Long-Forgotten Research Suggests a Secondary
In the late 1970s, just 18 months before Borrelia bacteria was named the cause of Lyme disease, tick expert Willy Burgdorfer was confident that he
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In the late 1970s, just 18 months before Borrelia bacteria was named the cause of Lyme disease, tick expert Willy Burgdorfer was confident that he
Photo 3: After initial tests, Burgdorfer suspected the Swiss Agent caused Lyme. He shared the strong evidence with a close colleague in Switzerland to see whether he could verify the
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In the 1980s, Burgdoerfer found that a rare strain of tick-borne bacteria he called "Swiss Agent" makes Lyme disease patients'' symptoms worse and harder to cure.
In this post, we highlight information about what Willy termed “the Swiss Agent”–a rickettsia that was present in the vast majority of Lyme sufferers tested early in research into the
In the late 1970s, just 18 months before Borrelia bacteria was named the cause of Lyme disease, tick expert Willy Burgdorfer was confident that he might have found the culprit - a different
At a government lab in Montana, Willy Burgdorfer typed a letter to a colleague, reporting that blood from Lyme patients showed "very strong reactions" on a test for an obscure, tick-borne
At a government lab in Montana, Willy Burgdorfer typed a letter to a colleague, reporting that blood from Lyme patients showed “very strong reactions” on a test for an obscure, tick-borne
Rickettsia helvetica is a member of the spotted fever group Rickettsia. Burgdorfer''s research with Allen Steere, who first described Lyme disease, found the Swiss Agent present alongside Borrelia in US
The formula was factored to stimulate native bacteriophages to target 90 different microbes associated with treatment-resistant Lyme Disease with its co-infections, but we are excited to announce that we
Lyme disease first emerged in Connecticut, just 13 miles from Plum Island. Key research, including Willy Burgdorfer''s discovery of a second Lyme-related pathogen (the "Swiss Agent"), was