If you haven’t ventured outside mainstream medicine into the world we lovingly call ‘voodoo’, then most of this may see crazy to you.
Mainstream medicine doesn’t deal with late stage and/or chronic Lyme. It just doesn’t.
I see a Lyme specialist who initially treated primarily with antibiotics and other rx medications, but also added various supplements, remedies & alternative treatments.
Over the years, I have been exposed to a lot of very out of the box treatment programs. The more I learn, the more strongly I believe that our bodies can and should be able to heal. It’s a matter of finding the right tools, at the right time.
What is the Lymestop treatment and how does it work?
Many doctors use a testing system called Muscle Response Testing (MRT) to identify specific stressors in the body. Truth be told, the first time I saw MRT, I thought it was stupid. The more I experienced it, the more it made sense.
It was explained to me this way: if you have two trumpets playing the same note toward each other, you will get feedback as the duplicate frequency bounces off each other. Every part of the body, every pathogen, every sickness, has a specific frequency. If you can mimic that frequency, you will get the same type of feedback. You just need to know how to identify that feedback.
Lymestop utilizes MRT to identify infection and illness and then utilizes therapeutic magnets on the cranium and at specific points on the body associated with Lyme and/or it’s many coinfections, as well non-tick related issues such as mold and metal toxicity, food allergens, parasites & viruses.
The magnets stimulate the body’s neuro-immune system to recognize infection and produce an immediate response. Essentially, this therapy helps your brain recognize the infection(s), and then gets your own immune system to fight it.
Will this treatment cure me?
This is the answer from the lymestop faq page:

I don’t don’t expect a full cure, but I do hope for additional improvement over the next year. I also expect the die-off to cause a detox reaction, which will likely come and go for many months, so I am expecting to feel worse for a while.
That said, I have come to terms with the probability that I am one of the small percentage of patients who never fully recover. I have several conditions as a result of late diagnosis that will likely always be with me.
Cervical Instability (CI) is one of those conditions. CI happens when the ligaments in the neck become loose and unstable – basically my neck is not strong enough to hold up my head.
Treatment for this is limited. Surgery to fuse the vertebrae is the most common but has about a 50% success rate for reducing pain (the other 50% often get worse). For me, it would include most of the neck and just doesn’t make sense.
There are a few neurosurgeons in the US who do prolotherapy injections in the neck. I’ve had 4 sessions and it has indeed helped some. It is costly and requires travel to Florida. I hope to return some day for more but right now, it’s not on the horizon.
So for now, I am not planning any additional treatment programs for the next year (unless something specific and unexpected shows up).
I will be focusing on letting my body heal, detox, rest and recover. As always, taking life a day at a time.
Learn more about Lymestop: