Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
August 9, 2007
Lyme?

President Bush was treated for Lyme disease last August, the White House announced Wednesday after failing to disclose the problem for nearly a year.
Bush Treated for Lyme Disease Last Year

Perhaps the most well known disease that’s been linked to mental disorders is Lyme disease, which is caused by the Borrelia burgdorferi germ. First identified in the mid-1970s among children near Lyme, Connecticut, the disease has long been known to cause nervous-system problems and achy joints if left untreated. Now scientists are finding that Lyme disease can also trigger a whole smorgasbord of psychiatric symptoms, including depression.

[…]
There are 15 species of borellias—making them the most common tickborne disease-producing bacteria in the world.

For its part, the parasite Toxoplasma gondii, which can be found in undercooked meat and cat feces, can lead to full-blown psychotic episodes. Some studies suggest that the parasite stimulates the production of a chemical similar to LSD, producing hallucinations and psychosis. Even when the parasite lies dormant in muscle and brain tissue, it can affect attention span and reaction time in otherwise healthy people.
Diseases of the Mind

Comments

Ah. So.

Posted by: beq | Aug 9 2007 18:34 utc | 1

Dangers of a Cornered Geroge Bush

Posted by: beq | Aug 9 2007 18:44 utc | 2

Perhaps it was a case of tequila-and-lime disease…

Posted by: ralphieboy | Aug 9 2007 18:56 utc | 3

Posted by: Tantalus | Aug 9 2007 19:29 utc | 4

If things are heading where they seem to be heading, the possible hallucenogenic qualities of cat poo might be worth investigating. It’s one of the few commodities of which I have an ample supply.

Posted by: Tantalus | Aug 9 2007 19:30 utc | 5

Lyme, shmyme. His mental “issues” certainly were in evidence long before this…Perhaps it is just a convenient cover story.

Posted by: Bea | Aug 9 2007 20:08 utc | 6

I’ve know a few people to have it, it is not fun. And I’m w/ beq & bea.

Posted by: Uncle $cam | Aug 9 2007 20:50 utc | 7

Is it sexually transmited?

Posted by: Cloned Poster | Aug 9 2007 20:54 utc | 8

How did Georgie boy get bit by a tick? He is always inside or hyper protected, or covered by a uniform (victory after shock and awe), or under Christ’s umbrella, cosmically protected by glowing halos and shooting stars…
Nah.

Posted by: Noirette | Aug 9 2007 21:29 utc | 9

I hear electro-shock therapy to the genitals, or water-boarding, are the best treatments for this.

Posted by: PeeDee | Aug 9 2007 22:11 utc | 10

Wonder why Pickles for got to “check him for ticks” (if you know what I mean) after their outing. Oh yeah, its george bush.

Posted by: anna missed | Aug 9 2007 22:20 utc | 11

I have had some direct personal contact with a lot of Lyme’s syndromes and lived in a heavily deer tick infected environment. One place, NW Wisconsin, I would guess approx. 50% of the locals I knew had dealt with or were dealing with Lymes. We never came back from a walk in our rural setting without doing a complete tick check with a high percentage of finds.
One of our close friend’s teenage daughter went through a severe bout of symptoms (which were formidable) and subsequent treatments. It took literally one or two years but now she seems to be pretty much back to normal. Treatment in the allopathic world is probably always specific antibiotics.
If it is detected and treated early there seems to be a high success rate. The later it is detected, the harder to treat.
As I said, I personally knew quite a few people who had been infected with Lymes and I have never been cognizant of any mental deficiencies due them. This is of course totally subjective but I would be willing to bet the shrub’s mental/psychic problems arise from something much earlier in his developmental life and probably goes back to the root of his psychopathic impulse and follow-through to blow up frogs.

Posted by: Juannie | Aug 9 2007 22:38 utc | 12

Questions of mental or physical illness aside, the man is consistent. Just as a laboratory mouse will unnerringly remember a circuitous route through a maze to locate a bit of cheese, the commander-in-chief will invariably follow old, but familiar, routes to arrive again to the warm comfort of the worst possible solution for any given problem.

Posted by: Monolycus | Aug 9 2007 23:22 utc | 13

I’m with ralphieboy, tequila, lime, with a coke chaser.

Posted by: Dick Durata | Aug 10 2007 2:36 utc | 14

I have/had Lyme. You are never considered to be 100% cured. Oh, its also a growing issue. Lyme can be contracted from Florida to Canada and South Carolina to California. Its not just in Connecticut anymore. Soon, you will all know somebody who has Lyme.
Its no fun. It does impair your mental focus or just plain takes it away. Brain fog is a popular description. There are a ton of other symptoms that go with it. Depression and general feelings of malaise, chronic fatigue syndrome, arthritis, heart palpitations, etc. Look it up and you’ll find a ton. I would bet he was more ADD than “normal”
Also, there is a bigger issue here… his treatment. Right now, many insurance company’s only cover two weeks of antibiotics. Most Lyme literate doctors will tell you that at minimum 3 months is needed. That’s a minimum. Many like 6 months.
If word of how bunnypants was treated got out, it could impact some of the pockets that his policies line. They can’t have that.

Posted by: PRob | Aug 15 2007 8:10 utc | 15

Side effects of yaz.

Yaz.

Posted by: Yaz. | Jan 20 2010 15:17 utc | 16

Vytorin.

Zetia vytorin. Vytorin.

Posted by: Vytorin. | Jan 20 2010 20:25 utc | 17