Blogger Facebook Twitter



Homeopathics


Enzymes


Supplements & Herbals


Skin Care


Transforming Emotions


Books & CDs


DesBio Ehrlicia Nosode » Free Shipping on Domestic Orders Over $50



Deseret Biologicals Ehrlicia Nosode

Ehrlicia Nosode - for temporary relief of tick bite. Symptoms are often confused with generalized flu symptoms such as a fever, severe headache, muscle aches and chills and shaking.


DesBio requires a password to purchase their products. Contact us at 866-300-5243 or E-Mail us to obtain access to these products.



  • Indications
  • Ingredients

In the last decades of the 20th century, several tick-borne diseases have been recognized in the United States, including babesiosis, Lyme disease, and ehrlichiosis.

Ehrlichiosis is caused by several bacterial species in the genus Ehrlichia (pronounced err-lick-ee-uh) which have been recognized since 1935. Over several decades, veterinary pathogens that caused disease in dogs, cattle, sheep, goats, and horses were identified. Currently, three species of Ehrlichia in the United States and one in Japan are known to cause disease in humans; others could be recognized in the future as methods of detection improve.

In recent years, Ehrlichia has emerged as a significant and sometimes life-threatening pathogen. Two forms have been reported. One form is human monocytic ehrlichosis (HME) and the other human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE). Severity ranges from subclinical to fatal.

Clinical features are generally the same. The onset of symptoms generally occur approximately one week to one month following exposure which is generally tick related. Characteristically symptoms include an abrupt onset of fever, headache, myalgia and chills. On other occasions nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, cough and confusion occur. A rash has been observed in about 30 percent of patients and may be more common in children. Such rashes might not develop until several days into the illness and are usually short lived.

Ehrlichia ewingii is the most recently recognized human pathogen. Disease caused by E. ewingii has been limited to a few patients in Missouri, Oklahoma, and Tennessee, most of whom have had underlying immunosuppression.