d previously been treated for testicular cancer when I was in my twenties.) At that time I had an abdominal CT scan which showed a few small spots on my spleen, liver and lungs. The doctors weren’t too worried about these but they said that given my history it would be prudent to do a follow-up scan in a year to make sure those spots weren’t growing. The new scan showed that they were stable. In other words, non-cancerous.

MRI: the primary reason for getting an MRI of my head was to make sure that the cause of my human growth hormone deficiency wasn’t a pituitary tumor. In addition, even with the Lyme diagnosis I hadn’t quite stopped worrying that I might have MS. The neurological Lyme symptoms overlap a great deal with MS symptoms. But the scan came back clear. No tumor, no lesions.

All of this is a great relief. It means I can focus on what I know is wrong with me and let go of that lingering anxiety about other possible explanations for my symptoms. I can settle in with two definitive diagnoses. Human growth hormone deficiency and Lyme Disease.

Human Growth

The initial lift I felt when I started supplementing human growth hormone – the improved mood, the sense of physical fluidity – has faded over the past six or seven weeks. It’s possible that this is simply a perceptual issue. As any social psychologist will tell you, a change in state is perceptually more salient than an on-going state. As a change in functioning settles into a stable way of being, it becomes less noticeable. So it could be that the benefit I felt initially is still there but I’m just not experiencing it as acutely.

But I worry that what I’m experiencing is a repetition of something that I’ve felt in the past when I’ve started supplementing other deficient hormones: an initial surge of improvement followed by a rapid return to my previous baseline. I’m certainly not experiencing the common physical benefits that usually come with supplementing HGH…loss of body fat, increased muscle tone, increased exercise tolerance. It’s impossible for me to really sort this out, but I’m concerned that this is my body’s pattern: for whatever reason, I have trouble sustaining the benefits of supplementing any hormones. I want to be wrong about this. For now I’m continuing to give myself the nightly injections.

The causes of my HGH insufficiency remain mysterious. I’ve been asked whether it’s the result of the Lyme. I have no idea and I’m not certain what the mechanism for such an effect would be. I know that  lot of “Lyme literate” physicians

Borrelia

(LLMDs) are aware of the importance of getting hormones in balance as part of an overall treatment plan for Lyme. And I’m very aware that once borrelia (the spirochete that causes Lyme) gets a foothold in the body, it can spread throughout all the body’s systems. So it certainly seems possible that it could mess with the production HGH as well as everything else.

Understanding how my body is responding to continued HGH supplementation feels particularly important because it appeared that an initial effect of the HGH was to clarify the nature of my Lyme symptom cycle. HGH seemed to clear out the symptomalogical static so that, for a few months, a clear pattern could emerge: two bad weeks followed by two not-so-bad weeks. In the past six weeks that pattern has been disrupted (more about that in a moment). What this means is unclear to me, but it complicates my efforts to understand both my Lyme symptoms and my struggles with my hormones.

Existential doubts…an aside

While my naturopath was the one who diagnosed and is treating the human growth hormone deficiency, I continue to work with my internist as well, and (for insurance purposes as much as anything) I wanted him to put in the order for my recent MRI. The conversation I had with him about this was quite fascinating. He had, he reminded me, previously run a test for human growth hormone. His had been a blood test and it had shown normal levels of HGH. I was worried that he was reminding me of this result as a way to argue that the naturopath was wrong and that I shouldn’t be supplementing HGH. But instead he just got a puzzled look and told me that he simply didn’t understand what was going on.

“You’re responding to the treatment,” he said, “and ultimately that’s what matters.”

It is a very unusual thing to have a physician acknowledge the limits of his own knowledge. But what he said next surprised me even more.

“It makes me wonder whether anything we do works at all,” he said. “I think of those studies that show that a significant percentage of people who are ill will get better on their own without treatment. Maybe we do what we do, but people would do just as well without us.”

He mused for awhile longer on the possibility that everything that he had been trained to do was in fact meaningless. I felt an impulse to reassure him. Because it was unnerving to have a person who is caring for you profess such profound existential doubt about his own capacity to help. But I thought about my own experience as a therapist, about how I have experienced similar moments of self doubt and how I have come to accept them as an important part of the process of helping others heal. Those moments are humbling. But they open me up to new ways of thinking about seemingly intractable situations. If I allow myself to experience them fully, they open into transformation.

So I realized that this was an important moment for both my doctor and me. And that, by giving me access to his experience he was truly giving me a gift. I’d spent more than two years in a complex and deeply ambivalent relationship with medical professionals. I desperately wanting them to have the power to be able to figure out what was wrong with me while simultaneously harboring deep suspicions about their capacity to do this.

Here at last was someone who was describing this experience from the other side. The words he was speaking were words I both wanted to hear and feared hearing.

So I stifled the urge to say something comforting to him. I shut myself up and listened. Although it was frightening to me to hear his doubts, I recognized the gift he was giving me by expressing them. In the end I agreed with him that the business of healing is more complex and difficult than either of us could possibly comprehend.

Treatment options

As I’ve settled into my Lyme Disease diagnosis, I’ve discovered that life with Lyme actually has a lot in common with being undiagnosable. The diagnosis is fraught with controversy and confusion. And, as I’ve described in previous posts, treatment is equally fraught. The biggest controversy centers around the use of long-term antibiotics, which many LLMDs and their patients believe is essential for a full recovery from tick-borne illnesses.

But the dilemmas surrounding treatment, I’ve come to realize, are much more confusing and complicated than just that.

I thought, naively as it turns out, that once I found an LLMD my treatment would be fairly straightforward. I knew that it would take time, and that it might not be pleasant…but I didn’t expect it to be mysterious and confusing. Which is exactly what it has turned out to be.

To put it bluntly: there is no single clearly and effective treatment for Lyme Disease. Antibiotics get most of the attention, but even within this approach there are a multitude of types of antibiotics and forms of administration and beliefs about dosing. This book describes the “top ten” Lyme disease treatments. That this book exists tells you something about the state of treatment for Lyme. For most major medical conditions physicians will follow clearly established “standards of practice.” There are always choices in treatment for any illness, but those choices usually involve variations on an agreed-upon protocol.

But with Lyme, it’s a smorgasbord.

Schaller’s book lists, in addition to the “antibiotic rotation protocol,” the Marshal Protocol, the Salt/Vitamin C protocol, detoxification and rife machine therapy, in addition to a set of supportive

Rife Machine

supplemental treatments. Each of these approaches is long and complex. People I’ve spoken to who are following the Marshall Protocol (the micro-biological theory of which is difficult for me to comprehend), tell me that you have to commit to it for at least two years in order to for it to work. That’s a long time frame for a treatment for any disease…especially so for a treatment which may or may not ultimately be effective for you. But unfortunately it’s the status of most if not all Lyme treatments. And that’s where the largest dilemma arises with regard to treatment. Not all treatments work for all people with Lyme. But the only way you can know whether a treatment will work is to stay on it long enough to find out.

As a result, patients need to become experts on their own disease. We need to have enough confidence in our own knowledge about the disease to be able to disagree with the doctors we’ve sought out for help.

This can present a terrible bind.

It’s an emotional bind because we long, when we’re sick, to simply be taken care of by someone who understands our condition better than us.

It’s a cognitive bind because Lyme disease often fogs your brain and makes it difficult to think clearly. For instance, the simple act of reading has become much more difficult for me. It’s not easy to trust a foggy brain to be able to think clearly enough to have a coherent discussion with a physician.

This is simply not a model of medical care that we’re accustomed to. For better or for worse, we’re used to assigning expertise to medical professionals and simply following the treatment recommendations we’re given.

Lyme disease  presents you  with a plethora of possible treatments, many of which have fierce proponents, all of which will require a long-term commitment, but only some of which are actually likely to help you in a significant way at any particular stage of the disease. So you can’t just go to your doctor and ask her what you’re supposed to do. You have to consider that doctor’s beliefs about the disease. Which means that in addition to educating yourself about the micro-biology of Lyme and the mechanisms by which the various treatments work, you’ve also got to educate yourself about your doctor’s position on the disease and on its treatment. Then you’ve got to be willing to hold your own knowledge up to your doctor and be willing to switch to a new doctor if you don’t agree with her approach.

It’s a lot to ask of a person who’s feeling terribly sick most of the time.

Treatment efficacy

Having made the transition from “newly-diagnosed Lymie” to just plain “Lymie,” the most difficult question I face is this: how do I know when a particular treatment is working?

Karl Herxheimer

Am I feeling particularly bad today because it’s part of my usual Lyme cycle? Or is it because the drug I’m taking is killing off the spirochete and the die-off is making me feel worse? The increased symptoms that occur when a treatment is working is known as a “Herxheimer reaction.” “Herxing” can be intense and it’s one of the major miseries endured by people with Lyme. But when you’re “herxing,” it’s a good thing. It means that the treatment is working.

The distinction between core Lyme symptoms and the symptoms of a herxheimer reaction is crucial, but thus far I’ve found that it’s almost impossible for me to sort out the difference. And conversations with other Lymies reveal that this confusion is not at all uncommon.

Since being diagnosed I’ve done several rounds of antibiotics, hydrogen peroxide IVs, and tried several different herbal remedies. (There are a lot more treatments out there than just those “top ten” in Schaller’s book.) Up to this point my naturopath has been willing to shift her approach relatively quickly if a particular treatment doesn’t seem to be working. But I continue to struggle to make sense of the relationship between my physical symptoms and the treatment I’m receiving. My Lyme symptoms change so often that I’m hesitant to attribute any particular meaning to any particular symptom.

So I need to rely on my naturopath to interpret the symptom pattern for me; but I also find myself reluctant to trust her judgment. It’s an aggravating bind.

The treatment I’m following now, as I described in my last update, is called the Zhang protocol. It involves taking a set of Chinese herbal medicines over a period of six months to a year.

A few of my meds

I had an appointment with my naturopath after about three weeks on this treatment. At the time I’d been feeling particularly rotten. A lot of pain in my shoulders and upper arms, heavier than usual fatigue. I was frustrated by a lack of improvement and when I went in for the appointment I was ready to ask for a referral to a doctor who would prescribe antibiotics. But when I described to her what I was experiencing she felt strongly that this was a herxheimer reaction to the herbal medicine I’d been taking.

Was it? Honestly I still have no idea. In the days after that visit my experience was mixed. I had a few good days and a week or so that pretty miserable. At present I’ve been enjoying a reprieve from most of my symptoms. It’s been about a week and it’s a relief.

But I have to say, as an aside, that it feels like I’m not telling the whole story when I describe the good weeks in which my symptoms abate. Because these days the point of comparison for everything I experience  is my most recent Lyme flare-up. So when I say I feel better, it means that that my most miserable symptoms aren’t present. As a result, it inevitably occurs to me a few days into feeling better that there’s another, more important point of comparison: how I felt before all of this started in the first place. Then I realize that I’m keeping myself feeling better by avoiding a number of physical activities – running, skiing, shoveling snow, or even having sex – that will inevitably send me on a downward spiral. It’s a depressing but an inescapable thought; better in the short term is a far cry from regaining the capacity that I’ve lost since all this started.

In terms of treatment I’m left wondering: was the pattern that seemed to establish itself (two good weeks, two bad weeks) a true pattern in the first place? I simply can’t get a good read on any of it. But given the choice between continuing a treatment that might be starting to work or jumping ship and starting in a new direction, I’ve decided to stick it out with the Zhang protocol for the time being.

Community

Although Lyme obviously exists here in Montana, it’s not terribly common. I know a few people who have or had it and it’s great to talk to them. But it’s not enough. There’s something terribly lonely about the experience of chronic illness. For one thing, it’s usually invisible to people around you. Most of the time I look fine. Even if I’m feeling awful.

When you live with this disjunction between your appearance and your experience you inevitably start to feel isolated. Inside your mind the flow of your days is defined by your shifting symptoms. It’s what you think about most of the time, whether you want to or not. But there’s only so much of this you can report to those around you. Even to those who love you the most. You risk becoming an awfully tedious person, constantly describing your aches and pains, your fears about your health and your sorrow and grief about the life you’ve lost.

So one of the most important things I’ve found for myself is the on-line community of Lymies. It’s the universal algorithm of support groups: those who are going through the same thing you’re going through “just get it.” They can understand not only the surface meaning of what you say but also everything behind it.

Being understood is healing. This feels as important for me as any medical treatment I’m receiving. I don’t necessarily trust any of these treatment to work, and I know that if it does it may take a long time. But I do trust the capacity of others with Lyme to understand what I’m going through and to offer their support.

And it’s good to discover something that remains constant in this perpetually shifting disease.

 

 

Read the next post in the Life with Lyme series here.

 

 

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As readers who followed my Being Undiagnosable series will be aware, over the past few months I’ve received three separate diagnoses for the wide-ranging set of symptoms that have been plaguing me over the past few years: arsenic poisoning, adult-onset human growth hormone deficiency, and Lyme Disease.

Since receiving these diagnoses I’ve been trying to make sense of both the causes and treatment options. But with a set of over-lapping syndromes (especially when it includes a disease as protean as Lyme), treatment seems to proceed haltingly. At this point I’m working primarily with a naturopath who has specialized training in Lyme, but I’m still consulting with other specialists as necessary. In this post I’ll give an overview of the treatment so far. My hope is to provide periodic updates like this from time to time.

Arsenic

Arsenic exposure is both the nuttiest and seemingly the simplest of the three diagnoses to sort out. I met with an Occupational Medicine doctor (just when I thought already I’d been to every sort of specialist possible!), who agreed with my suspicion that my arsenic levels were caused by the Chinese herbs I was taking during the second half of last summer. There’s no treatment, she said. Just try to avoid further exposure and let the arsenic flush out of your system. Get tested again in a month or two to confirm.

I just had that follow-up test and I’m waiting for the results. If it continues to show high arsenic levels, I’ll be at a loss as to the source of the exposure and what I need to do about it.

My naturopath has a different take on heavy metals. She’s not so concerned with the levels in my urine as they’re being flushed out. She’s concerned with the amounts of heavy metals that are stored in my body. So she did a challenge test (injecting a chelating agent which draws out the metals), in order to try to identify those levels. The results showed slightly elevated levels of antimony, lead and mercury. Arsenic was not elevated. She wants to give me a couple of IV chelation treatments to try to draw down some of those stored heavy metals, the theory being that my body can fight the Lyme better without agents those in the way. I’m not entirely sure what I think of this approach, but I’m going to trust that she knows what she’s doing.

Endocrinology

While my naturopath recognizes the importance of the Lyme diagnosis, much of her initial focus has been on my endocrine system. The tests results showing human growth hormone deficiency have driven the biggest change in this regard. For the past two months or so I’ve been giving myself nightly injections of human growth hormone. As I’ve described previously, it definitely makes a real difference, especially in my mood. It works like an anti-depressant for me, lifting my mood even when my Lyme symptoms are flaring up.

Since receiving the naturopath’s tests results (which were based on a urine sample) I’ve since learned that my Internist had also recently tested me for HGH levels in my blood, and that those levels were normal. Both physicians acknowledge that this is puzzling. But the bottom line is that I’m feeling better on the HGH. Significantly better. So for now, I’m staying on it.

Of course, human growth hormone is only part of the endocrinological picture. The endocrine system is a set of interactive hormonal reactions, and over the past few months we’ve been struggling to get everything into balance. My thyroid supplement has remained constant. But everything else has been adjusted in one way or another. I had a trial of adrenal support medication before it became clear that my adrenals were fine. I’ve been on then off pregnenolone and progesterone. And I’ve tried various methods of supplementing my testosterone levels.

Testosterone is the real mystery. And it has been for years. I began supplementing it about three and a half years ago, when the decline in my libido and sexual functioning began to reach a distressing level. Since then the levels of testosterone in my blood have been right where they should be. But in spite of this, I haven’t experienced any of the benefits that healthy testosterone levels should bring. Most importantly, my libido and my sexual functioning have continued to be AWOL.

Working with my naturopath I’ve tried changing the method of administration of the cream. We’ve also tried switching to an oral form of the supplement. Without results. Her tests showed that while my testosterone levels appear to be appropriate, my estrogen levels are somewhat elevated. Her working theory now is that the problem is arising because my body is converting too much of my testosterone into estrogen. That’s why my levels are okay but I don’t experience any effect. The answer, she believes, lies in blocking that conversion. So she’s given me a supplement – Miomin, it’s called – which is meant to do that.

I’ve been taking this supplement for about three weeks, and I’m starting to feel like it might be making a bit of a difference. I’m cautious about putting too much faith in this change – I’ve gotten my hopes up too many times in the past – but I’m keeping an open mind.

All in all, the hormone picture is clearer than it had been, and that has been extremely useful in helping me get a clearer picture of what are and what are not my Lyme symptoms. With the endocrine fatigue starting to wash out, my Lyme symptoms are revealing themselves more clearliy.

Lyme

That’s not to suggest that my experience with Lyme has been straight forward. Far from it. As so many other people with chronic Lyme describe, my symptoms tend to be diffuse, erratic, evolving and often seemingly random. Most of these symptoms I’ve described in the past. The aggravating muscle twitches and spasms. The numbness. The fatigue and brain fog. The crazy buzzing sensations beneath the surface of my skin.

Increasingly I’m also experiencing arthritis-like problems. I’ve had sore neck for many months now. At first I’d thought I’d pulled a muscle, but it failed to resolve. This, it turns out, is a common Lyme symptom, arising from borellia’s intrusion into the nervous system. And little by little, the rest of my joints have joined the party. My shoulders, my hips, my wrists, my knees – they can all become incredibly stiff and sore. They’re not always, though. Similarly with my muscles. I get diffuse migrating pain that can show up in any part of my body. At the moment it has landed in my arms. And like the joint issues, the muscle pain comes and goes.

That coming and going, I’ve learned, is also common in Lyme, which tends to move through 30-day cycles. (Which has something to do with the replication cycle of borrelia.) I’ve known about this cycle but haven’t been able to clearly identify it in myself until some of the hormonal problems have been resolved. But for the past few months it’s looked awfully clear. I have two really bad weeks a month, followed by two not-as-bad weeks.

Which is helpful to know.

The bad half of the month is truly rotten. When I’m in that stage I can become pretty non-functional.

The not-as-bad weeks feel like a reprieve. I don’t feel like myself, but I’m not in intense pain.

So far, nothing we’ve tried to address the Lyme with has made any difference at all. I’ve had several rounds of antibiotics. I’ve had antimicrobial IVs and various supplements. Nothing has shifted.

Right now we’re giving a new treatment protocol a try. It’s a treatment advocated by a practitioner of Chinese medicine named Zhang. I’ve read his book, which makes a good case for the use of modern Chinese herbal treatments rather than antibiotics. His arguments make sense, although they’re hard to put into context in the absence of any counter-arguments. At any rate, I’m willing to give it a try. It involves taking a specific set of (not inexpensive) herbal supplements, in conjunction with acupuncture. The plan is to give it a month or two and if it’s not working my naturopath will consult with her colleagues and we’ll talk about a referral to a physician, probably out-of-state, who has more experience than she does treating Lyme with antibiotics.

I’d be happy to avoid subjecting myself to long-term heavy antibiotic treatment. But my hunch is that this is where I’m ultimately heading.

Loose ends

In the meantime, there are a few other things I still need to take care of. I’m scheduled for several new scans. A CT scan of my chest and abdomen to follow up on the one I had a little more than a year ago, which showed some small spots on my lungs, spleen and liver. The presumption is that they won’t have changed in size, which will indicate that they’re not cancerous.

I’ve also scheduled an MRI of my head, to rule out the possibility of a benign pituitary tumor, which is the primary cause of adult-onset human growth hormone deficiency. No one seems to think I’ve got this, but I want to know for sure.

I’ve felt a real heaviness scheduling these tests. I don’t want to go back into those scanning machines. But I’m not going to be able to fully relax about a cancer recurrence until I know that I’m clear. My hope is that these will be the last scans I have to get for a long time.

And there’s one last thing that I really need to do. I need to write a letter to send to the many doctors who have treated me over these past few years, to everyone who was unable to provide me with a diagnosis. I’m struggling with how to write that letter. Because it’s so tempting to be angry, to use it as a way to vent all of my frustration over the unnecessary medical agony that I’ve been through. But I know that while venting might feel good in the moment, it won’t do what I really want…which is to help reduce the likelihood that other people suffering from Lyme will have to wait as long as I did to get a proper diagnosis. Especially people who live outside of the identified Lyme endemic areas.

So that’s where things stand now. I’m going along with my evolving treatment. Trying to move forward with my work and my life. And I’m taking my time trying to compose a calm, sane letter informing the doctors about what it was that they missed as they were studying me.

 

Read the next installment of Life with Lyme here.

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Part 8: Commencement

[In part seven of this series I described the point at which I surrendered any hope of ever obtaining a definitive diagnosis for my symptoms.]


The end

The conclusion to this story is a story unto itself.

It is about finally receiving a diagnosis…although perhaps it would more accurate to describe it as entering into a dance with a diagnostic possibility. Because after more than two years of going to doctors and getting no answers, something shifted. I was about to receive not just one diagnosis, but three.

It’s going to be helpful, I think, to remember the list of diagnostic dilemmas that I described in the first post in this series. In particular, dilemma number five.

How do you determine whether you are dealing with a single syndrome as it evolves over time, or whether are you looking at two or more co-occuring conditions?

A single diagnosis brings focus to your efforts to care for yourself and to heal. Even if it’s a terrible diagnosis. Even if it’s terminal. Receiving multiple simultaneous diagnoses – “co-morbidity” is the medical term – is rather like trying to dance coherently with three or four partners at once. It is an answer from which emerges many more questions.

The culmination of this series was meant to be, to paraphrase the way a friend recently put it, that to be human is in some sense to be undiagnosable. The comforting assumption that everything about our lives can be understood is a helpful illusion that protects us from our anxiety about all the things that we can never fully understand.

The message of this series was to be: living authentically means living with an open awareness of mystery.

Once I had a diagnosis, didn’t that sort of muddy that message?

If receiving a diagnosis removed the all the mysteries, that might be true. But in fact, as I’ll describe, receiving a diagnosis can be almost as confusing as living without one.

The fantasy is that a diagnosis will be an explanation.

But mysteries will remain. Mysteries will always remain.

And so the message is the same.

As I move forward through a new set of struggles, the question is no longer what it means to live without a diagnosis. I’m not entirely sure what that new question will be. I will keep writing about it in this space, but it won’t be part of this series. This post will mark, as they say at high school graduations ceremonies, both the end of one period of my life, and the beginning of something new.

Persist

What made the difference?

It’s a question I always ask my clients when they’ve finally succeeded at making a difficult change in their lives: what did you do differently that made a difference?

The point of the question is twofold. First, it’s meant to anchor positive change by putting a narrative to the process which created it. Second, it’s an inoculation. When we (inevitably) relapse into our old ways, it’s easier to recover if we can remember what it was that helped us get out the first time.

In my case, the answer to that question is unrevealing. I came upon a diagnosis by doing exactly the same things I had been doing all along: going to doctors and insisting on tests. Nothing really changed.

You could, I suppose, argue that it was a matter of persistence. And I find myself tempted to make that into the message here. Keep trying. Never give up. But I’m skeptical of such sentiment. I don’t believe that persistence at a goal is necessarily correlated with achieving that goal.

At any rate, it wasn’t my persistence that led to a diagnosis. I was done with it all. I’d given up hope.

And my doctor had essentially given up as well. In my conversations with him over the past year he began to acknowledge the limits of allopathic medicine when it comes to figuring out what was wrong in certain complex cases.

“There’s a small set of people,” he said, “that we just can’t figure out. And the truth is, we don’t know everything. Sometimes the alternative docs and non-western practitioners can help where we can’t.”

The first time he said it, I felt annoyed. It seemed like he was trying to shake loose of me and my problems. But when he repeated it last June, it actually sounded right to me. I was ready to let go of traditional medicine. I was looking forward to a trip to Seattle, because I was planning to go back to get more of the Chinese herbs that had helped the summer before. I was considering asking the Hmong healer for more help. I had officially surrendered.

So what exactly did “persistence” have to do with it? If anything, it was my wife’s persistence that finally led to an answer. It was at her urging that I got a test for babesiosis, based on an energetic diagnosis from a healer I had never met.

My doctor pondered that request for a long time. He clearly didn’t believe that I had babesiosis. But he was willing to honor the request.

“If we’re going to do this,” he said, “I want to do it right.” He knew that I’d already had negative results on the standard screening test for Lyme (about which more in a moment), a test which doesn’t look for co-infections to Lyme. He said that he wanted me to get tested at a laboratory that specialized in this. It was, he said, a laboratory that the alternative medicine doctors used. He communicated a certain degree of personal doubt as to the validity of the lab’s work, but he understood what I wanted and he tried to give it to me.

The lab’s name was Igenex. The tests, a Western Blot for Lyme Disease, and a series of other tests for common Lyme co-infections, cost $1,100, upfront and out of pocket. I bit the bullet and paid for it. My doctor also ordered another huge round of blood tests. It was, he said, the largest number of blood tests he’d ever ordered for someone at a single time.

I asked him for something else at that visit. At my wife’s suggestion, I said I wanted a trial of antibiotics. We’d been thinking about this and we realized that if I did have a tick-borne illness, then antibiotics would be the treatment. And if what I had wasn’t tick-borne, we thought, then maybe whatever I did have would respond to antibiotics. We were fishing, but at that point the risks of taking a month’s worth of antibiotics seemed small in comparison to the hope that they might help.

He agreed to prescribe 30 days of Doxycycline – a prescription which, I was soon to understand, came with a certain degree of professional risk.

I went on my way. I had my blood drawn and I started taking the antibiotics. I wasn’t expecting anything to come of it. It would be awhile before we got all the test results. I took my boys to Seattle. I went back to the Chinese pharmacy, where, to my amazement, the doctor there was able to look up his records from my visit the year before. He felt my pulses, asked some questions and wrote out a new prescription. The previous prescription had a lot of bark in it. This one had more leaves. He also sold me a very expensive medicine that came in a red and gold metal tin. It was a small ball that looked a little like a tiny chocolate truffle. But tasted like tar. I was to take half of it that night, half the next night. Then I was to wait a week and take another.

That night I let it dissolve in my mouth. It was like swallowing turpentine.

I made my way through the trial of antibiotics. Nothing changed. That seemed to prove that whatever I had wasn’t tick-borne.

But when we got back from Seattle a lab result sheet from my doctor was waiting in the mail.

It said simply: “Positive for Lyme. Please call.”

Lyme

I stared at that paper for a long, long time. Internally I found myself struggling between disbelief, hope and fear. I knew next to nothing about Lyme at that point. Because I’d previously tested negative I hadn’t researched it at all. What I’d knew, or assumed, was that Lyme was a primarily Northeastern phenomenon. Aside from a winter on Cape Cod eighteen years ago, I hadn’t spent time in any of the areas that were endemic for Lyme. It didn’t make sense that I’d contract it in Montana. In fact, people I knew said that Lyme didn’t exist in Montana. I looked up the CDC statistics on Lyme Disease by state. Montana hadn’t had a single case until 2006, when they’d recorded one. In 2007 there were four. Six in 2008 and three in 2009.

If my diagnosis was accurate, it would apparently make me case number fifteen.

When I met with the doctor he expressed his skepticism about the results of the test he had ordered.

“I’m not sure what to tell you,” he said. “According to this lab you have Lyme, but you based on the CDC criteria it’s not definitive.”

I didn’t know it yet, but I had just stumbled into one of the craziest medical controversies in recent years. The definition of the disease, the process for diagnosing it and the standard of practice for treating it are all matters of fierce debate between different groups of physicians.

And the most fiercely contested aspect of all is the existence of Chronic Lyme Disease.

If Lyme disease is discovered and treated immediately, it’s a pretty curable condition. In many cases early diagnosis is made easier by the appearance of a signature “bullseye” rash at the site of a tick bite. If you live in an endemic area and you get that rash, your doctor will give you a month’s worth of antibiotics and you should recover nicely.

The problem is that not everyone gets that rash. Some argue that less than half of those who are infected get it. And an even bigger problem is that the same standard of treatment doesn’t seem to apply to those whose infection doesn’t get treated for months or years after the bite.

I am a case in point. At the time of receiving the diagnosis I was just about finished with a month-long regimen of Doxycycline, which might as well have been sugar pills for all the effect that they had on me.

The bug that causes Lyme is called a spirochete. It’s the same type of organism that causes Syphilis. Once the spirochete that causes Lyme has established a foothold in your bloodstream, it’s extremely devious. It can burrow into your cells to hide from the antigens which fight it. It changes the nature of the proteins on its surface in order to avoid detection. It even seems to be able to encase itself in a cyst in order to evade antibiotics, then to re-emerge once they’re gone. Over time, it can find its way into all of the organs of the body. In particular, it can invade the nervous system, giving rise to a host of neurologic symptoms like fasciculations, parasthesias (numbness, buzzing and tingling sensations), neck and other nerve pain, and cognitive fog. This set of symptoms is common enough that it has its own name: Neurological Lyme.

As it happens, we have a good friend here in Missoula who is a biochemist, whose principal field of study is the spirochete which causes Lyme Disease, called borrelia burdorferi.

When I told this friend about my diagnosis, he expressed skepticism. In his view, it wasn’t possible that I had contracted Lyme Disease here in Montana. The tick that spreads it, he said, doesn’t exist here.

But there had been a strange series of cases here which strongly resembled Lyme, down to the bullseye rash following a tick bite.

“We’ve told people, ‘We don’t know what you have, but we know what you don’t have, and that’s Lyme disease,’ ” state epidemiologist Todd Damrow has said of these cases.

So is this what it was going to come down to? I was finally going to get a diagnosis, but no one was going to believe that it was real?

I wasn’t sure what to think. All I knew for sure was that my test was positive, and that the diagnosis made sense in relation to my symptoms. If I had Lyme, I’d probably had it for at least two years. Which meant that if I had Lyme I probably had Chronic Lyme, especially since a round of antibiotics hadn’t touched it. But whether or not I had Chronic Lyme depended on which physicians you were listening to.

There’s no question that people whose Lyme Disease goes undetected and untreated for a long time struggle with evolving and debilitating symptoms. And I want to say that no one would argue that such people aren’t sick. But that’s not not entirely true. One common explanation that mainstream physicians give for those who are suffering from chronic Lyme is that their symptoms are psychiatric in nature. In other words, they’re not sick at all. They just think they are.

Remember diagnostic dilemma number two: how do you distinguish between psychological and physical causes of an illness?

It’s a complex issue, because people who have been sick with a chronic illness do experience cognitive decline. Their brains are fogged. They’re cranky, and they’re angry. As I have described previously, the longer you live in this condition, the more you start to look…well, crazy.

There’s another debate as well. Mainstream physicians and researchers believe that thirty days on antibiotics cures Lyme. If you accept this premise, and you also acknowledge that someone who has been previously diagnosed with Lyme is still sick…then how do you explain their illness? The argument they make is that in these patients the Lyme has triggered another, as yet unidentified autoimmune disorder. They don’t have Lyme, they have an “unidentified Lyme-induced disorder.”

These physicians, backed by the CDC, are strongly against the use of long-term antibiotics which most “Lyme literate” doctors (LLMDs) see as the only way to fully cure someone of the disease. In fact, doctors who prescribe long-term antibiotics are at risk of receiving severe professional censure.

All of this led me to be unsure about my own diagnosis. Could it be a false positive?

I felt like I’d wandered into an Alice in Wonderland riddle: When is a diagnosis not a diagnosis?

When it’s Lyme Disease.

From testing to treatment

Diagnostic testing for Lyme is a big part of the problem. The CDC standard of practice for diagnosing Lyme Disease is to give a screening test, an “enzyme-linked immunosorbant serum assay” or ELISA test. If a patient comes out positive on that test, then a more sophisticated test, the Western Blot is used to confirm the diagnosis. The problem is that the ELISA test (that’s the one that had come out negative for me before) is notoriously inaccurate, giving both false positive and false negatives. Some studies have shown it to be accurate less than fifty percent of the time.

And if it comes out negative, generally you’re stuck.

The Western Blot is a much more sophisticated and complex test. It separates the different antibodies that your body produces in response to specific proteins on the spirochete, which are separated into “bands” according to weight. The test is positive or negative for Lyme depending on how many of these individual bands are positive.

But there are many controversies about this test as well. For one thing, the strict CDC standard for a positive Lyme test requires a much higher standard than many LLMDs believe is reasonable.

This is further complicated by the fact that borrelia burgdorferi is inconsistently visible to even the best tests available. There are times in its life cycle when it is undetectable. Long-term patients with Lyme not uncommonly have a series of tests on which they are sometimes negative, sometimes positive, with varying degrees of confirmation.

Regardless of all of this, my test was clearly positive. When I learned how to read the results, I realized that my doctor had actually been wrong. My results were unequivocally positive even by CDC standards.

So the diagnosis stood. I really did have Lyme Disease.

I began educating myself about the controversies surrounding diagnosis and testing and treatment, and especially about the experience of those who had been suffering from Lyme for extended periods of time. I read Cure Unknown, an exceptional book on the subject by Pamela Weintraub, who is both a journalist covering scientific issues and a victim of Lyme Disease herself.

I began mapping my symptoms over the past two years to the symptoms for Lyme Disease. They include:

  • Neck pain and stiffness
  • Backache, back pain, sciatica
  • Muscle fasciculations
  • Muscle pains or cramps (which “migrate” through the body)
  • Burning, shooting or stabbing pain
  • Extreme fatigue/malaise/lethargy
  • Numbness and tingling
  • Lightheadedness
  • Brain fog
  • Confusion, difficulty in thinking
  • Difficulty with concentration or reading
  • Loss of sex drive,
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Taste abnormalities
  • Unexplained weight gain or loss

Check. Check. Check. It added up. Lyme seemed to provide an explanation for all of the symptoms I’d been experiencing. Possibly even including the rash.  As I described above, the earliest symptom of Lyme is often the “bullseye” rash. I thought back to that rash I had in the summer of 2008. I don’t believe it had that the classic characteristics. But it was strange. And I would give anything now to have a photograph of it.

So there was an answer. But it opened up new questions. If I had Lyme, when did I contract it? And where? And which of my symptoms did it account for?

Because of course I’d been having hormonal problems and sciatic pain even before the rash. They would seem to be unrelated to the Lyme. But for that matter, I didn’t know that the rash itself was related to Lyme. Was it possible that I contracted Lyme years ago but only started showing symptoms in the past two to three years? And what did it mean that I had experienced no effect after a month of antibiotics? According to the CDC, I should cured.

I doubt that any of these questions are ultimately answerable. And they were about to be complicated by several new discoveries.

In the meantime, I had to figure out how to proceed with treatment. My doctor, to his great credit, acknowledged his uncertainty about the whole matter and offered me several options. I could work with him and he would do the best he could. Or I could try to find another MD who had more experience with Lyme. Or (and this was an extraordinary thing for an allopathic physician to say), I could seek out a naturopath to work with.

Although I have been wary of naturopaths in the past, I chose the latter option. There was a naturopath in Missoula who had specific training in Lyme from the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS). I called her up and scheduled and appointment.

Heavy metal

But there was one more test to do first. On that exhaustive round of blood tests, the arsenic level in my blood was a little high. That was odd. To verify or disconfirm this result, I needed to do a 24-hour urine draw, to test specifically for arsenic. A week or so later I got a call from my doctor. I was in fact positive for arsenic. The levels in my urine should have been below 50 micrograms. Mine was 117.

Now this really was starting to sound like a House episode. A truly bizarre finding that made no sense. Did it have any relation to the Lyme diagnosis? That seemed unlikely. But how could I tell?

It was all the more confusing because symptoms of arsenic poisoning – neurological effects, sexual dysfunction, metallic taste – overlapped with so many of my symptoms.

It’s well-known that comparatively high amounts of arsenic are socked away in Montana’s rivers and soil, the aftermath of years of less-than-safe mining practices. But I hadn’t done anything in particular that would have created this level of exposure to it. I didn’t work in an industry where exposure was a risk. We were on city water, which was tested regularly.

It just didn’t make sense.

People started teasing me that my wife must be poisoning me.

But then I remembered those Chinese herbs. Especially that tar ball. I took that medicine on faith. I really had no idea what was in it. Could that tar ball have contained arsenic?

It seemed possible.

Full Circle

When this all started, before my symptoms were alarming (when they were merely distressing), I understood that something was off with my hormones. As I described in the first post in this series, the awareness that something was wrong began with a loss of sexual drive and functioning. I treated my testosterone and thyroid and got their levels to where they should be. But it changed very little. And that had remained a mystery to me over these two years. If my levels were right, why didn’t I feel better?

When I look at my hormone problems in relation to my Lyme diagnosis, there were several possible relationships. One was that my hormone problems predated Lyme and had nothing to do with it except that they made it harder for my body to fight off the spirochete. Another was that Lyme predated and was the source of the hormonal problems.

Or perhaps there was some way in which both of these possibilities could be true.

It’s a question that is as important as it is unanswerable.

Back to diagnostic dilemma number one: when does an illness begin?

In fact, my hormonal issues could date back to my testicular cancer 25 years before. Or even earlier. I’m not convinced that these issues haven’t been a lifelong problem for me.

Whatever the case, when I met with the naturopath it was clear that in addition to the Lyme and the heavy metal exposure, she was going to look aggressively at my hormones. She ordered a six-hour urine draw for a comprehensive endocrine panel. Another $400, up front.

“I’m going to include human growth hormone in this,” she said. “I don’t always, and it’s more expensive, but in your case I think it’s worth checking.”

She started me on a series of anti-microbial medications and IV treatments to address the Lyme. None of it seemed to affect me at all. I still felt, in cyclically varying degrees, like shit.

The hormone tests came back. Or most of them did. The human growth hormone results were delayed. The naturopath read them the way a psychic might read tea leaves. My estrogen levels were a little high. My adrenals looked fine. My testosterone, which I was already supplementing, seemed good. So did my thyroid levels, also supplemented.

What did all that mean?

The endocrine system is like a set of interlocking homeostatic mechanisms. You have to think dialectically to make sense of it. An elevation in one level corresponds with a deficiency in another, in a set of complex relationships. We tried a series of changes. A new thyroid formula. Changing the application method on my testosterone cream. Adrenal support. Pregnenelon. Progesterone.

None of it seemed to change anything.

Then the rest of my test came back. It turned out that the reason the human growth hormone results had been delayed was that when they’d run it the first time they hadn’t found any in me. That was odd enough that they ran the test a second time to make sure it wasn’t an error.

Again, nothing.

It turned out that I had a serious HGH deficiency.

“It doesn’t mean your body isn’t making any,” the naturopath said. “but it’s making so little that by the time it gets to your urine there’s none left.”

It was, she said, a very important finding. She thought it might be the key to everything.

“Your immune system is so depressed that it can’t even muster a response to the Lyme.”

She wanted to get my hormones in balance before she continued trying to treat the Lyme. This made me a little uneasy. But, she said, if we don’t do that she would wind up treating a hormone deficiency “as if” it were Lyme.

I started researching human growth hormone, which was difficult to do given the performance-enhancement stories and anti-aging websites that drowned out everything else in the search results. I learned that the main cause of HGH deficiency in adults is a benign pituitary tumor, called an adenoma. Did I have one? And if so, what did that mean?

Another MRI is in my future to check that out.

The naturopath said the goal of her treatment was going to be to get my own body to start creating adequate HGH again. But my reading was telling me that this might not be too likely.

The treatment for human growth hormone deficiency is pretty straightforward: you give yourself daily injections of a supplement. It’s expensive – about $500 a month – and of course my catastrophic health insurance wouldn’t cover any of it. But I had to try.

You can’t help but feel, when you start giving yourself injections, that you’ve crossed a certain line. I know that this is a normal thing for diabetics, but as I started to give myself my nightly dose of HGH, the main images in my mind were not diabetics but junkies.

Four or five days after I started the injections, I began to feel a difference. It didn’t feel like a change to what I have now started differentiating as my “Lyme symptoms.” It was something else. The biggest change was in my mood. This was the best anti-depressant I’d ever taken. I’d tried numerous anti-depressants in various doses and combinations over the years, and none of them had made a dramatic difference. But with the HGH it was like a cloud was lifting. I felt lighter and more connected with those around me. I felt more hopeful. I felt like part of the world again.

It didn’t help too much with the cognitive fog, but it did seem to give me a bit of an energy boost. And there was this global physical change that is very hard to describe. I feel more fluidity in my movement. It is as if my entire body has been lubricated.

As I write these words, I’ve been on the HGH for about three weeks. And last week when I met with my naturopath I all but begged her not to take me off of this. Not that she was about to, but now that I’ve found something that has started to make me feel better, I’m desperate to hold onto it.

Unanswered questions

I wish that I could let this story settle into an easy ending.

But I’d be lying if I told you that I feel completely comfortable with this cluster of diagnoses. Diagnosis, I have come to understand, is largely a matter of belief.

Here’s what I believe at this moment.

I believe that I have a fairly long-standing and untreated case of Lyme Disease.

I’m fairly certain that my elevated arsenic level was a red herring, an aberration created by the Chinese herbs. I’m hopeful that when I re-test those levels, they’ll be normal. If they’re not, I have no idea what I’ll do.

And I believe that my endocrine system has been severely depleted, probably for a very long time, perhaps even for my entire life. I trust that supplementing with HGH will help everything get back into the balance, although I’m certain that there will be further fine-tuning to do as well, especially with testosterone. Because although my levels seem right, I still feel depleted. And my libido is still on the lam.

Am I convinced that I don’t have ALS?

Absolutely.

Am I fully confident that I don’t have MS?

No.

Do I trust that a recurrence of cancer has been completely ruled out?

Not at all.

How would I describe my health at this moment?

Although the HGH is helping, I still feel fragile. The Lyme symptoms are all still present, in varying degrees. My whole body often hurts – that “cellular” pain that I’ve described previously. I can get easily fatigued. My thinking still feels awfully slow. The fasciculations aren’t particularly intense lately, but they haven’t gone away. The buzzing, numbness and other odd sensations continue as before.

It’s all there. At the moment it’s not at its worst. But because of the way these symptoms come and go in cycles, I don’t trust any particular state to last. It’s exceedingly difficult to figure out what is and what isn’t a trend.

And unanswered questions keep coming into my mind.

Why did I lose all that weight last year?

Do I have a pituitary tumor?

Will I be on HGH for the rest of my life?

How long have I had Lyme?

How treatable is my Lyme?

Will I ever experience my sexual self again?

In the end it seems to me that this is as close to a definitive diagnosis as I’m likely to get. And that feels okay. Because what I’ve been coming to terms with through all of this is my relationship to the entire idea of diagnosis. In the process of struggling for a definitive diagnosis, and in surrendering the hope of obtaining one, I found myself, in certain ways, at peace.

In this state of mind I feel the genuine possibility of healing. And that possibility is enough. I am certain that my symptoms and their diagnostic interpretations will continue to evolve. As will my state of mind. That’s to say that even within my diagnoses I will continue to feel the ebb and flow of diagnostic possibilities. Which is another way of saying that in certain ways I will always be undiagnosable.

As we all are.

 

Note: while this post marks the end of the “Being Undiagnosable” series, you can follow my journey in a new series of posts, titled “Life with Lyme.”

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