Lyme disease myths lead to frustrations for doctors

In the Canadian Medical Association Journal, author Wendy Glauser describes frustration felt by doctors in Canada regarding Lyme disease. “People have heard these horrible stories about how Lyme is so awful and you suffer for years and years and nobody knows what’s wrong with you,” says Dr. Michelle Cohen in an interview with Glauser.

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Top 10 Lyme disease blogs for 2019!

The top blogs for 2019 on Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses covered a range of topics. The impact of Lyme disease on cardiac functioning, neurologic changes, and autonomic dysfunction, along with case reports highlighting the unusual presentations of Lyme disease were of most interest to readers. 

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Killing ticks through controlled burns

Can we kill ticks through controlled burns? In the journal Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases, researchers describe findings from a study in which they surveyed questing and on-host ticks in forests with various fire management regimes in an area near Houston, Texas. They looked at two transects with a history of controlled burns and two with no burns.

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Patients can die when Lyme carditis is not treated

Lyme carditis can cause a broad range of symptoms. Patients may initially appear to have only a flu-like illness, however the severity of symptoms can change rapidly. In the article “Fatal Lyme carditis in New England: Two case reports,” Marx and colleagues highlight the importance of early recognition and treatment, even empirically, as Lyme carditis can be deadly when left untreated.

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Bannwarth syndrome and weight loss – an atypical case

Bannwarth syndrome is a neurological disease caused by an infection with Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterial agent of Lyme disease. The disease causes intense nerve pain and is characterized by “painful radiculopathy, neuropathy, varying degrees of motor weakness, lower motor neuron (LMN) facial nerve palsy and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) lymphocytic pleocytosis,” writes Diaz et al. in the journal Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery.

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Treatment guidelines for Lyme disease strike out. An editorial.

In 2000, the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) published the first set of guidelines for the treatment of Lyme disease. The guidelines were criticized for not recognizing the existence and severity of chronic Lyme disease. The second set of guidelines, released by IDSA in 2006, again failed to recognize chronic Lyme disease. [1] Now, it would appear that the next set of soon-to-be-released guidelines are in danger of striking out again and not recognizing the existence and severity of chronic Lyme disease.

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Study identifies189 children with Lyme carditis

In reviewing medical records from a Pediatric Health Information System (PHIS) database between 2007 and 2013, clinicians identified 189 children diagnosed with Lyme carditis. “The burden of Lyme disease and Lyme carditis in U.S. children’s hospitals has increased in recent years,” writes Beach and colleagues in Pediatric Cardiology.

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Brain MRI in Lyme disease

Infectious pathogens, including viral, bacterial and parasitic, can impact the central nervous system (CNS), resulting in neurologic disease. “The infections caused by these pathogens often show a variety of neuroimaging patterns that can be identified [on a] CT scan and MRI,” explains Alves Simão and colleagues. ¹ Radiology, they argue, is central to the diagnosis and follow-up of these conditions. Therefore, “radiologists should be familiar with these infections.”

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C6 peptide test may indicate Borrelia miyamotoi infection

The C6 enzyme immunoassay (EIA) is often used to diagnose Lyme disease. The test is based on the C6 peptide of the Borrelia burgdorferi sl VlsE protein. But a recent study suggests the C6 peptide test may also indicate an infection with Borrelia miyamotoi, another tick-borne disease.

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Treatment of Lyme arthritis with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD)

Editorial: I am concerned with the subgroup of Lyme arthritis (LA) patients described by Dr. Steere, who “developed a marked inflammatory, proliferative synovitis lasting months to several years after antibiotic treatment.”

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