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‘Lyme-literate’ doctor in Illinois, Iowa faces fresh allegations

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — A former Joliet, Ill., surgeon who reinvented himself as a “Lyme-literate” physician after Iowa medical authorities charged him with professional incompetence is now facing allegations of misconduct related to his new practice.

The Iowa Board of Medicine is pursing formal disciplinary charges against Dr. Jeffrey Piccirillo, 50, who practices in northwest suburban Lake in the Hills and in Grinnell, Iowa. The charges allege professional incompetence, “practice harmful or detrimental to the public,” sexual misconduct and unethical or unprofessional conduct.

The board, in charges filed in September, alleges that Piccirillo failed to provide appropriate care to numerous patients who were diagnosed with Lyme disease and that he engaged in an inappropriate sexual relationship with a female Illinois patient.

The female patient said she also contacted the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation about Piccirillo.

Agency spokeswoman Sue Hofer said agency policy restricts her from confirming or denying whether it had received a report or is investigating.

In the previous case, the Iowa medical board alleged that Piccirillo had demonstrated “a pattern of professional incompetency” and “practice harmful or detrimental to the public.” Piccirillo, who moved to Iowa in 2004, entered into a settlement agreement with the board in February 2009.

Piccirillo, who is licensed in Iowa and Illinois, received a public reprimand and was ordered to pay a $5,000 fine. He also was prohibited from practicing surgery, ordered to complete a board-approved mental health assessment, required to submit to psychiatric care and mental health counseling, and placed on indefinite probation subject to board monitoring.

Because of the Iowa sanctions, the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation also put him on indefinite probation.

Since then, Piccirillo has been diagnosing and treating patients for a form of Lyme disease that some medical authorities, including the Infectious Diseases Society of America and the American Academy of Neurology, have concluded does not exist.

Lyme disease is a bacterial infection primarily transmitted by deer ticks that can cause rashes, swollen joints and inflamed nerves. It usually is curable with a round of antibiotics.

But a group of doctors, including Piccirillo, has told patients with common problems such as back pain, poor concentration and fatigue that their ailments might be caused by a chronic form of Lyme disease that can evade standard testing and treatment. The doctors describe themselves as “Lyme-literate.” These patients sometimes are treated for months or years with antibiotics that can be costly and dangerous.

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