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- <text id=91TT1375>
- <title>
- June 24, 1991: Life in The Age Of Lyme
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 24, 1991 Thelma & Louise
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 45
- Life in The Age Of Lyme
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As the disease spreads, many scared Americans have declared war
- on ticks. Summer may never be the same.
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW--Reported by Janice M. Horowitz and Andrew Purvis/
- New York
- </p>
- <p> Guinea hens are bald, wattled and graceless. They
- resemble feathered footballs. Worse, they are surly, loud and
- unmusical, often at 3 in the morning. But they are voracious
- gobblers of bugs and are especially fond of the tiny deer ticks
- that carry the spirochetes of Lyme disease. Which is why model
- Christie Brinkley, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED's swimsuit sweetie some
- years ago, learned to love them. She has installed a flock on
- her estate in East Hampton, N.Y., and hands out chicks (called
- keets) to her neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> Before she got the hens, Brinkley had taken to wearing
- high fishing boots when she walked to the beach. "We were
- really infested," she says. "It seemed as if every blade of
- grass had a tick hanging off it." Her hen patrol has reduced the
- local tick population, although that has not prevented her from
- contracting the tormenting ailment that she and millions of
- other householders routinely take elaborate pains to avoid. The
- tick that infected her with what was diagnosed last week as Lyme
- disease probably, she thinks, bit her while she was horseback
- riding.
- </p>
- <p> Fear of Lyme disease is justified, and harboring guinea
- hens is reasonable, if not terribly practical for most people.
- The nagging affliction often shows itself first as a rash and
- flulike nausea, fever and aches. Lyme mimics many other
- illnesses, and in later stages it can escalate to arthritis,
- meningitis, neurological damage and sometimes physical debility
- and racking pain. Some 30,000 cases had been reported in the
- U.S. by the end of last year. From 1986 through 1989, reported
- cases doubled each year, and a slight drop last year (7,995
- cases, from 8,551 the year before) may reflect only a change in
- reporting criteria.
- </p>
- <p> Thus when the U.S. Centers for Disease Control advises
- that anyone walking through grass or brush in tick-infested
- areas wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants taped into sock
- tops, many people actually do it, though the fashion statement
- is irredeemably tacky. The meticulous daily body inspection
- that is the most effective preventive is now a normal routine,
- like flossing teeth. What you are looking for is the nymphal
- stage of an arachnid (not an insect) that is louse-size only as
- an adult and that as a nymph has been compared to a dark
- freckle. Where you are looking is behind the knees, in pubic and
- scalp hair, under watchbands, in armpits. Yes, you need a
- partner for this, and perhaps, if you are no longer 25, a stiff
- drink.
- </p>
- <p> Old Lyme, Conn., got an undeserved reputation as a
- pesthole when the disease later named for it was first
- identified there in 1975. But it is unlikely that the disease
- really was newly hatched in that area. Dec ades earlier, on Long
- Island in New York, a pesky swelling called Montauk knee was
- causing trouble. In 1908 something indistinguishable from Lyme
- disease was described in Sweden. Ticks hitch rides not just on
- deer, mice, humans and other mammals, but also on birds, which
- helps explain why Lyme disease has been reported in 46 states.
- (Only Alaska, Arizona, Montana and Nebraska have reported no
- cases.)
- </p>
- <p> White-tailed deer are suburban creatures, and a surge in
- the deer population as forests have regrown in the Northeast
- offers one reason that Lyme disease has hit hard in New York,
- New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania and lower New England.
- Wisconsin and Minnesota have had smaller outbreaks, and so,
- though the ticks are a different species, has Northern
- California.
- </p>
- <p> A fairly effective control method for a limited area is a
- product called Daminex, which is a tube filled with
- pesticide-soaked cotton. Mice take the cotton to build nests,
- and the pesticide kills ticks. On Martha's Vineyard and
- Nantucket, scientists are planning to release large numbers of
- a tiny wasp called Hunterellus hookeri. Success is uncertain.
- The wasps do kill some tick nymphs, but may in fact need a large
- and healthy tick population to maintain their own numbers. Other
- drastic preventives that householders mutter about while
- untaping their trousers--region-wide burning of fields,
- pesticide spraying or slaughter of deer--are just not
- politically or environmentally feasible.
- </p>
- <p> An effective vaccine would save the day, and last year
- researchers at Yale were reporting some progress. But the
- approach has so far proved successful only in mice and has yet
- to be tested in humans. Some resolute citizens are said to chew
- garlic before venturing outdoors, hoping wistfully that what
- works for vampires will also drive off ticks. Ken Liegner, a
- Westchester County, N.Y., doctor with many Lyme disease
- patients, has invented a "deer gazebo" that would lure
- whitetails with a salt lick or apple mash and shower them with
- pesticide. The rumor persists that Lyme-infected veterinarians
- have dosed themselves with canine Lyme vaccine not tested in
- humans.
- </p>
- <p> Antibiotic treatment usually works fairly well in the
- early stages, but the suffering of a few patients with advanced
- Lyme disease does not respond to conventional cures. So a
- dangerous and unconventional therapy has come into use. Dr.
- Henry Heimlich of Cincinnati, known for developing the Heimlich
- maneuver to relieve choking, observed that Lyme disease
- resembles syphilis in that it is caused by a corkscrew-shaped
- spirochete. He knew of an outdated treatment for the late stages
- of syphilis in which patients were deliberately infected with
- malaria and then cured of it. It was believed once that malarial
- fevers cooked away the syphilis, though now it is thought that
- the malaria provokes a powerful response by the immune system.
- Heimlich does not apply malaria therapy, which is not approved
- by the Food and Drug Administration. Nonetheless, he insists
- that the treatment, available in Mexico and Panama, is a
- legitimate last resort for late-stage Lyme sufferers who are
- "paralyzed, bedridden in a fetal position" or perhaps going
- blind. Results vary, and what is achieved by weeks of full-blown
- malaria seems at best to be a remission.
- </p>
- <p> But Nancy Modiano, a 30-year-old Hamilton, N.J., resident,
- agrees with Heimlich. She thinks she contracted Lyme disease as
- a teenager. By last year she was helpless, subject to vomiting
- and seizures, her joints so swollen that she couldn't operate
- her wheelchair. She flew to Mexico City last November and was
- injected with malaria. For 35 days her fever would spike to 108
- degrees, then drop to 95 degrees. Yet two weeks after the
- induced malaria was cured, she was learning to walk again.
- Though she still has some Lyme symptoms, her recovery continues.
- She sums up the experience: "I knew I was dying. I had no other
- choice. I would go through the malaria treatment again in a
- second."
- </p>
- <p> For the rest of us, will summer ever be lighthearted
- again? Will no shirtless youth dive gallantly into the peonies
- to catch a Frisbee? Will no maiden swish barefoot across a dewy
- moonlit lawn? Eventually, yes, when poultry or medicine comes
- to the rescue. But not this tick-plagued summer, not just yet.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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