Lyme Disease Co-Infections: Symptoms, Causes, and Why They Matter
Lyme disease co-infections may complicate diagnosis and treatment
Babesia, Bartonella, Ehrlichia, and Anaplasma may add overlapping symptoms
Persistent or unusual symptoms may require broader evaluation
Ticks carrying Lyme disease may also transmit additional infections known as co-infections. These infections can complicate symptoms, influence recovery, and sometimes make Lyme disease more difficult to diagnose and treat.
Common Lyme disease co-infections include Babesia, Bartonella, Ehrlichia, and Anaplasma. Some patients may carry more than one infection simultaneously after a tick bite.
Co-infections may contribute to broader symptom patterns involving fatigue, fevers, sweats, headaches, muscle pain, neurologic symptoms, gastrointestinal complaints, dizziness, and cognitive difficulties.
Because symptoms often overlap, co-infections may be overlooked when patients continue to experience persistent illness despite treatment directed primarily at Lyme disease.
Babesia is a malaria-like parasitic infection that may lead to fevers, chills, night sweats, air hunger, fatigue, and anemia. Some patients report significant shortness of breath or exercise intolerance.
Bartonella has been associated with neurologic symptoms, burning pain, anxiety, irritability, sleep disturbance, foot pain, and vascular or skin findings in some patients.
Ehrlichia and Anaplasma may cause fever, headaches, muscle aches, low white blood cell counts, elevated liver enzymes, and flu-like illness.
Patients with Lyme disease co-infections may experience more severe symptoms or longer recovery times. In some cases, persistent symptoms may reflect overlapping infections rather than Lyme disease alone.
Careful history-taking, symptom review, laboratory evaluation, and clinical judgment may help identify patients who require broader assessment for tick-borne co-infections.
Clinicians should also consider that co-infections may mimic autoimmune disease, viral syndromes, chronic fatigue states, or neurologic disorders.
Why Lyme Disease Co-Infections Are Difficult to Recognize
Many Lyme disease co-infections produce overlapping symptom patterns that can complicate diagnosis. Patients may report fatigue, headaches, sweats, dizziness, sleep disturbance, cognitive dysfunction, gastrointestinal symptoms, or neurologic complaints that cannot easily be attributed to a single infection.
Some co-infections may also resemble autoimmune disease, viral syndromes, chronic fatigue states, or inflammatory conditions. Symptom patterns may fluctuate over time, particularly when more than one tick-borne illness is present.
Common Lyme Disease Co-Infection Patterns
| Co-infection | Common Symptoms | Potential Clinical Clues |
|---|---|---|
| Babesia | Night sweats, chills, air hunger, fatigue | Shortness of breath, anemia, relapsing fevers |
| Bartonella | Neurologic symptoms, irritability, burning pain | Foot pain, anxiety, vascular or skin findings |
| Ehrlichia | Fever, headaches, muscle aches | Low white blood cell count, elevated liver enzymes |
| Anaplasma | Flu-like illness, fatigue, fever | Abnormal laboratory findings and systemic symptoms |
Testing Limitations in Lyme Disease Co-Infections
Laboratory testing for Lyme disease co-infections may have limitations depending on the stage of illness, timing of testing, prior treatment exposure, and the specific organism involved.
Negative laboratory findings do not always exclude co-infections when clinical symptoms remain highly suggestive. Physicians may need to integrate symptom history, exposure risk, physical findings, and laboratory data when evaluating complex tick-borne illness presentations.
Autonomic and Neurologic Symptoms in Co-Infections
Some patients with Lyme disease co-infections report dizziness, palpitations, lightheadedness, exercise intolerance, temperature dysregulation, sleep disruption, or cognitive dysfunction. These symptoms may overlap with autonomic dysfunction and neurologic Lyme disease presentations.
Persistent neurologic or autonomic symptoms may warrant broader evaluation when recovery does not follow the expected clinical course.
For a broader overview of tick-borne illnesses, visit our Lyme disease co-infections hub.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Lyme disease co-infections?
Lyme disease co-infections are additional infections transmitted during a tick bite alongside Lyme disease. Common examples include Babesia, Bartonella, Ehrlichia, and Anaplasma.
Can co-infections make Lyme disease worse?
Potentially. Co-infections may contribute to broader symptoms, greater illness severity, and longer recovery in some patients.
What symptoms suggest a Lyme co-infection?
Night sweats, air hunger, persistent fevers, neurologic symptoms, severe fatigue, low blood counts, or unusual symptom patterns may raise suspicion for co-infections.
Can Lyme disease treatment fail if co-infections are missed?
Persistent symptoms may sometimes reflect untreated or unrecognized co-infections rather than Lyme disease alone.
Which tick-borne infections commonly overlap with Lyme disease?
Babesia, Bartonella, Ehrlichia, and Anaplasma are among the most commonly discussed Lyme disease co-infections.
Clinical Takeaway
Lyme disease co-infections may complicate both diagnosis and recovery by producing overlapping or additional symptoms that extend beyond classic Lyme presentations. Persistent symptoms following treatment may warrant broader evaluation for associated tick-borne infections.
Recognizing Lyme disease co-infections early may help guide more individualized diagnostic and treatment decisions in patients with complex or persistent illness.
Related Articles
Lyme disease co-infections hub
Babesia and Lyme disease
Bartonella and Lyme disease
Ehrlichiosis symptoms and diagnosis
Anaplasmosis and tick-borne illness
Lyme disease symptoms guide
References
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Tickborne diseases of the United States.
- Sanchez E, Vannier E, Wormser GP, Hu LT. Diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of Lyme disease, human granulocytic anaplasmosis, and babesiosis. JAMA. 2016;315(16):1767-1777.
- Wormser GP, Dattwyler RJ, Shapiro ED, et al. The clinical assessment, treatment, and prevention of Lyme disease, human granulocytic anaplasmosis, and babesiosis. Clin Infect Dis. 2006;43(9):1089-1134.
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