Can Lyme Disease Trigger Guillain-Barré Syndrome?
Ascending neuropathy may rarely follow Lyme disease
Guillain-Barré syndrome and Lyme disease can share neurologic features
Diagnosis may require considering multiple causes of neuropathy
Authors of the case study Clinical association: Lyme disease and Guillain-Barre Syndrome describe Borrelia burgdorferi as “an important antecedent infection associated with the development of GBS.” [1] Their report raises an important question: could Lyme disease be an underrecognized infection contributing to Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in select patients?
Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) is typically associated with infections that trigger abnormal immune responses. Some case reports suggest Lyme disease may rarely act as one of these triggers in susceptible individuals.
Some clinicians have questioned whether infections acquired after a tick bite could act as triggers for Guillain-Barré syndrome in rare situations.
Case report: Lyme disease and Guillain-Barré syndrome
Eight months before admission, the 31-year-old man noticed a dime-sized lesion on his left arm. Over time, he developed progressive numbness and weakness affecting both his hands and feet along with areflexia.
The numbness and burning in his feet progressed into his upper extremities. He later developed weakness involving all extremities along with blurry vision, numbness involving the tongue, decreased sensation, and right temporal headaches worsened by light and sound.
The exam revealed “decreased sensation to pinprick with a distal to proximal gradient up to proximal thigh,” according to Patel from SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York. “Other significant findings were 4/5 weakness in all extremities along with areflexia in biceps, triceps, patellar and achilles.”
Can Lyme disease cause ascending weakness and neuropathy?
Ascending weakness and neuropathy are hallmark features of Guillain-Barré syndrome, but Lyme disease may also produce neurologic symptoms that overlap with peripheral neuropathies.
Published reports describing Lyme disease-associated Guillain-Barré syndrome remain uncommon, making causation difficult to establish.
Neurologic manifestations of Lyme disease are discussed further in neurologic Lyme disease.
Patients experiencing numbness, burning pain, or peripheral nerve symptoms may also have features discussed in Lyme disease neuropathy.
Diagnostic findings supporting both Lyme disease and GBS
Diagnostic testing revealed a mildly elevated white blood cell count of 12,800 WBC/μL, ESR elevation to 17 mm/h, spinal fluid protein elevation to 190 mg/dL, and pleocytosis of 10 mm3.
An electromyography (EMG) demonstrated absent F waves in bilateral tibial and peroneal motor responses consistent with acute acquired polyradiculoneuropathy with active denervation.
“A clinical picture with ascending neuropathy and EMG findings of isolated absence of F waves favor a diagnosis of GBS,” Patel explained.
A Lyme disease diagnosis was confirmed with immunoblots positive for IgM p23 and p41 along with IgG p18, p23, p30, p39, and p41.
Elevated protein and pleocytosis have previously been described in neurologic Lyme disease. [2]
How do clinicians distinguish Lyme disease from Guillain-Barré syndrome?
Both conditions may present with weakness, numbness, abnormal reflexes, neuropathy, and neurologic symptoms.
Clinicians may consider:
- Exposure history including tick bites or endemic exposure
- Neurologic examination findings
- Spinal fluid analysis
- EMG studies
- Serologic testing
- Pattern and progression of symptoms
Diagnostic overlap can complicate evaluation when multiple neurologic processes are occurring simultaneously.
How might Lyme disease contribute to Guillain-Barré syndrome?
The relationship remains unclear.
Patel explains, “However, there is evidence of immune responses associated with tick-borne pathogens. It is possible that these immune complexes in some individuals result in the development of antiganglioside antibodies causing GBS.”
Lyme disease has also been associated with demyelinating neurologic manifestations and immune-mediated processes.
Treatment and outcome
The patient received intravenous immunoglobulin at 0.4 g/kg daily, plasma exchange therapy, and intravenous ceftriaxone 2 g daily.
Within 7 days, his symptoms reportedly resolved.
The authors concluded that Lyme disease should remain part of the differential diagnosis in patients presenting with acute ascending neuropathy when exposure history and clinical findings support possible infection.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Lyme disease trigger Guillain-Barré syndrome?
Case reports suggest Lyme disease may rarely be associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome, although the relationship remains incompletely understood.
Can a tick bite cause Guillain-Barré syndrome?
Tick-borne infections have been proposed as possible triggers in rare cases, although evidence remains limited.
Can Lyme disease cause ascending weakness?
Neurologic Lyme disease may present with weakness, neuropathy, numbness, and other neurologic symptoms that overlap with other neurologic disorders.
Is Guillain-Barré syndrome a known complication of Lyme disease?
Published reports describe possible associations, but the condition appears uncommon.
Clinical Takeaway
Lyme disease and Guillain-Barré syndrome may share overlapping neurologic features including neuropathy, weakness, and sensory abnormalities.
Recognizing possible infectious triggers and considering Lyme disease in appropriate clinical settings may help avoid delayed diagnosis.
Ascending weakness with neuropathy and tick exposure history may warrant evaluation for both infectious and immune-mediated causes.
Related Articles
Lyme radiculopathy
Autonomic dysfunction in Lyme disease
Persistent Lyme disease symptoms
POTS and Lyme disease
References
- Patel K, Shah S, Subedi D. Clinical association: Lyme disease and Guillain-Barre syndrome. Am J Emerg Med. 2017.
- Logigian EL, Kaplan RF, Steere AC. Chronic neurologic manifestations of Lyme disease. N Engl J Med. 1990;323(21):1438-1444.
Dr. Daniel Cameron, MD, MPH
Lyme disease clinician with over 30 years of experience and past president of ILADS.
Symptoms • Testing • Coinfections • Recovery • Pediatric • Prevention
Hallo
Ik heb in mijn overtuiging een Guillian Baree syndroom gehad in 2006. Ik had toen al 8 jaar de ziekte van Lyme!
De spoedopname die de huisarts stond te regelen, kon niet doorgaan door bizarre omstandigheden. Ik heb in 2016 voor het eerst allerlei antigliosiden laten testen en de specifieke van een Guillian Barree syndroom, waren een tiende meer verhoogd, dan de andere!!!! Nu 11 jaar later, nog steeds de ziekte van Lyme en al de uiteenlopende klachten worden nog steeds verkeerd gediagnosticeerd en de bron word vergeten!
perhaps “frozen shoulder” as well.
Bursitis and synovitis are common place in tick borne illnesses. I am not familiar with any other research on the subject.
Hello,
I am responding to this great thought process By Dr. Cameron because I know and am close enough to somebody that has experienced the wrath that GBS can unleash. I am also a Lyme disease advocate. Through my years of studying and listening. I am finding that Flu shots given to possible Lyme infected people may trigger a GBS autoimmune attack. This person also a diagnosed RA sufferer, Knee and leg issue sufferer, nerve and I am sure Peripheral nerve issues. The subject went paralyzed for sometime and was tested with protocol testing and as usual. Came back as read negative for Lyme disease on the protocol test. Which means nothing because I didn’t see the tests and they are basically junk tests for Late stage testing anyway. This person went on to a prestigious Non Lyme Literate Hospital and received numerous Blood washes and slowly came out of the experience and now manages the days with out a Lyme diagnosis. But I am sure there is Tick related issues in this subject. But subject refuses to talk about it. I believe the blood wash helped, but I am no longer close enough to observe. I presume the subject is doing well for what it is.
Thank you Dr. Cameron for striking this response.
David R Thomas
Lyme Advocate
There are certainly questions that have not been resolved.
Sir:
My husband has been suffering from several issues stemming from several sources so this may become a bit convoluted. In July of 2017 he became very ill from an infection he had that was not completely resolved by antibiotics. He went back to the doctor to receive more antibiotics which seemed to cure the infection by the end of July. Early in September he became ill again with a high fever and chills as well as diarrhea and vomiting for several days. He recovered from this without any doctor visits or antibiotics and felt it had resolved on it’s own. After a few weeks he began to have pain in his back and hip and tried to see our GP but was unable to get an appointment. He went to ER and the doctor felt he had sciatica and suggested a chiropractor. My husband had 12 sessions which proved to be of no benefit and during that time began to lose balance and have weakness in his left leg. Soon he was falling and needed a cane which did help for a while. His other leg had become weak during this time and soon he required a walker. In any case he saw a neurologist eventually who diagnosed GBS. Many blood tests later a Lyme test came up positive and so a lumbar puncture and an MRI were done and Lyme was definitely present. I should say that he never experienced the paralysis up into his lungs and although both legs were affected only one arm and hand were affected. He just went through a round of 30 days of antibiotics and the inflammation in his feet has subsided. He still has the numbness and bone pain in his legs and hand, and the right foot is still experiencing severe neurological shocks on a regular basis while his hand, arm and left leg have sporadic shocks. The right arm also occasionally receives them as well but it has been the least affected. I’ve left out some of the symptoms and issues that he has even now as my story would be much longer and involved but the main thing is that the doctors still aren’t positive this was just Lyme disease. We’ll find out more next month when we meet with some of the specialists he’s been to in the last 6 months. The biggest question for us is was this a case of Lyme disease mimicking GBS or did the Lyme trigger GBS? He never had the treatment for GBS but his symptoms are still present and really haven’t changed in the intensity of the pain he’s in. He has been taking 3000 mg of Gabapentin daily as well as 20 mg of Noretrypteline for the pain and it only allows him to sleep at night. Any information or input on this would be greatly appreciated as it’s been a long struggle for us and answers would be nice. Thanks
Lynne H
Your husband’s case is all to common. His course is severe enough to look at both Lyme disease and tick borne co-infections as well as Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). There are common symptoms of tick borne illness including feet pain. Some doctors focus on the feet pain calling it Plantar fasciitis. I encourage working with a range of consultation until you get your husband back.
This is an old post. Did you do any testing or clinical differential for Bartonella or other tick borne infections?
Pub med has a very interesting article regarding the relationship between rotator cuff tears and Lyme Disease my ortho md was either impressed that I found such information or confounded with its contents as he had never heard of such a correlation.
As a retired nurse and advocate it’s my hope this nasty disease will be irradicated.
I would assume you are referring to this case report titled Lyme Disease as an Underlying Cause of Supraspinatus Tendinopathy in an Overhead Athlete at https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22247404/
My daughter is 20 years old and was tested positive for GBS (Steve Miller variant) and Lyme disease in mid-November. Her GBS is severe. She was treated with a 7 day dose of IVIG for the GBS and antibiotics for Lyme. Her recovery has been slow. She’s into her 7th week and she is still on a ventilator with very limited mobility and unable to speak. How can it be determined that Lyme disease is the cause of her condition? Is there a specific antibiotic that works better for treating Lyme disease under these conditions and should she be re-tested for the Lyme.
Your daughter’s story highlights the difficulties doctors and their patients have in treatment when Lyme disease and tick borne illnesses are a part of the history. I use IV Rocephin AKA know as IV ceftriaxone as this drugs enters the brain. I have also added oral if needed is I suspect a co-infection. There is no test to determine if Lyme disease has cleared.
Can chemotherapy cure Lyme disease? My test for the disease showed 6 out of 10 . I had
HER2 cancer and breast cancer at the same time. Did radiation also. Am now cancer free.
My hips and legs are losing strength and are baffling my doctors. What specialist should I see?
I have not seen any information on the effect of chemotherapy on Lyme disease. I have avoided use of immunosuppressants if I suspect an unresolved tick=borne infection. I have patients in my practice who need to work with their oncologist to rule out a recurrence while they are being treated for a tick-borne infection.
I have not seen any information on the effect of chemotherapy on Lyme disease. I have avoided use of immunosuppressants if I suspect an unresolved tick=borne infection. I have patients in my practice who need to work with their oncologist to rule out a recurrence while they are being treated for a tick-borne infection.
Can chemotherapy cure Lyme disease? My test for the disease showed 6 out of 10 . I had
HER2 cancer and breast cancer at the same time. Did radiation also. Am now cancer free.
My hips and legs are losing strength and are baffling my doctors. What specialist should I see?
This June 3, 2025 I had a blood draw testing for Lyme Disease. A few days past and the Lyme Disease Test indicated a positive result. I have began my first round of oral antibiotics and also oral prednisone 40mgs. Per day. I have 3 days of tablets of my Antibiotic and have a decreased dose of 20mg. of prednisone. Three weeks later, I am struggling to find any additional treatment or car from an Infection Disease Team Specializing in Lyme Disease in my demographic area of Omaha, NE. Please help!! I am sooo so very sick, feeling lost, hopeless, … Lisa Popken 4022894819
I hope you come up with a treatment plan.