Probable late lyme disease: a variant manifestation of untreated Borrelia burgdorferi infection.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Lyme disease, a bacterial infection with the tick-borne spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, can cause early and late manifestations.
The category of probable Lyme disease was recently added to the CDC surveillance case definition to describe patients with
serologic evidence of exposure and physician-diagnosed disease in the absence of objective signs. We present a retrospective
case series of 13 untreated patients with persistent symptoms of greater than 12 weeks duration who meet these criteria and
suggest a label of 'probable late Lyme disease' for this presentation.
METHODS
The sample for this analysis draws from a retrospective chart review of consecutive, adult patients presenting between August
2002 and August 2007 to the author (JA), an infectious disease specialist. Patients were included in the analysis if their
current illness had lasted greater than or equal to 12 weeks duration at the time of evaluation.
RESULTS
Probable late Lyme patients with positive IgG serology but no history of previous physician-documented Lyme disease or appropriate
Lyme treatment were found to represent 6% of our heterogeneous sample presenting with ≥ 12 weeks of symptom duration. Patients
experienced a range of symptoms including fatigue, widespread pain, and cognitive complaints. Approximately one-third of this
subset reported a patient-observed rash at illness onset, with a similar proportion having been exposed to non-recommended
antibiotics or glucocorticosteroid treatment for their initial disease. A clinically significant response to antibiotics treatment
was noted in the majority of patients with probable late Lyme disease, although post-treatment symptom recurrence was common.
CONCLUSIONS
We suggest that patients with probable late Lyme disease share features with both confirmed late Lyme disease and post-treatment
Lyme disease syndrome. Physicians should consider the recent inclusion of probable Lyme disease in the CDC Lyme disease surveillance
criteria when evaluating patients, especially in patients with a history suggestive of misdiagnosed or inadequately treated
early Lyme disease. Further studies are warranted to delineate later manifestations of Lyme disease and to quantify treatment
benefit in this population.
Links
Authors
Aucott JN, Seifter A, Rebman AW
Institution
Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. jaucott2@jhmi.edu
Source
BMC infectious diseases 12: 2012 pg 173MeSH
AdultAged
Antibodies, Bacterial
Borrelia burgdorferi
Female
Humans
Immunoglobulin G
Lyme Disease
Male
Middle Aged
Time Factors
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22853630
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