How This Protocol Works
Lyme disease (Borrelia burgdorferi infection) presents a set of biological challenges that botanical medicine addresses from multiple angles: active antimicrobial pressure against both motile and stationary-phase (persister) forms, immune system modulation to support the body without simple suppression or hyperstimulation, co-infection support for Babesia and Bartonella, and targeted tissue support for the joints, connective tissue, and nervous system most commonly affected. No single herb addresses all of these. This protocol combines herbs that each address a specific layer -- the way Lyme-literate naturopathic medicine approaches the complexity of the disease.
Layer 1 - Anti-Borrelia Antimicrobial
Andrographis and Cat's Claw (Samento TOA-free) represent the most researched botanical combination for direct Borrelia antimicrobial activity. Johns Hopkins 2019-2020 screening of over 100 botanical compounds identified andrographolide as one of the top performers against both motile and stationary-phase Borrelia -- including persisters that standard antibiotics leave intact. Cat's Claw (TOA-free) disrupts biofilm and modulates the immune response simultaneously. These two herbs form the antimicrobial core.
Layer 2 - Co-Infection Support
Artemisia annua addresses Babesia -- the intraerythrocytic parasite that co-infects a significant proportion of Lyme patients and is frequently missed or undertreated. Artemisinin (from Artemisia) earned a Nobel Prize for its antimalarial mechanism, and Johns Hopkins 2020 identified it as active against Borrelia stationary-phase forms as well. Houttuynia targets Bartonella and viral co-infections (EBV, HHV-6 reactivation) -- the polymicrobial layer of tick-borne illness that drives many of the most persistent symptoms.
Layer 3 - Immune Foundation
Astragalus (Huang Qi) is the immune foundation of this protocol. Unlike herbs that simply stimulate immune function, Astragalus modulates it -- activating NK cells, raising CD4+/CD8+ ratios, and inducing interferon without triggering the autoimmune-style hyperstimulation that can worsen Lyme herx reactions. It is used as a daily foundational herb throughout the protocol, not just during active antimicrobial phases.
Layer 4 - Tissue and Neurological Recovery
Teasel Root (Chuan Xu Duan) addresses the musculoskeletal presentation -- the joint pain, tendon inflammation, and connective tissue involvement that are common in Borrelia-associated illness. Stephania Root (Fen Fang Ji) targets the neurological layer -- microglial neuroinflammation, blood-brain barrier permeability, and the neuropathic patterns of late-disseminated and neurological Lyme. Both herbs have deep TCM traditions that map directly onto the tissue targets of Lyme disease.