Ben and Lisa Lyme Hope

Ben and Lisa Lyme Hope Welcome to *Lisa and Ben’s Lyme Hope* — a space to share our story, raise awareness, and offer hope to others battling Lyme disease.

Babesia has been, by far, my most severe battle. It’s been the invisible force behind my biggest flares over the years, ...
03/15/2026

Babesia has been, by far, my most severe battle. It’s been the invisible force behind my biggest flares over the years, and the SOT treatment I had in February has been incredibly brutal on my system. I'm still struggling to get back on my feet.
Babesia is a parasite, much like Malaria—it’s persistent, it comes in waves, and because it’s not a bacteria, standard antibiotics often don’t work! Most people don't realize that many, if not most, Lyme patients are also fighting this, and many of us find it the hardest part of the journey to treat.
There is finally some hope on the horizon! 🕊️ New research is looking at using a specific Malaria medication for Babesia. This could be a total game-changer for those of us living with chronic infections. I’m praying this becomes an available option soon. We need better ways to heal!

A new update from 60 Degrees Pharmaceuticals highlights encouraging progress for patients facing relapsing babesiosis, a serious tick‑borne infection that

As I’ve mentioned before, Lyme disease and other vector-borne infections are notoriously difficult to prove through stan...
03/14/2026

As I’ve mentioned before, Lyme disease and other vector-borne infections are notoriously difficult to prove through standard blood tests.

Whether it’s too early to detect an immune response, the "load" isn't high enough yet, or the infection is old and has migrated out of the bloodstream and into the tissues, teeth, and nerves—the result is the same: a negative test that never advances to the necessary IgM or IgG stages of testing.
This leads to countless missed infections. It’s exactly what happened to both Ben and me.

To be honest, this has been an exhausting and deeply, painful and isolating journey. Beyond the physical toll, gaslighting and minimization from some medical practitioners, as well as sometimes from the people in our lives, has been incredibly hurtful and caused further isolation and gives a veil of shame to the journey of a Lyme patient.
When one decides to be open and transparent, about their health, only to be dismissed and minimized, is a trauma many in the Lyme community know all too well. Much of this stems from medical training and information that, very often, relies on outdated information. However, I can see the tide is finally turning.

Awareness of Lyme, Babesia, Anaplasmosis, and Bartonella, etc., is growing, and, as a response, the technology is catching up. One shining example is the new device being developed at the University of Guelph. It works similarly to a glucose monitor. The hope is that it will soon be available in walk-in clinics, hospitals, and eventually for home use!
With every advance in testing and treatment, we get one step closer to ending the stigma of having Lyme. I hope one day a positive test for Lyme will never be proceeded with questions like ‘are you depressed, or could this be psychosomatic, or are you eating healthy?’
Please take a moment to check out this video from CTV and the excerpt from the CBC article below.
Stay well, everyone! As the weather warms up, remember to pull up those white socks and keep a tick remover handy!

https://news.uoguelph.ca/2026/03/lyme-disease-research-at-university-of-guelph-reaches-pivotal-milestone/

https://youtu.be/PP9SpXGRXPk

A new device being developed by Guelph University researchers is promising new hope for lyme disease patients. Health reporter Pauline Chan explains.Subscrib...

Better testing needed!One of the biggest hurdles in treating Lyme, is actually better testing. Home testing would be a g...
03/04/2026

Better testing needed!
One of the biggest hurdles in treating Lyme, is actually better testing.

Home testing would be a game changer!

Imagine finding out you have a recent tick bite…and treating it within the first couple of days. These first few days are the only days when a short round of antibiotics could actually kill the infection.
After four weeks the bacteria have already hunkered down for the long journey.

Early testing would save lives.
Reduce the burden on our medical system.
As well, there is a strong indication that it could reduce many diseases that can triggered by a tick bite.

Praying this becomes available soon!

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GSz6WPM7X/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Excellent work being done at University of Guelph, Magnotta Research Foundation;

Lyme Disease Research at University of Guelph Reaches Pivotal Milestone

Biosensor promises a future where Lyme disease testing could take place at home

Through an international collaboration, U of G researchers have combined biochemistry, electrical engineering and physics to create a biosensor with potential to revolutionize the way Lyme disease is detected.

The team at the G. Magnotta Research Lab led by Dr. Melanie Wills, is one step closer to a more efficient and specific test for Lyme disease, the tick-vectored bacterial infection and One Health concern.

“This is a major breakthrough,” says Dr. Vladimir Bamm, a Magnotta Lab senior research associate, of the new paper published in ACS Sensors.

The biosensor translates the presence of a biomarker in a blood sample into an electrical signal, Wills explains.

The sensor can detect the presence of even the smallest amounts of a Lyme disease biomarker using an integrated circuit, a microchip, that translates its finding into the signal a computer can read.

Similar to the way people with diabetes use a glucometer, the device identifies a pathogen’s presence, making testing for Lyme disease something anyone could do at home with a simple blood sample.

Still a proof of principle, the team remains cautious but optimistic about how the device will make detecting and diagnosing Lyme more efficient and more specific.

“Ideally, every member of the Lyme community would have access to this, or every family physician would have one in their office,” Bamm says.

Biosensor more efficient, effective in detecting Lyme

The pathogen that causes Lyme disease is notoriously difficult to detect, and conventional testing methods are inadequate.

“The biosensor is a much more effective and much more specific way of detecting pieces of the pathogen,” Wills says. “No tests in Canada actually look for the pathogen, they look for the immune response.”

The two-tier testing approach that is currently used in Canada is not sensitive enough in the early period of infection, when a definitive diagnosis would enable prompt treatment and prevent the pathogen from spreading in the body. The test also isn’t helpful for monitoring treatment outcomes. In addition, it can be inefficient and labour intensive to perform.

Human cases of Lyme continue to rise globally.

In Canada, the number of people who contract Lyme disease rises approximately 20% each year. Most cases are reported in Nova Scotia, Ontario and Quebec. However, the actual number of infections is believed to be higher than data reflects, and a warming planet means climate change is increasing tick populations and expanding their geographic locations.

International collab bridges engineering, biochemistry, physics

The team at the Magnotta lab has pursued a range of processes to solve the problem of Lyme disease diagnosis. Some are more practical, following prior conventions and requiring blood samples to be separated, while some are more innovative.

“For us, it is important to use all components of blood,” Bamm says, eliminating the risk of disposing blood that could have the identifiable pathogen.

Currently, the biosensor is a lab prototype. To come to market, it would have to undergo clinical testing and then be miniaturized, mass produced and productized to be viable. “We have the engine,” Wills says. “Now we need to build the car.”

In collaborating with Dr. Gil Shalev, head of the Lab for Emerging Device Technologies at Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Israel, the team learned that because of engineering principles, the idea is feasible.

“This was a very effective collaborative effort in multiple fields of science,” Bamm points out. “Here we’ve merged electrical engineering, biochemistry, biophysics, physics, material science, microbiology and medical sciences including hematology.”

Symptoms show up differently in men and women. Lyme disease is different in everyone. It depends upon gender, health his...
03/01/2026

Symptoms show up differently in men and women.
Lyme disease is different in everyone. It depends upon gender, health history, and genetics.

In a new Johns Hopkins Medicine study, researchers found that male and female patients with early Lyme disease present with different signs of the disease

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18U3XjDecN/?mibextid=wwXIfr
02/28/2026

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/18U3XjDecN/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Bay Area Lyme Spotlights Series “Some institutions are evolving in research and education, but it’s not translating to clinical practice.” – James Bruzzese, MD When James Bruzzese, MD, talks about Lyme disease, he doesn’t speak in abstractions. He speaks as a brother who watched his sis....

This explains why my teeth have been hurting so bad. It’s scary to discover how sneaky tick infections can be!
02/28/2026

This explains why my teeth have been hurting so bad.
It’s scary to discover how sneaky tick infections can be!

Thanks to Robert Wighton, I’ve recently learned about Ren Gill, a young man diagnosed with late Lyme disease. Misdiagnos...
02/25/2026

Thanks to Robert Wighton, I’ve recently learned about Ren Gill, a young man diagnosed with late Lyme disease. Misdiagnosed for years, Ren suffered with many physical and mental effects of Lyme and Bartonella.
He continues to get treatment, currently seeking treatment in Mexico for more stem cells. A never ending journey.
His song broke my heart. Reminded me so much of the difficult journey Ben has travelled. Please take the time to watch this moving video.

https://www.facebook.com/share/1GGTjRoxxo/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Help support me by joining my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/renmakesmusicSubscribe Now! - https://bit.ly/RenYTSub- - -Ren - Hi Ren (Official Music Video)H...

I get this feeling of being “disposable “. Life with a disease that many in the medical community refuse to treat, let a...
02/24/2026

I get this feeling of being “disposable “. Life with a disease that many in the medical community refuse to treat, let alone acknowledge, is so isolating.
Grateful for everyone that is speaking out.

Bella Hadid explained to her sister Gigi Hadid how her focus on her career has shifted after going through treatment for her Lyme disease last year.

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