Guy,
I'll try to keep this short...
He initially had some stomach pains and pains in arms that would come and go. He also had some sleep issues and a slight fever that would also be intermittent. Being active and in puberty many of these things were initially attributed to just growing pains. A few months after the initial symptoms he became very sick (flu-like symptoms) and we took him the peds doc who basically said wait it out. Nothing much changed, we started doing research and though it may be Lyme. Went back, doc reluctantly did Lyme test - the numbers were way, way high. Looking back he probably had been bit months earlier and he was fighting it off. The sudden onset was most likely from another bite since he camped in a grassy field w/Boys scouts just a few weeks before he crashed.
The symptoms persisted and we saw signs of more sleep issues, schoolwork dropping, unable to concentrate, memory loss, etc. We saw many docs here in NJ and in PA including infectious disease docs at Childrens Hostipal. They told us no such thing as chronic Lyme, said it was in his head, and were literally mad at us for bringing him there. What an eye opener that was.
The traditional way to treat is with 14 days of antibiotics and perhaps up to 28 days. There are literally thousands of Lyme patients where this did not work, my son is one of them. There are physicians who will treat longer, but going against "mainstream" is a problem for their practices. He presently sees a doc who is considered to be the top pediatric Lyme literate doc in the US.
I would highly recommend seeing the documentary entitled "Under Our Skin" from Open Eye pictures. Came out last year and gives pretty good insight to the disease and how it is (or is not handled) in the US. This link has a trailer and you can see if there are screenings in the area:
http://www.underourskin.com/
My son's issues were written up in The Burlington County Times and it still has some internet links to the article, here's one of them:
http://sci.tech-archive.net/Archive/sci.med.diseases.lyme/2007-05/msg00486.html
Hope this helps, it is quite a difficult disease to identify, treat, and live with.
46er,
We've spoken with the head of the clinic, Dr.Fallon. His organization is conducting reseach but not actively treating patients. We were also hampered in treatment since he is not an adult.