All Episodes

August 1, 2025 41 mins
Singer-Songwriter Justin Timberlake recently revealed he has Lyme disease, a tick-borne illness that can cause fever, headache, fatigue, muscle aches, and more. The announcement comes on the heels of his Forget Tomorrow tour where he faced criticism of his “energy” on stage. Rheumatologist Dr. Alfred Miller joined Dan for a full discussion of what Lyme disease is and its complications.


Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's Night Side with Dan Ray. I'm WBS cost in
some news radio.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Beg you very much, Al, there was a news story
that broke yesterday that caught my attention, and I think
it caught attention of a lot of people. Uh. And
for those of you who recognize the voice, you know
him as a from a member of in Sync Cut
three Rob. We're talking about Justin Timberlake, who yesterday announced

(00:43):
to the world that he is suffering dealing with lime disease.
And lime disease is not something that anyone should take lightly.
And there's no one I know who knows more about
lime disease, not only the treatment of lime disease, but
the potential long term implications of this horrific condition than

(01:09):
doctor Alfred Miller. Doctor Miller, welcome back to night Side, sir,
good evening.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
Thank you, Thank you so much. I appreciate you inviting
me back.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Well. For those of you who do not know doctor Miller,
doctor Miller is a male clinic trained roommatologist and he
is retired at this point, but he is deeply committed
to figuring out how this disease can be most effectively

(01:41):
dealt with. Lime Lime ticks are everywhere. Doctor Miller has
watched the progression of this disease across the country. Uh,
there's there's some variations of it. But doctor Miller, what
we're most concerned about is people who either don't have

(02:05):
get lime disease and it's not diagnosed, or it's diagnosed
and it's not treated properly. People will get lime disease.
There are millions of Americans and I don't know what
the number is. You probably do, who at some point
in their lives have contracted lime disease. But the implications

(02:26):
of this disease above and beyond what it does while
you're infected, the implications are devastating for people who again
either get bitten, become infected, are not properly diagnosed or
not diagnosed whatsoever, and then are not treated properly. Tell

(02:48):
us what your big concern is the long term implications
of lime disease.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
Well, there is a very well known physion. But doctor
William Osler, who many many many years ago said, if
you know syphilis, you know medicine, and syphless is a
spire heath, and Burrillia burg darfrey, which is lime disease,

(03:16):
is a spire heath and this spire heat illness. Siffleis
was called the great imitator, and the great imitator today
is brilliant burg Darfrey lime disease. Now I use I
use the word instead of calling U. Instead of referring
to this as lime disease, I refer to this as

(03:38):
Burrillia infection because there are maybe forty different species of
Barillia in the world, and I don't like to limit
it just to brilliant Burgdorfrey, which is located primarily in
the Northeast. In your area.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
It's endemic in the.

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Northeast area because patients and elsewhere in the United States
and elsewhere in the world, if they have the symptoms
of lime disease and the doctor orders to test the
lime disease, it will come back negative and the doctor
will have an erroneous conclusion that the patient does not
have the infection, but in fact they had a different

(04:14):
berrillia that wasn't being tested. And by the way, the
testing is just critical critical. I strongly urge every patient
to be tested by a laboratory that deals primarily and
take more in diseases. The It's extremely important. And one

(04:35):
thing that you must understand is let me let me
jump in.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
There, doctor just for a second, because I want we've
had this conversation, and there's some points in the conversation
that I need to get clarified in my mind, and
I want my audience to be clarified. So if and
when someone is bitten by a tick, whatever type tick
that might be, depending upon the part of the country,

(04:59):
and that either they picked the tick off their skin
or the tick has already been engorged and they have
to remove the tick. And if they then or are
fortunate enough to see the rash that's associated with these diseases,
how do they find the right doctor? Because the impression

(05:22):
I have is that a lot of doctors, you know,
the PCP's general practitioner is, whatever you want to call them,
do not take the disease as seriously as you have
always cautioned me to take this disease. And most people
not every doctor is prepared to to diagnose properly and

(05:44):
also to treat properly. Or Am I wrong when I say.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
That, No, You're absolutely right, And even today at some
of the major institutions Harvard et cetera. If a patient
walks in with a recent tick bite and the doctor says, well,
it could be brilliant birddarthy, it could be lime disease.
I'm going to give you two weeks of doctor cycling

(06:08):
that will fail the bacteria. All bacteria consume antibiotics during
their reproductive cycle, and the reproductive cycle of Baillia Bergdorfrey
line disease is every twenty eight days. So if the
patients treated for fourteen days with an antibiotic that kills
Baillia for fourteen days, those that haven't consumed the antibiotic

(06:35):
for the next fourteen days will survive and thrive. So
it's very important that after the initial bite of the
take that the treatment be adequate and for a long
period of time. And there are three ways that this
disease can be transmitted. If one way is from the mother.
If the mother has the illness and it's in her

(06:55):
blood when she's pregnant, she transmits the illness to the
feet is through the placenta, and the baby is born
with a Brillian infection. And by the way, when the
baby is about two or three years old, they develop autism.
Autism I'm hearing on TV, We've got to find a
cause for autism. There's more and more of it around. Yes,

(07:19):
and they all are testing positive for brilliant and they
all respond to antibiotics. The third way you can get
this ill is through sexual intercourse, just like syphilis, so
the patient has to be adequately treated. In addition, when
the berrillia enters the patient and it's been in the

(07:41):
patient for maybe three months or so, it becomes a
microscopic cyst and it buries itself deep, deep, deep into
your tissue. And that microscopic cyst is completely totally impenetrable
through an antibiotic. So the treatment with anything, any antibiotic,
is going to fail unless you open up the cysts

(08:04):
prior to giving them the antibiotics. So there are a
couple of medications that I recommend routinely and I call
them cysts busters. And once you open the cysts, then
you can kill the barillia. But when the cyst is hiding,
by the way, it doesn't challenge the patient's immune system,

(08:25):
and all of the tests that we use look for
antibodies to the barillia, and if the patient's immune system
is not being challenged, there are no antibodies, so the
tests come back negative. So I now recommend prior to
getting tested, that the patients take what I call provocative antibiotics,

(08:45):
one antibiotic to open the cyst, together to bring out
the sphiakeet and challenge the immune system, and then you'll
have a positive. In fact, when I was on your
program once, a blog of the program went to Europe
and I got a contact from a patient and London,
and the patient said, I have ALS. I've been diagnosed

(09:05):
with ALS Ludaric's disease. And I followed your directions completely
and here are the test results that I had. I
didn't use the lab you suggested. I used another lab
in Germany, which I happen to know is a very
good lab that patients said, please look at the results,
and they were negative. And I said, look, I want
you to take two antibiotics, one flagile to open up

(09:28):
the cysts and the other steps to bring out the
spiracue and challenge you immune system. And I want you
to do this for twenty eight days and then get
the same test and the same laboratory repeated. And they did,
and then they sent me back the results of the
new test completely positive, very very very positive. In addition,

(09:48):
in the United States, the CDC, a western bloc. The
Western blood is a very definitive test for Barrillier and
the CDC Western blood two bands. The Western bot consisted
of a number of bands which are really antigens, and
the CDC Western Bot omits bands thirty one and thirty four.

(10:11):
Those happen to be very specific for the Brillia brig
gearfrey for the lame disease, and it's hard to imagine
why they would do that. But in nineteen ninety eight
there was a vaccine on the market called Limericks, and
the Limericks consisted of two proteins which are very characteristic

(10:32):
of the brilliant burgdarphy or to protect the patient against
the infection. Well, the vaccine was on the market for
two years only it was taken off the market in
the year two thousand. It was taken off the market
because of various side effects. However, the CDC said, well,
if the vaccine has the protein for bands thirty one

(10:52):
and thirty four, we're going to omit that in the
Western bog. Well, the Western blot was then those two
significant bands were omitted and in the year two thousand
the vaccine has taken off the market. But ever since then,
for the last twenty five years, those two bands remain
off the Western BOT. So you might get a Western

(11:14):
blider Harvard or Beth Israel or or Hopkins at Mayo
Clinic and their CDC condoned Western b will omit those
two bands, and the patient's results will come back negative.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
So we're just saying admitting those two bands the test
has no validity. Correct, Okay, I just want to go
back to the point you made the difference between the
fourteen day treatment or the twenty eight day treatment. So
someone's infected with the burlier and they get an antibiotic

(11:50):
for fourteen days. The life span as I understand it,
of the burlier is twenty eight days. So h is
the is the bacteria uh continuing to reproduce bacteria within
your system, and that the bacteria that that is that

(12:13):
is created after that fourteen days obviously is not impacted
because the treatment is is that is that what you're.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
Talking about exactly exactly correct, That that baillia will that
is not consumed the antibiotic will of reproduce. I can
become dormant and come out at a later date with horrible,
horrible illnesses. And I might say this as a rheumatologist.
I spent forty years treating so called autoimmune diseases, and

(12:46):
the number of autoimmune diseases that are listed is innumerable,
and I'm I'm convinced now that every single autoimmune disease
is it's illogical. It's illogical that your immune system, which
is to protect you, is now attacking you. And these

(13:07):
patients when properly tested with the audioimmune diseases, When I
properly tested for brillia, they are one hundred percent positive
and proper treatment will eradicate the illness. And I'm talking
about severe, severe illnesses in the neurological in almost every
specialty in neurology, it's als multiple.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
I want to get to all of that, but I
got to take a commercial break as we're a few
minutes over here, and I don't want to interrupt your
trend of thought. But that's what I'm talking about. That
people might look at this as an inconvenience. You feel
lousy for a few days and then you get rid
of it. But your belief is that this line disease,
when again undiagnosed or improperly treated or untreated, can lay

(13:58):
the groundwork for for serious neurological problems later in life.
We're going to get to that. If you folks have
a question on this and you'd like to talk with
doctor Miller, he makes himself available six one, seven, two, five, four,
ten thirty six one seven, nine three one ten thirty
and I will tell you this and doctor Miller, I

(14:19):
don't think I'm saying anything that I should not say
in the radio. Doctor Miller believes that that he's trying
to contact some of the people within the Trump administration
who have often been people who think outside the box,

(14:40):
and the Trump administration is not responding to the the
very clear messages that doctor Miller has talked about for years.
We'll get to those. Uh again. I hope that Justin
Timberlake works with doctor Miller, because if he doesn't, he's

(15:03):
missing a great opportunity. We'll be back on Nightside right
after this quick break.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
It's night Side with Ray Boston's News Radio.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
My guess is doctor Alfred Miller. He is a male
clinic trained roomnologist rheumatologist. I should say he practiced for
forty years and he is a big believer in that
lime disease is being undiagnosed and misdiagnosed in this country.
We're talking about Justin Timberlake who announced yesterday, revealed yesterday

(15:37):
he has a lime disease. It is a serious disease,
nothing to mess to mess with, doctor Miller. You believe
that lime disease, undiagnosed, improperly diagnosed, improperly treated, untreated can
lead to some very serious neurological issues for individuals who

(15:59):
do not deal with it and deal with it effectively.
Explain to us why and tell us what your concerns are.

Speaker 3 (16:07):
Well, you know, the the more time I spend studying
this illness, the brilli infections, I'm constantly amazed by what
I'm coming up with, because every single specialty in medicine,
from rheumatology to neurology to gastro neurology, it's incredible how

(16:31):
many of these illnesses are caused by berrillia and they
can all be documented with proper testing and the results
speak for themselves. So it's very very important and I'm amazed.
I mean, there are areas that, for instance, in rheumatology,
every single arthritic illness, every illness that has the joint

(16:55):
pains involved, that's you know, everything from rheumatari's writers to lupus, plymlegs, roumatica,
you name it. When they're properly tested. Now I realize
they are due to a Burrillier infection.

Speaker 5 (17:09):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (17:09):
There's a very common illness that many people are dealing
with called fibromyalgia. And I've had so many patients when
I would diagnose them with fiber mileage, they would say, oh,
thank god, somebody's put a label on my symptoms. But
now I know fiber miles is due to a Burrillier infection,
and it's it improves and it disappears with eradication of

(17:35):
the baillia. Now there's a couple of things that you
need to know that if a patient is going to
be treated. And by the way, when the tick bites,
that burley is in the saliva of the tick. Because
people are always asking me, how long does the tick
have to be attached before it can transmit the illness.
It's in the saliva. So as soon as it attaches,

(17:57):
the brilliant enters the patient. Don't don't look for any
uh delay. It happens virtually immediately.

Speaker 6 (18:06):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
There are so many other illnesses that I've come across,
and the traumatic brain injury. You know, NFL football players
come down with neurodegenitive diseases and they blame on head
trauma and UH. In Italy, the Italian soccer players come
down with neurodegenitive illnesses and they blame it on hitting

(18:28):
the ball with their head. I kept searching, and I
found that Italian agricultural workers have a high incidence of
neurodegenitive disease. In this country, golfers, the military have a
high incidence of neurodegenitive disease. What do they all have
in common? They're all exposed to the environment, and when

(18:50):
properly tested, they're they're positive. I've contacted some NFL football
players who've been diagnosed with als and multiple scrosses, and
when they're are tested, they are all positive. It's it's incredible.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
So essentially, what what what? I just want to make
sure I understand what you're saying in my audience. What
you're saying is that some of these most devastating diseases
that people are diagnosed with, you are convinced that the
onset of that disease comes from the presence of berrillia

(19:28):
in their system, which you can test for, and that
that berrillia in most if not all of these cases,
is transmitted to them through a tick bite.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
Correct, it can be through a tick bite or sexually
as I mentioned earlier.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
But that is that is the that is the key.
And you know, line disease has exploded in this country
and I I I don't know how many people are
thought to have been infected with lime disease, but that
means as time goes on, we're going to have more
and more people who are coming down with these horrific

(20:12):
neurological diagnoses.

Speaker 3 (20:16):
Yes, and not only neurological, but there are areas of
medicine that I have found that brilliant is responsible. Who
would have thought osteel prosis, you know, the bones get thin,
and they blame it on old age. But I've come
to realize that that's not the case. Because in the bone,
you have two cells. You have an osteel blast which

(20:37):
builds bones. You have an osteel class. The one has
a B and one has a c Ostel class tears
down the bones. And over our lifetime, our skeleton is
being constantly remodeled. But if you put in a culture
ostel class, the ones that break down the bones and
you add brillier, nothing happens. But if you put ostel blasts,

(20:58):
the ones that build bone to a culture, and I
had Brillier, it kills the osteoblasts. So these patients there
that are infected, their bones are being destroyed by the
osteoclass and they're not being rebuilt by the osteoplast. And
if you contact the major osteoporosis centers in the United

(21:20):
States are all over the world, and you asked them,
do you test the patients for brilliant?

Speaker 5 (21:24):
Oh? No, But this is a fact.

Speaker 3 (21:27):
And I can tell you that from personal experience. A
patient had a severe call and had and broke a rib,
and I told the patient contacted me, I said, go
get a bone density test. And the bone density test
came back osteopenia, that the bones were getting thinned. I said, well,
go back and tell you a doctor that you want

(21:48):
to be treated to prevent the bones from getting any
thinner the resulting osteoporosis. So they did, and about three
months later they had a repeat bone density test and
this time instead of osteopenia, it's short osteoporosis. And they
contacted me and said it's getting worse. So when properly tested,

(22:08):
they were positive for brillia. When properly treated, that brier
were eradicated and then the bones stopped, the astroporosis was halted.
So there you know, how many people think about if
they have plant or fanciatis the bottom of their feet hurt.
How many people even think about a brillian infection, or

(22:29):
it can affect the joints of the toes and you
get the hammer toes, one toe that overlaps the other.
These areas are not even being considered. And doctor Allen McDonald,
who was a certified pathologist, he noted that patients who
have brilliant infections have a high incidence of glioblastoma brain tumor,

(22:51):
and so he collected the surgically removed glioblastomas and he
studied them for a brillia and they were all positive.
Brilliant causes Leo blasphemer So it's very, very, very significant.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Mill I got a pause. I gotta pause here and
because I got late for my news break, But I
also want to emphasize that, uh that the the Trump
administration is talking about making America healthy again, and yet
there are a lot of people in the upper echelons

(23:26):
of the Trump administration who should be open to at
least testing the thesis that the thesis that you are
espousing for us tonight, and I have spoken to some
of them who just seem not interested. It's almost it's
frightening to think that people who who I know and

(23:48):
I have reached out to, including doctor McCarey, who is
now the head of the FDA, UH others, others who
have been guessed on this program and who medical people
think outside the box, are unwilling to think about this theory.
And I hope someone tonight is hearing us, hearing us.

(24:12):
We've got to take a break. We'll be right back
with phone calls for my guest, doctor doctor Alfred Miller,
right after this.

Speaker 1 (24:21):
It's Night Side with Boston's News Radio.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
I'm talking with doctor Alfred Miller. He is an expert
on lyme disease. He is a Mayo Clinic trained rheumatologist.
He is an extraordinary individual. I've known him for several years.
He firmly believes in what he is saying. I do
not have the medical expertise that he has, nor what

(24:47):
I have a hope of having the medical expertise, but
I will also tell you that you can find some
very brief six seven minute tutorials on lime disease and
the implications thereof by going to his name, Alfred Miller
and line disease on the internet. He is brilliant in

(25:11):
my opinion, and I commend him highly. And we're going
to get to phone calls right now. Let me go
to Robin in Chestna Hill. First, Robin, you are first
tonight on Night's Side with doctor Alfred Miller.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
Go right ahead, Robin, Thank you, Thank you, Dan.

Speaker 7 (25:25):
And first of all, let me just say from a
listener how important this topic is and how you have
delivered the most timely message to your audience. I don't
think anybody listening. I don't think anybody is away from
a line tick or a line disease. I think almost
everybody in our area has been exposed. And doctor Miller,

(25:49):
thank you for sharing your expertise. I think it is
so profound it can change people's lives if they get treated.
There are a couple of things. First of all, I
think I've been infected line since for the past fifteen years,
and I've been through all of the leading experts from
doctors Marola and Gottlieb and wine Blatt and you name it.

(26:09):
They're all rheumatologist and they've all gone through the myriad
of Aisle nineteen seventeen class inhibitors, jack and hibitors, all
kinds of medications that all we see on television about
to try to address the swelling and so forth. I've
also gone through the same type of protocols that you've
been talking about treating from a doctor cyclone or to

(26:33):
tetracycline for a twenty eight day period. But can you
come back. First of all, there are two things. One
for the audience and talking about any kind of prophylactic
treatments because we're exposed and we're in the neighborhoods where
we're going to see ticks everywhere. That is there a
prophylactic type of recommendation that you have. Two you talk

(26:56):
about spirakeat and being treated or at least tested for
the barelia, but in fact you'll always test positive for burlyia,
especially when the spiral keep breaks and stays in your system.
Is there a way and can you talk about some
of the kinds of protocols. I guess I'm coming from
just at the bottom wishing that I could find some

(27:18):
kind of relief, some kind of solution, And I thought,
I've gone to every place possible. So they've treated from
like a art treatments. We've done doctor Cyclin, how can
we go back? I've even gone to doctor la Pree
on Nantucket. So I come to you and ask you
if you can sort of broaden out the what does
it mean to be treated? How do you go about this?

(27:42):
Just assume you're starting from having lines and two from
a prophylactic standpoint, how do you say to the audience
to move forward?

Speaker 2 (27:50):
That's a big set of questions. Rob and doctor Miller,
I have packed lines. Let's prophylactic. There are sprays that
you can put on your clothes. I know that, and
obviously you can make sure that when you're going to
be working in the gardener you want to make sure
that you have, you know, the proper clothing tightly round it.

(28:13):
So go ahead, doctor Milly, you'll handle this better than
I will.

Speaker 3 (28:16):
Go Right ahead, Well, the treatment has to be by
someone who's knowledgeable. You have to use a As I
said earlier, you must open up that syst or to
kill the burelia. So the protocol is either antibiotics, and
those can be given depending upon how seriously ill the

(28:37):
patient is intravenously or oral. And because the treatment with
antibiotics is going to be for a prolonged period of time,
I prefer to use what I call a pulse method,
so the patients take antibiotic. If you take the antibiotic
every day for the length of the time that's necessary,
you'll have all kinds of complications from the antibiotics. But

(28:58):
the pulse method, you if the patient takes the antibiotics
for three days on, four days off, three days on,
four days off. The four days off allows the intestinal
bacteria to recoup. Of course, you're always using probiotity to
prevent eliminating the microbiomem and the gas intestinal track, but

(29:21):
you have to have appropriate treatment and you have to
have a ciss buster without assist busters. I mean, some
of these major institutions will treat a patient and if
you tell them, well, this illness is due to brillia,
they say, okay, well we'll give the patient intervenus let's
say resetin, which is very good against berrillia.

Speaker 4 (29:40):
So we'll give the.

Speaker 3 (29:40):
Patient intervenus recepin for the next twelve months, at the
end of the twelve months, they say, look, there's been
no difference. It's just the same. But they never add
an assist buster. So if you use any antibiotic without
having assist buster, it's like pouring water on a duck's back.
It's just a waste, all.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Right, Robin, I hope that helps. I got pack lines. Uh.
I hope you can find doctor Miller privately. And doctor
Miller you're you're in the book in in Texas correct, yes, And.

Speaker 3 (30:21):
You can content me by email. It's doctor L. Miller
at gmail dot com. All the lower case letters, no
punctuation marks, and just contact me, you know, but keep
in mind I'm retired. I do not treat, but I
will guide your your physician on how to test properly
and how to treat properly.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
Great, okay, Robin, I hope that helps.

Speaker 7 (30:45):
So much, So thank you very much. And it's doctor
A L. M I L L at gmail dot com.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
Yes, it's d R for doctor L d R A
L for L. Miller M I L L E R
at gmail dot com. You got it.

Speaker 7 (30:58):
Thank you, gentlemen.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Thank Robin. Call me and if you if you miss
any of it, Rob give Robin my direct line, and
I can be I can I can serve as a conduit. Okay,
feel free to get my direct number. Thank you so much. Okay,
let me do this, and going to try to get
one more quickly in here. Lines are packed. Gloria in Salem, Gloria.

(31:19):
I'm going to get you in here before the commercial break.
Go ahead, Gloria.

Speaker 6 (31:23):
Okay. I think that I probably got a tick bite
about forty years ago. I mean, it's been that long,
so it's probably hopeless, but it does spread. I was
unfortunate that a nurse practitioner looked at me. I could
see the rash, I could almost see the tick, and

(31:45):
she said, no, you don't have the lime disease. So
I went on my merry way. And over the years, well,
I've lost the use of one hand from arthritis, my
feet are gone, I have auto immune deficiency, I have IBS.

(32:08):
It just spreads.

Speaker 2 (32:10):
Do you have a do you have a question for
doctor Miller? Again, obviously it sounds to me as if
you've figured out what happened and why it happened. I
don't know if you have a question for doctor Miller only.

Speaker 6 (32:22):
That is there a time limit? Only I mean, I'm older. Now,
there's nothing that can be done.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
Okay, let's see doctor Miller. Someone who thinks they were
a bit forty years ago. Has it has too much
time passed by.

Speaker 3 (32:42):
The answers? No, And you know, these organisms can be
dormant for years and years and then come out with
various illnesses, and that's the patient that will be attributing
to other things. So absolutely, you know, let's just use
an example of chicken pox. That's the virus. You got
chicken pots when you're six, and you get shingles when

(33:03):
you're sixty. Your immune system keeps a dormant and if
there's any weakning in your immune system, the virus comes
out and you get herpes and that's the shingles. And
the same thing is true with verrillia. This organism can
be dormant for years and years and then come out.
And when it comes out, it comes out in little

(33:24):
symptoms and you go to the doctor for one symptom
and then comes another system symptom, and they're attributed to
various well known illnesses. But if you put them all together,
and every joint in your body, every joint, a little
tiny joints up and down, the spine, big joints in
your hips and your knees, your shoulders. Every joint in

(33:46):
your body has a synovial membrane inside, and the virillia
have an affinity for the synovial tissue, so they get
into the an oval tissue, they set up an inflammation,
and they destroy the joint or cause inflammation and pain.
It's it's it's very very common.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Gloria. I'm going to again suggest that maybe you might
just want to send an email to doctor Miller. D
R A L M I L R I R.

Speaker 6 (34:13):
Okay, have computer. So I was just curious because, like
I said.

Speaker 2 (34:18):
Okay, Gloria, I've got pack lines. That's the best I
can do. You can always send an email through the
computer of a friend of yours if you're really serious.

Speaker 3 (34:28):
Okay, okay, thank you, thank you, Well, you're welcome.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Coming right back on Nightside.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Right after this, you're on Night Side with Dan Ray
on w Boston's news radio.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
Well, let me go to my friend Harvey Silverglade, who
is joining us doctor Miller. Harvey is one of the
most respected attorneys criminal defense attorneys here in Boston and
a constitutional scholar. Harvey, you owned doctor al Miller. You
got to help me out in time here, buddy, go right.

Speaker 5 (34:55):
Ahead, doctor Miller. What is the relationship between the boss
and lyme disease I had. I'm a city person, but
I happened to visit a client on Martha's Vinyard and
I came back with something called the biosis. I was
treated at the parapsychology lab at the mess General Hospital.

(35:18):
The patients.

Speaker 3 (35:21):
The barillia travels with many other co infections, and two
of the most common co infections are Bartonella and the bigia.
So if you were positive for bobigia, the chances are
you've also got a Burrilli infection because they usually travel together.
And of course Martha's Vineyard. Of all the counties, I

(35:43):
think it's like three thousand counties in the United States,
and the top ten counties that have the highest incidents
of brilliant infection, one of them is Martha's Vineyard. So
if you were there and you got a pick byte,
you and if the lamb only tested for uh babigia,
it will be positive. But if they tested for all

(36:03):
the co infections you would be you'd find that you'd
also had a brillia infection. You may also have bartonella.

Speaker 2 (36:12):
Harvey, I can get you doctor Miller's Gmail, and I
think that they would be helpful for you to contact
him on that. Okay, I will get it. Is just
D R. L. Miller, So d R A L M
I L L E R at gmail dot com and
he will respond to you if you would keep a
lookout from my friend's email, doctor Miller, I appreciate it. Sure,

(36:37):
all right, Harvey, thank you very much.

Speaker 5 (36:40):
Right, oh bye bye, Okay, let me go next.

Speaker 2 (36:42):
To Donna in Northborough. Donnie, you were next on nice
that with doctor L.

Speaker 3 (36:47):
Millerker right ahead, Hey, doctor L I am curious.

Speaker 8 (36:52):
I took care of I had some chickens that I
was raising, and I discovered that using dietamatious earth was
very helpful, not only in helping them avoid external parasites
like ticks, but also for internal parasites. I'm curious if
there's any uh studies or anything that you've done with

(37:12):
regard to what you're talking about now as far as
sysbusters or UH how that might help in that way
because it's food grave dietamacious earth, is there has there
been any studies on that?

Speaker 3 (37:30):
I'm sorry, I don't understand your question.

Speaker 8 (37:33):
So the question is, when I was raising chickens, I
used food grade dietamacious Earth to help keep the ticks
off of the chickens, but also it helps them mixed
in with their food for parasites.

Speaker 7 (37:48):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (37:49):
They were incredibly healthy chickens. They were tested. They were
in amazing conditions as a part of a regiment that
I did with you know, the the antimicrobial herbs.

Speaker 2 (38:00):
So the question maybe beyond Dr Miller's expertise. She's asking
a question about diet tamacious Earth. I don't know what
that is, Doctor Miller. If it's something that's not familiar
with you were going to move on.

Speaker 3 (38:17):
I'm not familiar with that. I'm sorry, all right.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
Sorry, sorry, Donnie. You can send him an email if
you want, d R A L. M I L L
E R at gmail dot com. Okay.

Speaker 8 (38:29):
I was also curious if he did any work with
David Well, the executive director now past of the American
Life Disease Foundation in the early two thousands.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
Yeah. And your connection is horrible, Donna. I don't know
if you're on a cell phone, if you're on a speakerphone.
I got to move on. Donnie, I would suggest you
send him an email. Thank you, Jennifer and Brockton. Jennifer,
I'm going to give you like one minute, and I
mean it. That's all I have left. Glad.

Speaker 3 (38:55):
Jennifer, Hi, I just have a question.

Speaker 4 (39:00):
My daughter's and worked up for connective tissue disorder and
I read recently, I mean I belong to a few
support groups, and I read recently that somebody made a
connection to lime disease.

Speaker 2 (39:13):
And you're talking about connective tissue disorder. Yes, doctor, let
me again, because of time, Jennifer, you've called late. It's
connective tissue disorder and lime disease. Anything that you can
add on that, doctor Miller.

Speaker 3 (39:29):
Yes, it should absolutely be properly tested because connective tissue
disease is usually due to barellia.

Speaker 5 (39:39):
Okay, that's good to know. Thank you so much.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
All right, Jennifer, thank you for the no Jennifer, I'm
sorry you got to send him an email at doctor L.
Miller at gmail dot com. I'm flat out of time.
I think Rob just ended the call. Doctor Miller. As always,
thank you, thank you, thank you. I will be in
touch with you tomorrow. For those of you who I
couldn't get to on time. I apologize profusely, just overwhelmed.

(40:07):
His email is dr for Doctor L A. L. Miller
m I L L. E. R at gmail dot com
and you can find him all over YouTube. He's brilliant.
I think that he needs to be recognized and accepted
by some of the folks who want to make America
healthy again. Wake up America, wanting to make America healthy again.

(40:35):
This is a physician who can make America healthy again,
doctor Miller.

Speaker 3 (40:39):
Thank you so much, Thank you, Dan, thank you.

Speaker 2 (40:43):
I'll call you the more. We'll be back right after
the eleven o'clock news, and we're going to give you
an opportunity to remember for me, for yourself your most
precious childhood summer memories. Back on night side right after
this and thanks to doctor al Miller,
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

24/7 News: The Latest
Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton tackle the biggest stories in news, politics and current events with intelligence and humor. From the border crisis, to the madness of cancel culture and far-left missteps, Clay and Buck guide listeners through the latest headlines and hot topics with fun and entertaining conversations and opinions.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.