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LYME DISEASE
What is it?
In the early 1970's, a mysterious clustering of arthritis occurred among
children in Lyme , Connecticut , and surrounding towns. Medical
researchers soon recognized the illness as a distinct disease, which
they called Lyme disease. They subsequently described the clinical
features of Lyme disease, established the usefulness of antibiotic
therapy in its treatment, identified the deer tick as the key to its
spread, and isolated the bacterium that caused it.
Lyme disease is still mistaken for other ailments,
and it continues to pose many other challenges: it can be
difficult to diagnose because of the inadequacies of today's
laboratory tests; it can be troublesome to treat in its later
phases; and its prevention through the development of an
effective vaccine is hampered by the elusive nature of the
bacterium.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH), a
part of the U.S. Public Health Service, conducts and supports
biomedical research aimed at meeting the challenges of Lyme
disease. This page presents the most recently available
information on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of
Lyme disease.
How
Lyme Disease Became Known
Lyme disease was first recognized in 1975 after researchers investigated
why unusually large numbers of children were being diagnosed with juvenile
rheumatoid arthritis in Lyme and two neighboring towns. The investigators
discovered that most of the affected children lived near wooded areas
like to harbor ticks. They also found that the children's first
symptoms typically started in the summer months coinciding with the height
of the tick season. Several of the patients interviewed reported
having a skin rash just before developing the arthritis, and many also
recalled being bitten by a tick at the rash site.
Further investigations resulted in the discovery
that tiny deer ticks infected with a spiral-shaped bacterium
or spirochete (which was later named Borrelia burgdorferi) were
responsible for the outbreak of arthritis in Lyme.
In Europe , a skin rash similar to that of
Lyme disease had been described in medical literature dating
back to the turn of the century. Lyme disease may have
spread from Europe to the United States in the early 1900's
but only recently became common enough to be detected.
The ticks most commonly infected with B.
burgdorferi usually feed and mate on deer during part
of their life cycle. The recent resurgence of the
deer population in the northeast and the influx of suburban
developments into rural areas where deer ticks are commonly
found have probably contributed to the disease's rising
prevalence.
The number of reported cases of Lyme disease,
as well as the number of geographic areas in which it is
found, has been increasing. Lyme disease has been
reported in nearly all states in this country, although most
cases are concentrated in the coastal northeast, mid-Atlantic
states, Wisconsin and Minnesota , and northern California
. Lyme disease is endemic in large areas of Asia and
Europe . Recent reports suggest that it is present
in South America , too.
Ticks that Most Commonly Transmit B. burgdorferi in
the U.S.
Ixodes dammini - most
common in the northeast and Midwest
Ixodes scapularis -
found in south and southeast
Ixodes pacificus - found
on the west coast
Most Common Symptoms of Lyme Disease
Early Infection
Rash (erythema migrans)
Muscle and joint aches
Headache
Stiff neck
Significant fatigue
Fever
Facial paralysis (Bell's palsy)
Meningitis
Brief episodes of joint pain
and swelling
Less Common
Eye problems such as conjunctivitis
Heart abnormalities such as heart
block and myocarditis
Late Infection
Arthritis, intermittent, or chronic
Less Common
Neurological conditions such
as encephalitis or confusion
Skin disorders
Symptoms of Lyme Disease in Detail
Erythema Migrans
In most people, the first symptom of Lyme disease
is a red rash known as erythema migrans (EM). The telltale
rash starts as a small red spot that expands over a period
of days or weeks, forming a circular, triangular, or oval-shaped
rash. Sometimes the rash resembles a bull's eye because
it appears as a red ring surrounding a central clear area. The
rash, which can range in size from that of a dime to the
entire width of a person's back, appears within a few weeks
of a tick bite and usually occurs at the site of a bite. As
infection spreads, several rashes can appear at different
sites on the body.
Erythema migrans is often accompanied by symptoms
such as fever, headache, stiff neck, body aches, and fatigue. Although these
flu-like symptoms may resemble those of common viral infections,
Lyme disease symptoms tend to persist or may occur intermittently.
Arthritis
After several months of being infected by B.
burgdorferi, slightly more than half of those people
not treated with anti-biotics develop recurrent attacks of
painful and swollen joints that last a few days to a few
months. The arthritis can shift from one joint to another;
the knee is most commonly affected. About 10 to 20
percent of un-treated patients will go on to develop chronic
arthritis.
Neurological Symptoms
Lyme disease can also affect the nervous system,
causing symptoms such as stiff neck and severe headache (meningitis),
temporary paralysis of facial muscles (Bell's palsy), numbness,
pain or weakness in the limbs, or poor motor coordination. More
subtle changes such as memory loss, difficulty with concentration,
and a change in mood or sleeping habits have also been associated
with Lyme disease.
Nervous system abnormalities usually develop
several weeks, months, or even years following an untreated
infection. These symptoms often last for weeks or months
and may recur.
Heart Problems
Fewer than one out of ten Lyme disease patients
develops heart problems, such as an irregular heartbeat,
which can be signaled by dizziness or shortness of breath. These
symptoms rarely last more than a few days or weeks. Such
heart abnormalities generally surface several weeks after
infection.
Other Symptoms
Less commonly, Lyme disease can result in eye
inflammation, hepatitis, and severe fatigue, although none
of these problems are likely to appear without other Lyme
disease symptoms being present.
How Lyme Disease
is Diagnosed
Lyme disease may be difficult to diagnose because many of its symptoms
mimic those of other disorders. In addition, the only distinctive
hallmark unique to Lyme disease - the erythema migrans rash - is absent
in at least one-fourth of the people who become infected. Although
a tick bite is an important clue for diagnosis, many patients cannot
recall having been bitten recently by a tick. This is not surprising
because the tick is tiny, and a tick bite is usually painless.
When a patient with possible Lyme disease
symptoms does not develop the distinctive rash, a physician
will rely on a detailed medical history and a careful physical
examination for essential clues to diagnosis, with laboratory
tests playing a supportive role.
Blood Tests
Unfortunately, the Lyme disease microbe itself
is difficult to isolate or culture from body tissues or fluids. Most
physicians look for evidence of antibodies against B.
burgdorferi in the blood to confirm the bacterium's
role as the cause of a patient's symptoms. Antibodies
are molecules or small substances tailor-made by the immune
system to lock onto and destroy specific microbial invaders.
Some patients experiencing nervous system
symptoms may also undergo a spinal tap. Through this
procedure doctors can detect brain and spinal cord inflammation
and can look for antibodies in the spinal fluid.
The inadequacies of the currently available
antibody tests may prevent them from firmly establishing
whether the Lyme disease bacterium is causing a patient's
symptoms. In the first few weeks following infection,
antibody tests are not reliable because a patient's symptoms. In
the first few weeks following infection, antibody tests are
not reliable because a patient's immune system has not produced
enough antibodies to be detected. Antibiotics given
to a patient early during infection may also prevent antibodies
from reaching detectable levels, even though the Lyme disease
bacterium is the cause of the patient's symptoms.
Because some tests cannot distinguish Lyme
disease antibodies from antibodies to similar organisms,
patients may test positive for Lyme disease when their symptoms
actually stem from other bacterial infections. A lack
of standardization of antibody tests and poor quality control
also contribute to inaccuracies in test results.
Due to these pitfalls, physicians must rely
on their clinical judgment in diagnosing someone with Lyme
disease even though the patient does not have the distinctive
erythema migrans rash. Such a diagnosis would be based
on the history of a tick bite, the patient's symptoms, a
thorough ruling out of other diseases that might cause those
symptoms, and other implicating evidence. This evidence
could include such factors as an initial appearance of symptoms
during the summer months when tick bites are most likely
to occur outdoor exposure in an area where Lyme disease is
common, and a clustering of Lyme disease symptoms among family
members.
New Tests Under
Development
To improve the accuracy of Lyme disease diagnosis. NIH-supported
researchers are developing a number of new tests that promise
to be more reliable than currently available procedures. Some
of these detect distinctive protein fragments of the Lyme
disease bacterium in fluid samples.
Treatment
The treatment of lyme disease is medical therapy with antibiotics. Dosage
and duration depends on the stage of disease.
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