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	<title>Comments on: Tracking Lyme Disease in Living Hosts</title>
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		<title>By: Linda</title>
		<link>http://www.microbiologybytes.com/blog/2008/06/30/tracking-lyme-disease-in-living-hosts/comment-page-1/#comment-953</link>
		<dc:creator>Linda</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 18:16:26 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>I just started the antibiotic treatment for Lyme Disease. I received a bite on my leg, right near the panty line. On the first day of medicine the rash disappeared by 50%, the second day more than 90% of the rash was gone. The burn from the rash went away too. I got on the Internet to find out more about the habits of ticks. I read that after a blood meal the tick will drop off. That made me feel better that the tick was gone. Then I read to prevent tick bites you should check your groin, underarms, behind your ears and your navel. Now I also had a burning feeling every time I urinated.
So I got out a mirror and checked my groin. To my horror I saw three black specks. They were smaller than a poppy seed. Two just dropped off at the touch. I thought well maybe that was just some specks of dirt. The third speck ran away. Then it too dropped. After the first bite they did not drop off my body. They were ruffing up my skin to make it bleed. I had a very small sore area near a moist area in my groin. After the first bite on my leg they moved to my groin and instead of biting they were ruffing up the area to make it bleed. I also found a small amoung of blood on my underwear. It was all so disgasting.
I washed everything on my bed, Vacumed the carpet. Washed my clothes. I had been outsmarted my a tick. The ticks are about the size of a poppy seed in the nymph stage and they are very hard to detect. I didn’t know that until after I was biten.
It could very well be that people with long term Lyme Disease are contantly being reinfected. Most Doctors do not examine you they just give out drugs. That means you have to look for yourself. Check your navel too.
What thiscould mean that just like crabs, ticks can be spread sexually.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I just started the antibiotic treatment for Lyme Disease. I received a bite on my leg, right near the panty line. On the first day of medicine the rash disappeared by 50%, the second day more than 90% of the rash was gone. The burn from the rash went away too. I got on the Internet to find out more about the habits of ticks. I read that after a blood meal the tick will drop off. That made me feel better that the tick was gone. Then I read to prevent tick bites you should check your groin, underarms, behind your ears and your navel. Now I also had a burning feeling every time I urinated.<br />
So I got out a mirror and checked my groin. To my horror I saw three black specks. They were smaller than a poppy seed. Two just dropped off at the touch. I thought well maybe that was just some specks of dirt. The third speck ran away. Then it too dropped. After the first bite they did not drop off my body. They were ruffing up my skin to make it bleed. I had a very small sore area near a moist area in my groin. After the first bite on my leg they moved to my groin and instead of biting they were ruffing up the area to make it bleed. I also found a small amoung of blood on my underwear. It was all so disgasting.<br />
I washed everything on my bed, Vacumed the carpet. Washed my clothes. I had been outsmarted my a tick. The ticks are about the size of a poppy seed in the nymph stage and they are very hard to detect. I didn’t know that until after I was biten.<br />
It could very well be that people with long term Lyme Disease are contantly being reinfected. Most Doctors do not examine you they just give out drugs. That means you have to look for yourself. Check your navel too.<br />
What thiscould mean that just like crabs, ticks can be spread sexually.</p>
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		<title>By: Amiya Sarkar</title>
		<link>http://www.microbiologybytes.com/blog/2008/06/30/tracking-lyme-disease-in-living-hosts/comment-page-1/#comment-952</link>
		<dc:creator>Amiya Sarkar</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 19:50:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://microbiologybytes.wordpress.com/?p=588#comment-952</guid>
		<description>Advances in imaging technology will let us see hitherto unknown and unseen processes in physiology and biochemistry. I&#039;m eagerly waiting to see how the mitochondia produce ATP by oxidative phosphoryllation and also the DNAs in action.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Advances in imaging technology will let us see hitherto unknown and unseen processes in physiology and biochemistry. I&#8217;m eagerly waiting to see how the mitochondia produce ATP by oxidative phosphoryllation and also the DNAs in action.</p>
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