She never saw the tick. Never got the rash. But weeks after a mild flu, everything changed—fatigue, brain fog, joint pain. One doctor blamed stress. Another said early menopause. No one tested her for Lyme.
When she finally reached me, she said:
“It feels like something hijacked my body.”
She was right. It was Lyme—and Babesia too.
Her story isn’t rare. The real question is:
Are we doing enough to catch Lyme before it’s too late?
Let’s talk about it—in a clinical dialogue.
A Clinical Dialogue on Lyme Screening
Cameron: Some patients are not diagnosed early—and that delay can make all the difference. The question is: should we be screening more in endemic areas?
Colleague: Screening asymptomatic people is tricky. But if someone has outdoor exposure and classic symptoms—fatigue, joint pain, brain fog—Lyme should be on the radar.
Cameron: Exactly. That patient I mentioned? She never saw a tick or rash, but had a textbook case. When we tested, we found Lyme and Babesia. With treatment, she began to get her life back.
Colleague: Did she improve quickly?
Cameron: It took time. But the turning point was someone finally listening, asking the right questions.
Colleague: Are you suggesting broader screening?
Cameron: Not mass screening. But targeted case finding—in high-risk patients with unexplained symptoms.
What the Research Shows
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Testing early can be inconclusive.
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Many patients don’t recall a tick bite.
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Most never get the bull’s-eye rash.
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Lyme can mimic fibromyalgia and multiple sclerosis
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Co-infections like Babesia and Bartonella often go overlooked.
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Early treatment—with antimicrobial therapy—yields better outcomes, lowers chronic risk.
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Why Proactive Screening Matters
Cameron: We routinely screen for high-burden conditions like hypertension and cancer. Why not apply the same principle to Lyme in symptomatic patients?
Colleague: What about overdiagnosis?
Cameron: Clinical judgment ensures we screen thoughtfully—not reflexively.
My Approach to Patient Care
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I ask about outdoor activities, travel, pets, even without known bites.
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I screen patients with fatigue, brain fog, migrating pain, dizziness, or POTS
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I test early for Babesia and Bartonella
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I rely on clinical patterns—not just lab results.
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I customize treatment and adapt based on patient response.
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Final Thoughts
Too many Lyme cases are missed or diagnosed late. Testing might not be perfect—but delaying diagnosis until severe disease sets in is avoidable.
That moment when a patient says, “I wish someone had looked sooner,” reminds me:
“Is there something we’re overlooking?”