Holistic Treatment of Lyme Disease: Part 1
Why the Controversy, and Why Hope Still Exists
By Dr. Alice Honican, Lead Practitioner at Longevity Health Center
Lyme disease is one of the most misunderstood and controversial conditions in modern medicine. At Longevity Health Center, I meet patients every week who have been suffering for years, often after being told their symptoms are “all in their head” or that Lyme disease simply cannot persist after a ten-day course of antibiotics.
This blog series is designed to bring clarity, science, and hope to those navigating or walking alongside someone with Lyme disease, especially chronic or persistent forms. In Part 1, we’ll lay the foundation: what Lyme disease is, why it’s so controversial, how it affects the body, and why conventional approaches often fall short.
The Growing Lyme Disease Epidemic
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Lyme disease is the most commonly reported vector-borne illness in the United States. Officially, about 30,000 cases are reported each year, but newer estimates suggest the real number of diagnoses may be ten times higher.
Despite being historically associated with the northeastern U.S., Lyme disease is now found throughout the country and worldwide. It has been called one of the fastest-growing infectious diseases of our time.
Public awareness has increased as well. Celebrities like Avril Lavigne, Justin Timerlake, Bella Hadid, and Kelly Osbourne have spoken publicly about the toll Lyme disease has taken on their lives. Social media campaigns such as “Take a Bite Out of Lyme” have highlighted just how widespread and serious this condition has become.
Yet despite this growing awareness, many patients are still left without answers.
Why Is Lyme Disease So Controversial?
Historically, conventional medicine has defined Lyme disease narrowly:
- Transmitted by a tick bite
- Caused by Borrelia burgdorferi
- Easily diagnosed
- Successfully treated with a short course of antibiotics
The lived experience of many patients tells a very different story. Lyme disease can be:
- Difficult to test accurately
- Highly individualized in symptoms
Persistent or relapsing - Resistant to short-term antibiotic therapy
For several decades, many physicians have not recognized chronic Lyme disease as a valid diagnosis. As a result, patients with ongoing symptoms have been misdiagnosed with autoimmune disease, chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, anxiety, or depression, without addressing the underlying infection.
A Brief History of Lyme Disease
Lyme disease was first recognized in the 1970s in Old Lyme, Connecticut, when children and adults began developing unexplained arthritis-like symptoms, fatigue, headaches, and rashes.
After years of investigation, scientist Dr. Willy Burgdorfer identified the cause in 1981: a spiral-shaped bacterium transmitted by deer ticks. The organism was later named Borrelia burgdorferi in his honor.
While the discovery was groundbreaking, our understanding of the organism, and its ability to survive in the human body, has continued to evolve.
Understanding the Tick Connection
Ticks are part of the arachnid family and have a complex life cycle: egg, larva, nymph, and adult. They feed on the blood of animals such as mice, birds, deer, pets—and humans.
Important facts many people don’t realize:
- Ticks are not born infected
They acquire pathogens from previous hosts - Nymph ticks, which are tiny (about the size of a poppy seed), are responsible for most human infections
- Their bite is painless, making exposure easy to miss
Ticks can live in wooded areas, tall grass, city parks, and even home lawns. Pets can carry ticks indoors, increasing household exposure.
Recognizing Lyme Disease Symptoms
Early (Acute) Symptoms
- Flu-like illness (fever, chills, fatigue)
- Muscle and joint aches
- Headaches
- Swollen lymph nodes
- Bull’s-eye rash (erythema migrans)
Later or Progressive Symptoms
- Severe headaches and neck stiffness
- Neurological symptoms (tingling, numbness, memory loss)
Heart palpitations and shortness of breath
Facial paralysis (Bell’s palsy) - Migrating joint pain and swelling
- Dizziness and balance issues
Symptoms may appear weeks, months, or even years after the initial bite—especially if the infection is not fully resolved.
Why Lyme Disease Is So Hard to Treat
One of the key reasons Lyme disease becomes chronic lies in the biology of Borrelia burgdorferi itself.
This bacterium:
- Is a spirochete, a corkscrew-shaped organism that can burrow deep into tissues
- Divides very slowly, making short-term antibiotics less effective
- Can change forms to evade the immune system
- Can hide inside cells, biofilms, and cyst-like structures
In other words, Lyme disease is not a simple infection, and treating it as one often leads to incomplete recovery.
Where Bioenergetic Medicine Comes In
Bioenergetic medicine looks beyond symptoms and lab values. It evaluates how infections, toxins, immune dysfunction, and energetic imbalances interact within the body as a whole system.
Rather than asking, “What drug treats this disease?” We ask, “Why is this infection still surviving in this body?” This perspective opens the door to individualized testing, deeper immune support, and holistic treatment strategies, topics we’ll explore in the next parts of this series.
Hope for the Future
While the controversy surrounding Lyme disease can feel overwhelming, it is important to know that confusion does not mean impossibility. In fact, there is growing momentum at the highest levels of public health. The recent HHS Roundtable on Lyme Disease, hosted by Secretary RFK Jr., brought together scientists, clinicians, and patient advocates to prioritize research, improve testing and treatment protocols, and expand understanding of persistent Lyme disease.
This renewed national focus offers real hope for more research, more answers, and more solutions for those navigating chronic Lyme. When we stop viewing chronic Lyme as a failure of treatment and instead recognize it as a complex, whole-body imbalance, a journey forward emerges.
Bioenergetic medicine offers a framework rooted in personalization, resilience, and restoration, one that honors both science and the lived experience of patients. In part 2 of this series, we’ll walk through the three distinct phases of Lyme, how they drive chronic symptoms. Understanding this progression, immunity, and timing are key to finding a path to healing.


