https://danielcameronmd.com/tmj-arthritis-triggered-by-lyme-disease/
TMJ ARTHRITIS TRIGGERED BY LYME DISEASE

A case report by Weise and colleagues demonstrates that Lyme disease can induce temporomandibular joint (TMJ) pain and may be misdiagnosed as a common temporomandibular disorder (TMD).
In the article, “Acute arthritis of the right temporomandibular joint due to Lyme disease: a case report and literature review,” the authors describe a 25-year-old patient who presented to a medical center with acute pain in the right temporomandibular joint and mouth opening disorders.¹
Over a 5-year period, the woman’s distal bite was treated with removable and fixed orthodontic appliances. Three months after the first symptoms, “the patient developed increasing pain in the right TMJ, increasing active mouth opening restriction to 20 mm and a habitual deviation of the lower jaw to the left.”
The patient was initially diagnosed with a total ventral deviation of the discus on the right side without reduction. Treatment with anti-inflammatory medications, a bite splint and a corticosteroid injection, however, were not effective and the woman’s symptoms continued.
Although the patient did not recall a tick bite or EM rash, testing for Lyme disease was positive and she was diagnosed with Lyme arthritis affecting the right temporomandibular joint.
“Early interdisciplinary diagnosis of Lyme disease and early antibiotic therapy are essential to avoid misdiagnosis and unnecessary, sometimes invasive, therapies.”
The patient was prescribed a 3-week course of Cefuroxime. After one week of antibiotic treatment, her symptoms improved.
“It can be assumed that there must have been an infection with Borrelia in the right temporomandibular joint for a longer period of time before the symptoms occurred.”
Lyme disease presenting with TMJ “very often is misinterpreted as a temporomandibular disorder,” the authors state.
“In the case of unclear TMJ problems and when the TMD treatment is not successful,” the authors stress, “the possibility of a [Lyme disease] infection should definitely be considered as a differential diagnosis.”
References:
- Weise, C., Schulz, M.C., Frank, K. et al. Acute arthritis of the right temporomandibular joint due to Lyme disease: a case report and literature review. BMC Oral Health 21, 400 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-021-01744-4
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**Comment**
Been there, done that.
Sadly, what isn’t mentioned is the fact most people don’t test positive – sometimes ever.
What happens to these sorry-sacks? Well, they simply go on to suffer and are gaslit by mainstream medicine who will then tell them it’s all in their head.
One other little factoid is that this person could very well relapse in the future. What happens then? Well, it’s quite simple. If she stays in the mainstream medical paradigm, and doesn’t get to an independent doctor, she will simply suffer because this paradigm doesn’t recognize chronic/persistent Lyme/MSIDS.