Tara Geraghty observed a contemporary phenomenon while she watched her husband's health decline and doctors reject even looking into the possibility of her husband having Lyme and not ALS: "There's something about Lyme disease that no one wants to talk about it," she told The Valley Breeze.

While some will argue that prolonged antibiotics and other treatment approaches simply have a placebo effect, it's interesting to note that the hyperthermia-induction treatment from which the woman described above claims to have benefited is effectively a modernized version of heat-induction treatment used (often successfully) to treat closely related neurosyphilis infections going as far back as 1857.

Another curiosity: The maps at the top of this article show the geographic distribution of (top) multiple sclerosis and (bottom) Lyme disease. It's impossible not to notice the overlap, which is strikingly similar, especially considering actual general geographic coverage and not the geo-political borders identified. (Note that despite many documented positive Lyme tests among Australian people, Australia is represented on the MS map but not the Lyme one, presumably because the Aussie government does not acknowledge endemic cases of Lyme disease despite positive tests among its people.)

Migration from one geographic area to another seems to alter a person's risk of developing MS. Studies indicate that immigrants and their descendants tend to take on the risk level -- either higher or lower -- of the area to which they move. While underlining the complex relationship between environmental and genetic factors in determining who develops MS, these studies have also provided support for the opinion that MS is caused by early exposure to some environmental trigger in genetically susceptible individuals.

Some researchers as far back as 1988 have observed correlations between borrelia and MS, but as Tara Geraghty observed, "...no one wants to talk about it." The implication of genetic roles in determining who acquires multiple sclerosis would seem to rule out insect bites, but genetic factors in fact were implicated in this study examining the possibility that neuroborreliosis (neurological manifestation of Lyme) may cause Alzheimer's in some--not all--people, dependent on genetic predisposition.

Had Geraghty been diagnosed with Lyme and received treatment sooner, he may have recovered--or at least not died. But no one wanted to talk about it.

Medical professionals are obligated by virtue of their Hippocratic oath and general good practice to consider all potential causes of illness before rejecting certain possible causes--especially Lyme, which seems to be aggressively and inexplicably denied. The prevalence of physician neglect and insurance denial is so high that multiple members of U.S. Congress and state legislatures have introduced legislation to protect patients and support greater research.

Given such an obvious and glaring coincidence as the maps above, to offhandedly dismiss investigating whether there may be a correlation between these chronic illnesses that manifest similarly or identically seems to me to be shortsighted. Looking at these maps, isn't it natural for a person to ask about a relationship between these and other health conditions. Why are reasonable questions so often met with derision and condescension? Even if they turn out to be unfounded, are they not worth asking?

Patients have to be our own advocates--no one else will do it for us. Lyme patients can be particularly annoying because we have to become our own investigators and--to the dismay and disapproval of doctors--diagnosticians when others give up on us.

I've learned the hard way that some doctors care, some don't, and some care, but are first and foremost small-business owners who must cycle their clientele in and out as quickly as possible. And some subscribe to a fundamentalist type of dogma approach to healthcare: what is known is all there is to be known, and certainly not to be questioned--no, not even by desperate patients who are trying to save their livelihoods or even their lives. The message such people send is clear: You are wrong, now go die off my watch.

So when someone makes an obvious observation--as with David and Tara Geraghty understanding Lyme disease well enough to know that David's so-called ALS symptoms are similar enough to warrant investigation into Lyme as a (potentially treatable) cause--about his or her own health and pleas with his or her healthcare provider to look into it, what is it that prevents the question from being considered?

The arrogance of a self-styled omniscient and omnipotent physician?

Strict adherence to prescribed regulations that don't take into consideration variable and nuanced real-world factors that don't always fit neatly into diagnostic criteria?

Or is there something about Lyme disease specifically, as Tara Geraghty said, that no one wants to talk about?