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- $Unique_ID{BRK03948}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Lyme Disease}
- $Subject{Lyme Disease LD Lyme Arthritis Lyme Borreliosis Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Brachial Neuritis Parsonnage-Turner Syndrome Bell's Palsy Babesiosis}
- $Volume{}
- $Log{}
-
- Copyright (C) 1986, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993 National
- Organization for Rare Disorders, Inc.
-
- 238:
- Lyme Disease
-
- ** IMPORTANT **
- It is possible the main title of the article (Lyme Disease) is not the
- name you expected. Please check the SYNONYMS listing to find the alternate
- names and disorder subdivisions covered by this article.
-
- Synonyms
-
- LD
- Lyme Arthritis
- Lyme Borreliosis
-
- Information about the following diseases can be found in the Related
- Disorders section of this report.
-
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Brachial Neuritis (Parsonnage-Turner Syndrome)
- Bell's Palsy
- Babesiosis
-
- General Discussion
-
- ** REMINDER **
- The information contained in the Rare Disease Database is provided for
- educational purposes only. It should not be used for diagnostic or treatment
- purposes. If you wish to obtain more information about this disorder, please
- contact your personal physician and/or the agencies listed in the "Resources"
- section of this report.
-
-
- Lyme disease is an infectious tick-transmitted inflammatory disorder
- characterized by an early focal skin lesion, and subsequently a growing red
- area on the skin (erythema chronicum migrans or ECM). The disorder may be
- followed weeks later by neurological, heart or joint abnormalities.
-
- Symptoms
-
- The first symptom of Lyme disease is a skin lesion. Known as erythema
- chronicum migrans, or ECM, this usually begins as a red discoloration
- (macule) or as an elevated round spot (papule). The skin lesion usually
- appears on an extremity or on the trunk, especially the thigh, buttock or the
- under arm. This spot expands, often with central clearing, to a diameter as
- large as 50 cm (c. 12 in.). Approximately 25% of patients with Lyme disease
- report having been bitten at that site by a tiny tick 3 to 32 days before
- onset of ECM. The lesion may be warm to touch. Soon after onset nearly half
- the patients develop multiple smaller lesions without hardened centers. ECM
- generally lasts for a few weeks. Other types of lesions may subsequently
- appear during resolution. Former skin lesions may reappear faintly,
- sometimes before recurrent attacks of arthritis. Lesions of the mucous
- membranes do not occur in Lyme disease.
-
- The most common symptoms accompanying ECM, or preceding it by a few days,
- may include malaise, fatigue, chills, fever, headache and stiff neck. Less
- commonly, backache, muscle aches (myalgias), nausea, vomiting, sore throat,
- swollen lymph glands, and an enlarged spleen may also be present.
-
- Most symptoms are characteristically intermittent and changing, but
- malaise and fatigue may linger for weeks.
-
- Arthritis is present in about half of the patients with ECM, occuring
- within weeks to months following onset and lasting as long as 2 years. Early
- in the illness, migratory inflammation of many joints (polyarthritis) without
- joint swelling may occur. Later, longer attacks of swelling and pain in
- several large joints, especially the knees, typically recur for several
- years. The knees commonly are much more swollen than painful; they are often
- hot, but rarely red. Baker's cysts (a cyst in the knee) may form and
- rupture.
-
- Those symptoms accompanying ECM, especially malaise, fatigue and low-grade
- fever, may also precede or accompany recurrent attacks of arthritis. About
- 10% of patients develop chronic knee involvement (i.e. unremittent for 6
- months or longer).
-
- Neurological abnormalities may develop in about 15% of patients with Lyme
- disease within weeks to months following onset of ECM, often before arthritis
- occurs. These abnormalities commonly last for months, and usually resolve
- completely. They include:
-
- 1. lymphocytic meningitis or meningoencephalitis
- 2. jerky involuntary movements (chorea)
- 3. failure of muscle coordination due to dysfunction of the cerebellum
- (cerebellar ataxia)
- 4. cranial neuritis including Bell's palsy (a form of facial paralysis)
- 5. motor and sensory radiculo-neuritis (symmetric weakness, pain,
- strange sensations in the extremities, usually occurring first in the legs)
- 6. injury to single nerves causing diminished nerve response
- (mononeuritis multiplex)
- 7. inflammation of the spinal cord (myelitis).
-
- Abnormalities in the heart muscle (myocardium) occur in approximately 8%
- of patients with Lyme disease within weeks of ECM. They may include
- fluctuating degrees of atrioventricular block and, less commonly,
- inflammation of the heart sack and heart muscle (myopericarditis) with
- reduced blood volume ejected from the left ventricle and an enlarged heart
- (cardiomegaly).
-
- When Lyme Disease is contracted during pregnancy, the fetus may or may
- not be adversely affected, or may contract congenital Lyme Disease. In a
- study of nineteen pregnant women with Lyme Disease, fourteen had normal
- pregnancies and normal babies.
-
- If Lyme Disease is contracted during pregnancy, possible fetal
- abnormalities and premature birth can occur.
-
- Causes
-
- Lyme disease is caused by a spirochete bacterium (Borrelia Burgdorferi)
- transmitted by a small tick called Ixodes dammini. The spirochete is
- probably injected into the victim's skin or bloodstream at the time of the
- insect bite. After an incubation period of 3 to 32 days, the organism
- migrates outward in the skin, is spread through the lymphatic system or is
- disseminated by the blood to different body organs or other skin sites.
-
- Lyme Disease was first described in 1909 in European medical journals.
- The first outbreak in the United States occurred in the early 1970's in Old
- Lyme, Connecticut. An unusually high incidence of juvenile arthritis in the
- area led scientists to investigate and identify the disorder. In 1981, Dr.
- Willy Burgdorfer identified the bacterial spirochete organism (Borrelia
- Burgdorferi) which causes this disorder.
-
- Some researchers believe that genetic factors may determine whether a
- person with Lyme Disease will be cured with antibiotics, or if they will not
- respond to antibiotics and consequently suffer from chronic arthritis. Their
- response is determined by their human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes located
- on the 6th chromosome.
-
- Affected Population
-
- Lyme Disease occurs in wooded areas with populations of mice and deer which
- carry ticks, and can be contracted during any season of the year. Since
- first identified in 1975, Lyme Disease has become more common. In 1989, 7400
- cases were reported. Lyme disease has spread to at least 45 states. New
- York accounts for at least 50 percent of the reported cases.
-
- Related Disorders
-
- Rheumatoid Arthritis is a disorder similar in appearance to Lyme disease.
- However, the pain in rheumatoid arthritis is usually more pronounced.
- Morning stiffness and symmetric joint swelling more commonly occur in
- rheumatoid arthritis, and knotty lumps under the skin may be present over
- bony prominences. Bony decalcification which can be prominent in Rheumatoid
- Arthritis is detected on X-rays. (For more information on Rheumatoid
- Arthritis, please see articles in the Prevalent Health Conditions/Concerns
- area of NORD Services).
-
- Brachial Neuritis, also known as Parsonnage-Turner Syndrome, is a common
- inflammation of a group of nerves that supply the arm, forearm, and hand
- (brachial plexus). It is characterized by severe neck pain in the area above
- the collarbone (supraclavicular) that may radiate down the arm and into the
- hand. There also may be weakness and numbness (hyperesthesia) of the fingers
- and hands. Although many cases have no apparent cause, this syndrome may
- occur following an immunization (tetanus or diptheria), surgery, or infection
- with Lyme Disease. (For more information on these disorders, choose
- "Parsonnage-Turner" as your search term in the Rare Disease Database.
-
- Bell's Palsy is characterized by sudden onset of facial paralysis
- resulting from a decreased blood supply to part of the head and compression
- of the facial nerve. It occurs rapidly over several hours, sometimes
- following exposure to cold or draft. A slight fever, pain behind the ear, a
- stiff neck, and unilateral facial weakness and stiffness are among the
- earliest symptoms.
-
- Babesiosis is an infection carried and transmitted by deer ticks. It can
- cause disease when the tick attaches to humans. Symptoms include a
- malaria-like illness, fever, lack of appetite, headache, chills, stomach pain,
- vomiting, and diarrhea. In most people the diseases causes mild symptoms or
- no symptoms at all. However, in very young children, the elderly and
- immunosuppressed persons the disease can be life-threatening if left
- untreated. (For more information on this disorder, choose "Babesiosis" as
- your search term in the Rare Disease Database.)
-
- Therapies: Standard
-
- For adults with Lyme disease the antibiotic tetracycline Doxycycline and
- minocycline is the drug of choice. Penicillin V and erythromycin have also
- been used. In children penicillin V is recommended rather than tetracycline.
- Penicillin V is now recommended for neurological abnormalities. It is not
- yet clear whether antibiotic treatment is helpful later in the illness when
- arthritis is the most predominant symptom. Treatment should be started as
- soon as the rash appears, even before the Enzyme Linked Immunoabsorbent Assay
- (ELISA) test is completed. Results of this test may be inaccurate if
- patients have had antibiotics soon after contracting Lyme Disease, or in
- those who have weakened immune systems.
-
- If Lyme Disease is contracted during pregnancy, careful monitoring by
- physicians is highly recommended to avoid possible fetal abnormalities and/or
- complications. Treatment with penicillin should begin immediately to avoid
- the possibility of fetal abnormalities.
-
- For tense knee joints due to increased fluid flowing in the joint spaces
- (effusions), the use of crutches is often helpful. Aspiration of fluid and
- injection of a corticosteroid may be beneficial. If the patient with Lyme
- disease has marked functional limitation, excision of the membrane lining the
- joint (synovectomy) may be performed for chronic (6 months or more despite
- therapy) knee effusions, but spontaneous remission can occur after more than
- a year of continuous knee involvement.
-
- In 1989 a new Lyme Disease antibody test, manufactured by Cambridge
- Biosciences Corp., was approved by the FDA. This test is being used by local
- laboratories throughout the nation, making tests more available to the
- general population. However, it is 97% specific for antibodies to Lyme
- disease when compared to Western blot tests, but it cannot identify the live
- bacteria in patients who have not yet developed the antibodies.
-
- Lyme Disease may reoccur in some patients resulting in chronic neurologic
- disorders such as Polyneuropathy and Encephalopathy. These after-effects are
- treated with antibiotics.
-
- Therapies: Investigational
-
- Researchers are trying to develop a test that will identify the Lyme disease
- bacteria in patients who have not yet developed the antibodies. This would
- enable doctors to diagnose Lyme disease very early in the course of the
- illness.
-
- This disease entry is based upon medical information available through
- September 1992. Since NORD's resources are limited, it is not possible to
- keep every entry in the Rare Disease Database completely current and
- accurate. Please check with the agencies listed in the Resources section for
- the most current information about this disorder.
-
- Resources
-
- For more information on Lyme Disease, please contact:
-
- National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD)
- P.O. Box 8923
- New Fairfield, CT 06812-1783
- (203) 746-6518
-
- Lyme Disease Foundation, Inc.
- P.O. Box 462
- 384 Merrow Rd.
- Tolland, CT 06084-0462
- (203) 871-2900
-
- American Lyme Disease Foundation, Inc.
- Royal Executive Park, 3 International Dr.
- Rye Brook, NY 10573
- (914) 934-9155
- (800) 876-LYME
-
- The National Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases Information
- Clearinghouse
- Box AMS
- Bethesda, MD 20892
- (301) 495-4484
-
- Lyme Disease Clinic
- Yale New Haven Hospital
- 333 Cedar St.
- New Haven, CT 06510
-
- Lyme Disease Clinic
- Marshfield Clinic
- 1000 North Oak Ave.
- Marshfield, WI 54449
-
- Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
- 1600 Clifton Road, NE
- Atlanta, GA 30333
- (404) 639-3534
-
- References
-
- CECIL TEXTBOOK OF MEDICINE, 18th ed.: James B. Wyngaarden, and Lloyd H.
- Smith, Jr., Eds.: W. B. Saunders Co., 1988. P. 1251.
-
- CECIL TEXTBOOK OF MEDICINE, 18th ed.: James B. Wyngaarden, and Lloyd H.
- Smith, Jr., Eds.: W. B. Saunders Co., 1988. Pp. 1726-9.
-
- ASSOCIATION OF CHRONIC LYME ARTHRITIS WITH HLA-DR4 AND HLA-DR2, Allen C.
- Steere, et al.; N. Eng. J. Med, (July 26, 1990, issue 323 (4)). Pp. 219-223.
-
- CHRONIC NEUROLOGIC MANIFESTATIONS OF LYME DISEASE, Eric L. Logigian, M.D., et
- al.; N Eng J Med, (November 22, 1990, issue 323 (21)). Pp. 1438-1444.
-
-