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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
Man with Lyme disease and meningitis holding his neck in pain.

Lyme Disease Brachial Plexopathy: Arm Weakness and Meningitis

Lyme Disease Brachial Plexopathy: Arm Weakness and Radicular Pain Lyme disease brachial plexopathy can present as progressive arm weakness, neck pain, and shock-like pains radiating from the shoulders. A 76-year-old man developed left arm weakness following what he believed was a mosquito bite. He was initially treated for presumed cellulitis with temporary improvement. However, he […]

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Why Doctors Are Reluctant to Treat Lyme Disease

Why are doctors reluctant to treat Lyme disease?

Why Are Doctors Reluctant to Treat Lyme Disease? Why are doctors reluctant to treat Lyme disease? Many clinicians face regulatory pressure, professional stigma, insurance barriers, and the clinical complexity of managing persistent Lyme symptoms. Quick Answer: Doctors may be reluctant to treat Lyme disease due to fear of medical board scrutiny, lack of insurance support,

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Woman with Lyme disease and COVID-19 being examined in hospital bed.

Are Lyme disease patients at greater risk for developing severe COVID-19?

Are Lyme disease patients at greater risk for developing severe COVID-19? A new study looks at the risk of severe COVID-19 in patients with a history of exposure to Lyme disease. In their study “Correlation between COVID-19 severity and previous exposure of patients to Borrelia spp.,” Szewczyk‑Dąbrowska et al.² examined 3 groups of patients: those

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Babesia Asplenia

Babesia Asplenia: Why 8 Weeks of Treatment Wasn’t Enough

Babesia Asplenia: Why 8 Weeks of Treatment Wasn’t Enough Babesia asplenia is one of the most dangerous combinations in tick-borne disease. In their study “Trust the Process: Prolonged Babesia Parasitemia in an Elderly Man with Asplenia from the American Midwest,” Ivancich and colleagues describe an 89-year-old man with multiple comorbidities and splenectomy, who required 8

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Clinician talking about co-infections with patient.

Illinois clinicians demonstrate gaps in understanding of tick-borne co-infections

Illinois clinicians demonstrate gaps in understanding of tick-borne co-infections Carson and colleagues surveyed clinicians between August 2020 and February 2022 and reported their findings in the article “Knowledge, attitudes, and practices of Illinois medical professionals related to ticks and tick-borne disease.” ¹ The respondents included RNs (61.3%), physicians (21.4%), and APNs/PAs (17.3%). The authors found

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Man with powassan virus encephalitis holding his head.

Powassan Encephalitis in Winter: Case Report from New York

Powassan Encephalitis in Winter: Case Report from New York Powassan encephalitis can occur even in winter, challenging the assumption that tick-borne infections only happen during warmer months. A male patient was admitted to a New York hospital in December with altered mental status, dysarthria, and a left facial droop after reporting several recent tick bites.

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Patient on telemedicine visit during COVID pandemic.

3 Benefits of Telemedicine for Lyme Disease Patients

3 Benefits of Telemedicine for Lyme Disease Telemedicine for Lyme disease has expanded rapidly since the COVID-19 pandemic and may help improve early diagnosis and treatment. A study entitled “The Impact of Telemedicine in the Diagnosis of Erythema Migrans during the COVID Pandemic: A Comparison with In-Person Diagnosis in the Pre-COVID Era,” compared clinical data

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Photo of Lyme disease rash that appears to be herpes lesions.

Can Lyme disease be mistaken for herpes?

Can Lyme disease be mistaken for herpes? In their article “Disseminated Lyme disease with a herpetiform center,” Zhang et al.¹ described a patient who presented with a Lyme disease rash that could have been mistaken for herpes. The woman in her 30’s developed a herpetiform rash, which resembles herpes lesions. Initially, the patient developed a

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lyme-disease-spinal-cord

Could Lyme disease have led to a spinal cord lesion?

Could Lyme disease have led to a spinal cord lesion? In their article “Case report: Dueling etiologies: Longitudinally extensive spinal cord lesion mimicking spinal cord infarct with simultaneous positive Lyme serology and amphiphysin antibody,”¹ Kalaszi and colleagues discuss the case of a patient who presented with a Bull’s-eye rash 6 months prior to his illness

Could Lyme disease have led to a spinal cord lesion? Read More »

lyme-disease-dementia

Can Lyme disease cause cognitive dysfunction or dementia?

Can Lyme Disease Cause Cognitive Dysfunction or Dementia? Lyme disease cognitive dysfunction is a common concern among patients with neurologic symptoms. But can Lyme disease actually cause dementia? Wormser and colleagues addressed this question in their article “Lack of Convincing Evidence That Borrelia burgdorferi Infection Causes Either Alzheimer Disease or Lewy Body Dementia,” published in

Can Lyme disease cause cognitive dysfunction or dementia? Read More »