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Dr. Daniel Cameron

Board-certified physician with 38+ years specializing in Lyme disease and tick-borne illnesses. Past President of ILADS (International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society) and first author of ILADS treatment guidelines. Dr. Cameron operates a solo practice focused on patient advocacy and evidence-based Lyme disease treatment. He is the author of 1,100+ articles spanning diagnosis, treatment, co-infections, and recovery from tick-borne illnesses. His work challenges conventional approaches that often leave patients undiagnosed or undertreated, emphasizing clinical judgment over rigid adherence to testing criteria that frequently produce false negatives.

Dr. Daniel Cameron
facial-palsy-lyme-disease

Lyme disease with bilateral facial palsy, formally known as Bell’s palsy

Less than 2% of facial palsy cases are bilateral.¹ “Unlike unilateral facial palsy, it is often caused by a serious underlying systemic disease and therefore warrants urgent medical intervention,” wrote Yang and Dalal in their article “Bilateral Facial Palsy: A Clinical Approach.”² “A previously healthy 10-year-old boy presented in late August with a one-day history […]

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swollen-knee-lyme-disease

Unilateral knee swelling in a child due to Lyme disease

According to the authors, “The mother initially denied history of a tick bite, yet after focused questioning, the mother stated that the child had ticks on her approximately 9 months ago.” Unfortunately, the child was not taken to her clinician because she did not develop any skin rashes which could indicate Lyme disease. The child

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optic-neuritis-lyme-disease

Optic Neuritis in Lyme Disease: Case Report

A 48-year-old woman with multiple sclerosis presented to her primary care physician with fever and sore throat. Three weeks later, she returned with photophobia, eye pressure sensation, blurry vision, pain with eye movements, and central scotoma. A scotoma is a blurry or blind spot in the visual field while surrounding areas appear normal. MRI and

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woman with lyme disease and vertigo sitting and holding head

Lyme disease triggers vertigo and hearing loss

A recently published study by Sowula and colleagues provides further evidence that Lyme disease can trigger vertigo and hearing loss. In their article “Vertigo as one of the symptoms of Lyme disease,” the authors examine the frequency of vertigo symptoms and potential labyrinth damage in patients with diagnosed Lyme disease.4 The study included 38 patients

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identifying-ticks

Clinicians had difficulties identifying ticks

Welcome to another Inside Lyme Podcast with your host Dr. Daniel Cameron. In this episode, Dr. Cameron discusses findings from a recent study which examined the proficiency of clinicians at identifying ticks in the northeastern region of the United States. By Dr. Daniel Cameron The study by Laga and colleagues entitled “Proficiency at Tick Identification

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disseminated-lyme-disease

Lower socioeconomic status: a risk factor for disseminated Lyme disease

Moon et al. explored the risk factors for disseminated Lyme disease using an electronic database from the Geisinger integrated health care system located in Pennsylvania. They based their data on both diagnostic and narrative text data. One out of three of their disseminated Lyme disease cases were classified as disseminated cases. “Lyme arthritis was the

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trauma-lyme-disease

Prior trauma may worsen symptom severity of Lyme disease

The authors cited earlier research by Solomon and colleagues on the role of prior trauma in Lyme disease.²  “The investigators noted that patients who reported a higher number of lifetime traumatic events (i.e., a higher trauma score) at initial presentation were more likely to report a painful, disabling symptom course at follow-up.” Mustafiz and colleagues

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POTS similarities seen in Long-COVID and Lyme disease

Hello, and welcome to another Inside Lyme Podcast. I am your host Dr. Daniel Cameron. In this podcast, I will discuss the American Autonomic Society’s statement on Long-COVID postural tachycardia syndrome. By Dr. Daniel Cameron The statement was published in the journal Clinical Autonomic Research by Raj and colleagues.¹ CLICK BELOW TO WATCH VIDEO PODCAST

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Child with Lyme disease diagnosed with radiculopathy

A 10-year-old boy presented with fatigue, posterior lower neck pain, and a low-grade fever of 100.8. “The soft tissues of the posterior neck and upper back were tender with allodynia,” wrote Baker and colleagues in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine.² They added, the Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the cervical spine showed “questionable” nerve

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covid-evaluation-lyme-disease

No Lyme disease evaluation as part of a post-COVID-19 assessment?

Welcome to another Inside Lyme Podcast with your host Dr. Daniel Cameron. In this episode, Dr. Cameron will be discussing a paper which makes no mention of a Lyme disease evaluation as part of a post-COVID assessment. By Dr. Daniel Cameron The case was first described by Roth and colleagues in the journal Global Advances

No Lyme disease evaluation as part of a post-COVID-19 assessment? Read More »