Well, band 66 can be from Borrelia hermsii - relapsing fever, which, if at three months you are struggling again, might actually make sense. Remember, when most people say Lyme, they are talking about
all the strains (over 100 in the US alone), and the most commonly looked for ones are B. burgdorferi, B. mayonii and I think maybe one more.
"Relapsing fever spirochetes have a unique process of DNA rearrangement that allows them to periodically change the molecules on their outer surface. This process, called antigenic variation, allows the spirochete to evade the host immune system and cause relapsing episodes of fever and other symptoms. Three species cause TBRF in the United States: Borrelia hermsii, B. parkerii, and B. turicatae. The most common cause is cause is B. hermsii."
"Spirochetemia (spirochetes in blood) in TBRF often reaches high concentrations, 100-1000 times more than in cases of early Lyme disease. Thus, microscopy is a useful diagnostic tool for TBRF. The definitive diagnosis of TBRF may be based on the observation of relapsing fever spirochetes (Borrelia hermsii, B. turicatae, or B. parkerii in the US) in peripheral blood smears of a symptomatic person by a microscopist trained in spirochete identification. Although best visualized by dark field microscopy, the organisms can also be detected using Wright-Giemsa or acridine orange stains."
If you are not healing from this, you should consider another infection or condition that would be likely to stop your progress - it's still Lyme and will still inhibit the immune function.
www.cdc.gov/relapsing-fever/clinicians/