Dr. Daniel Warren of Envita Medical Centers Underscores the Need for Precision Integrative Lyme Treatments on Chronic Wellness Podcast
The tick-borne infection, Lyme disease, presents multiple challenges as it may manifest a wide variety of symptoms, complicating the process of its diagnosis and treatment. However, in the weekly podcast of “Chronic Wellness,” Dr. Daniel Warren, N.M.D., Envita Medical Centers, said, “You can heal from this, it is a fixable disease.” Speaking to the host, Annette Leonard, a writer, speaker, and wellness coach, Dr. Warren explained that Lyme disease can progress into a complicated disease with severe physiological, neurological, and psychological symptoms.
Speaking to the host Steve Adams, Dr. Warren explained that if Lyme disease is diagnosed after initial exposure, which is within the first 2 to 4 weeks of being bit by a tick, then the standard course of oral antibiotic treatment may be enough to treat it. However, the challenge lies in the fact that most people are not aware because they may not manifest the standard symptom of a bulls-eye rash on the tick-bite site. Later when they experience other physiological and neurological symptoms of Lyme disease, they are unable to correlate those symptoms to Lyme disease because they had not noticed the tick-bite in the first place.
In the podcast episode titled, “Integrative Treatment of Lyme Disease,” Dr. Warren highlighted how his team at Envita has been able to successfully treat many late-stage Lyme disease patients, some of whom had lost their ability to walk or talk properly. The sight of such patients being able to walk out unassisted through the doors of Envita has been a constant source of inspiration for Dr. Warren and his team, who have been utilizing the advanced personalized precision medicine approach. In their clinical experience of 25 years, the team has been combining the latest in conventional medicine with advanced natural therapies to precisely target the infectious load of each individual patient and help them recover holistically.
Dr. Warren explained that the conventional treatment for Lyme disease includes oral antibiotic treatment, which may not be effective if the disease has progressed to impact the central nervous system. Explaining the complications of Lyme disease to Leonard, who has herself lived with chronic aches and pains due to various autoimmune diseases, Dr. Warren said that Lyme disease is often associated with other secondary infections and co-infections.
To know more about Lyme disease and its diagnosis as well as treatment, watch this podcast.