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Last Updated:
01/15/09 12:13:20 PM
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Additional Health Information -
Lyme Disease |
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The Facts, The Challenge |
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Introduction |
In the early 1970s, 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 brochure presents the most recently available
information on the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of
Lyme disease.
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How Lyme Disease Became Known |
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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, CT and two neighboring towns.
The investigators discovered that most of the affected
children lived near wooded areas likely 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 their
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 Borrefia burgdorferl) were
responsible for the outbreak of arthritis in Lyme, CT.
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Ticks that Most Commonly Transmit B.
Burgdorferi in the US
(These ticks are all quite similar in appearance.)
Ixodes dammini
most common in the northeast and midwest
Ixodes scapularis
found in south and southeast
Ixodes pacificus
found on west coast
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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
1900s, 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.
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Symptoms of Lyme Disease |
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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 antibiotics
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, with the knee most commonly
affected. About 10 to 20 percent of untreated 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 is likely to appear without other Lyme disease
symptoms being present.
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How Lyme Disease Is Diagnosed |
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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. burgdorferl 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 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.
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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.
NIH scientists are developing tests
that use the highly sensitive genetic engineering technique,
known as polymerase chain reaction (PCR), to detect
extremely small quantities of the genetic material of the
Lyme disease bacterium in body tissues and fluids.
Several new methods to detect
infection are under development in NIH laboratories.
Scientists have isolated a protein of B. burgdorferi, called
p39, that reacts strongly on blood tests. The presence of
antibodies to this protein was found to be a strong
indicator of the presence of B. burgdorferi.
Although further research will be
needed to determine how soon after infection it can detect
the bacterium, p39 may prove to be an ideal test for Lyme
disease.
A somewhat different approach is
the use of an assay based on two closely related spirochetal
proteins that are not found in other species of bacterial
spirochetes. This assay differs from blood tests now in use
because it detects products of the spirochete itself rather
than detecting human antibodies to the bacterium.
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Most Common Symptoms of Lyme Disease
One or more may be present at different times during
infection |
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:
- Neurologic conditions such
as encephalitis or confusion
- Skin disorders
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How Lyme Disease Is Treated |
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Nearly all Lyme disease patients can be
effectively treated with an appropriate course of antibiotic
therapy. In general, the sooner such therapy is begun
following infection, the quicker and more complete the
recovery. Antibiotics, such
as doxycycline or amoxicillin taken orally for a few weeks,
can speed the healing of the erythema migrans rash and
usually prevent subsequent symptoms such as arthritis or
neurological problems.
Patients younger than 9 years of
age or pregnant or lactating women with Lyme disease are
treated with amoxicillin or penicillin because doxycycline
can stain the permanent teeth developing in young children
or unborn babies. Patients allergic to penicillin are given
erythromycin.
Lyme disease patients with
neurological symptoms are usually treated with the
antibiotic ceftriaxone given intravenously once a day for a
month or less. Most patients experience full recovery.
Lyme arthritis may be treated with
oral antibiotics. Patients with severe arthritis may be
treated with ceftriaxone or penicillin given intravenously.
To ease these patients' discomfort and further their
healing, the physician might also give anti-inflammatory
drugs, draw fluid from affected joints, or surgically remove
the inflamed lining of the joints.
Lyme arthritis resolves in most
patients within a few weeks or months following antibiotic
therapy, although it can take years to disappear completely
in some people. Some Lyme disease patients who are untreated
for several years may be cured of their arthritis with the
proper antibiotic regimen. If the disease has persisted long
enough, however, it may irreversibly damage the structure of
the joints.
Physicians prefer to treat Lyme
disease patients experiencing heart symptoms with
antibiotics such as ceftriaxone or penicillin given
intravenously for about 2 weeks. If these symptoms persist
or are severe enough, patients may also be treated with
corticosteroids or given a temporary internal cardiac
pacemaker. People with Lyme disease rarely experience
long-term heart damage.
Following treatment for Lyme
disease, some people still have persistent fatigue and
achiness. This general malaise can take months to subside,
although it generally does so spontaneously without
requiring additional antibiotic therapy.
Researchers are currently
conducting studies to assess the optimal duration of
antibiotic therapy for the various manifestations of Lyme
disease. Investigators are also testing newly developed
antibiotics for their effectiveness in countering the Lyme
disease bacterium.
Unfortunately, a bout with Lyme
disease is no guarantee that the illness will be prevented
in the future. The disease can strike more than once in the
same individual if he or she is reinfected with the Lyme
disease bacterium.
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Lyme Disease Prevention |
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Avoidance of Ticks. At present,
the best way to avoid Lyme disease is to avoid deer ticks.
Although generally only about one percent of all deer ticks
are infected with the Lyme disease bacterium, in some areas
more than half of them harbor the microbe.
Most people with Lyme disease become
infected during the summer, when immature ticks are most
prevalent. Except in warm climates, few people are bitten by
deer ticks during winter months.
Deer ticks are most often found in
wooded areas and nearby grasslands, and are especially
common where the two areas merge. Because the adult ticks
feed on deer, areas where deer are frequently seen are
likely to harbor sizable numbers of deer ticks.
To help prevent tick bites, people
entering tick-infested areas should walk in the center of
tracks to avoid picking up ticks from grass and brush
hanging over the trail.
To minimize skin exposure to both
ticks and insect repellents, people outdoors in
tick-infested areas should wear long pants and long-sleeved
shirts that fit tightly at the ankles and wrists. As a
further safeguard, people should wear a hat, tuck pant legs
into socks, and wear shoes that leave no part of the feet
exposed. To make it easy to detect ticks, people should wear
light-colored clothing.
To repel ticks, people can spray
their clothing with the insecticide permethrin, which is
commonly found in lawn and garden stores. Insect repellents
that contain a chemical called DEET (N,N-diethyl-Mtoluamide)
can also be applied to clothing or directly onto skin.
Although highly effective, these repellents can cause some
serious side effects, particularly when high concentrations
are used repeatedly on the skin. Infants and children may be
especially at risk for adverse reactions to DEET.
Pregnant women should be especially
careful to avoid ticks in Lyme disease areas because the
infection can be transferred to the unborn child. Such a
prenatal infection can make the woman more likely to
miscarry or deliver a stillborn baby.
Checking for Ticks. Once
indoors, people should check themselves and their children
for ticks, particularly in the hairy regions of the body.
The immature deer ticks that are most likely to cause Lyme
disease are only about the size of a poppy seed, so they are
easily mistaken for a freckle or a speck of dirt. All
clothing should be washed. Pets should be checked for ticks
before entering the house, because they, too, can develop
symptoms of Lyme disease. In addition, a pet can carry ticks
into the house. These ticks could fall off without biting
the animal and subsequently attach to and bite people inside
the house
.f a tick is discovered attached to
the skin, it should be pulled out gently with tweezers,
taking care not to squeeze the tick's body. An antiseptic
should then be applied to the bite. Studies by NIH-supported
researchers suggest that a tick must be attached for many
hours to transmit the Lyme disease bacterium, so prompt tick
removal could prevent the disease.
The risk of developing Lyme disease
from a tick bite is small, even in heavily infested areas,
and most physicians prefer not to treat patients bitten by
ticks with antibiotics unless they develop symptoms of Lyme
disease.
Vaccine Development. Because
Lyme disease is difficult to diagnose and sometimes does not
respond to treatment, researchers are trying to create a
vaccine that will protect people from the disorder. Vaccines
work in part by prompting the body to generate antibodies.
These custom-shaped molecules lock onto specific proteins
made by a virus or bacterium-often those proteins lodge in
the microbe's outer coat. Once antibodies attach to an
invading microbe, other immune defenses are evoked to
destroy it.
Development of an effective vaccine
for Lyme disease has been difficult to create for a number
of reasons. Scientists need to find out how the immune
system protects against the bacterium because people who
have been infected once can acquire the infection again. In
addition, there are several different strains of the
bacterium, each with its own distinct set of proteins, and
bacteria within an individual strain may change the shape of
their proteins over time so that antibodies can no longer
identify and lock onto them.
Tick Eradication. In the
meantime, researchers are trying to develop an effective
strategy for ridding areas of deer ticks. Studies show that
a single fall spraying of pesticide in wooded areas can
substantially reduce the number of adult deer ticks residing
there for as long as a year. Spraying on a large scale,
however, may not be economically feasible and may prompt
environmental or health concerns.
Scientists are also pursuing
biological control of deer ticks by introducing tiny
stingerless wasps, which feed on immature ticks, into
tick-infested areas. Researchers are currently assessing the
effectiveness of this technique.
Successful control of deer ticks
will probably depend on a combination of tactics. More
studies are needed before wide-scale tick control strategies
can be implemented.
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Tips for Personal Protection
- Avoid tick-infested areas,
especially in May, June, and July.
- Wear light-colored clothing so
that ticks can be easily spotted.
- Wear long-sleeved shirts and
closed shoes and socks.
- Tuck pant legs into socks or boots
and tuck shirt into pants.
- Apply insect repellent containing
permenthrin to pants, socks, and shoes, and compounds
containing DEET on exposed skin. Do not overuse these
products.
- Walk in the center of trails to
avoid overgrown grass and brush.
- After being outdoors in a
tick-infested area, remove, wash, and dry clothing.
- Inspect the body thoroughly and
remove carefully any attached ticks.
- Check pets for ticks.
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Local health departments and park or
agricultural extension services may have information on the
seasonal and geographic distribution of ticks in your area.
How to Remove a Tick
- Tug gently but firmly with
blunt tweezers near the "head" of the tick until it
releases its hold on the skin.
- To lessen the chance of
contact with the bacterium, try not to crush the tick's
body or handle the tick with bare fingers.
- Swab the bite area thoroughly
with an antiseptic to prevent bacterial infection.
Research-The Key to Progress
Although Lyme disease poses many
challenges, they are challenges the medical research
community is well equipped to meet. New information on Lyme
disease is accumulating at a rapid pace, thanks to the
scientific research being conducted around the world.
This brochure is not copyrighted and users are encouraged to
reproduce and distribute as many free copies as needed.
Single copies and black-and-white reproducible artwork are
available by writing to: Lyme Disease Booklet, NIAMS/NIH,
Box AMS, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
For
more information about Lyme disease you may want to contact
your State or local Department of Health, check the
government listings in your phone book. This agency maybe
able to tell you whether Lyme disease is common in your
area. Also, staff of the Department may suggest nearby
hospitals or clinics where you can be tested for Lyme
disease. They may also know local places where ticks can be
tested for the bacterium.
Prepared by: Office of Communications, National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Office of Scientific and
Health Communications, National Institute of Arthritis and
Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. |
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