Archive for the ‘Lyme’ Category

What We Know & Don’t Know About Lyme Disease

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2021.819541

MINI REVIEW article

Front. Public Health, 21 January 2022 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2021.819541

What We Know and Don’t Know About Lyme Disease

Consultant, Infectious Diseases, Falmouth Hospital, Falmouth, MA, United States

We know the cause of Lyme disease. We know that the bacteria can be found in the initial rash, and occasionally in the blood in the subsequent 2–3 months, but after then, its subsequent location is unknown. Whereas diagnosis and treatment of early Lyme disease is generally straightforward, the etiology of relapsing or persisting symptoms is yet to be defined, and presents clinical challenges. There are no current tests to determine if the infection is still present or absent, thus complicating diagnosis and treatment. Presented here are approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of persisting Lyme disease, based on available published information, and the experience of the author.

Introduction

It has been more than 40 years since the discovery of the causative agent of Lyme disease. Much has been learned, but several key questions remain:

  1. how do we know if the infection has been eradicated
  2. can it become dormant
  3. can it reactivate in patients with persistent symptoms, are these due to continuing infection or to non-infectious sequelae, and 4-are there treatments that can resolve the infection

Pathogenesis

We know that Lyme disease is caused by the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi, transmitted by the bite of an Ixodes tick. We know that the bacteria may be isolated from the typical erythema migrans rash, and can be occasionally recovered from the circulating blood in the subsequent 2–3 months (1). After that time, it has not been possible to consistently isolate the bacteria from any body fluids or tissues.

So, where are they? Under the skin, as demonstrated in studies with macaque primates (2), and similarly in preliminary studies in humans (3)? Intracellularly, as is the case of most, if not all pathogens that can become latent, then recur? Or both? Hence, the central question at the heart of the controversy surrounding the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease; i.e., whether persisting or relapsing symptoms are due to continuing infection or due to post-infectious phenomena.

Accumulating evidence regarding the persistence of biologically active, albeit non-replicating bacteria derives from several studies in various animal models. Hodzic et al. demonstrated that B. burgdorferi can persist in mice following antibiotic treatment but were non-cultivatable (4). Casselli et al. demonstrated that B. burgdorferi can colonize the dura mater in mice, are biologically active, and induce host gene inflammatory responses (5). Embers et al. demonstrated post-antibiotic treatment persistence in a non-human primate naturally tick infected model (6) and recovery of the spirochete by xenodiagnosis (2). Similarly, there was recovery of non-cultivatable B. burgdorferi by xenodiagnosis in a few human patients who had had an erythema migrans rash and had had prior antibiotic treatment (3). These results, plus observations by us and others that retreatment of patients with recurring or persisting symptoms following initial antibiotic treatment using specific antibiotic regimens (7), lend strong support to the hypothesis that it is persistent infection by B. burgdorferi that is the likely cause of persisting symptomatology. In contrast, attribution of post-infectious symptoms to some post-infectious phenomena has only been speculative without any supporting evidence.

Diagnostic Issues

Currently, in the absence of any currently available means to directly detect the bacteria or its products, the diagnosis is dependent on the clinical history and any associated manifestations, along with the results of serologic studies. A major clinical problem is, that with the exception of patients with Lyme arthritis, most patients with continuing symptoms have no objective signs for Lyme disease, making the diagnosis dependent on the clinical picture that overlaps with that of chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia. Making it more difficult is the fact that many such patients do not have robust serologic responses to the causative organisms (8). And, despite claims that once one is treated with 4 weeks of antibiotics, one no longer has Lyme disease, or, if Lyme test results revert to negative, it means one no longer has Lyme disease, these claims being unsupportable in the absence of any means to prove the bacteria’s absence (9).

It also appears illogical, when patients have persisting or relapsing symptoms identical to those at the initial presentation, to opine that the infection is no longer present and that the remaining symptoms are post-Lyme disease of yet to be defined cause. It would seem more logical to assume that the infection has not been eradicated. It may be that ongoing symptoms are due to post-infectious factors, e.g., autoimmunity without provocation from persistent infection, but that has yet to be demonstrated as an obvious cause of the ongoing clinical picture. It seems much more likely that the cause of symptoms are due to some bacterial product, be it an exotoxin or endotoxin, similar to that that is at the root of most, if not all other bacterial infections, accompanied with host-responses to that virulence product or products, including inflammatory and autoimmune responses (10).

Serologic Issues

A similar lack of logic is present in analyzing the results of Lyme Western blot reactions, specifically IgM responses. How logical is it to use positive IgM responses to support the diagnosis of early Lyme disease, but deem that those same responses in patients with ongoing or relapsing symptoms are false-positive responses? Is it not more logical to assume that continued IgM reactivity, in the presence of ongoing symptoms, might be an indicator of unresolved infection in the absence of any available test to determine the continuing presence or absence of the causative organisms? In support of that conjecture, the results of several studies in various animal models, indicate that the causative borrelia are able to modulate humoral antibody responses such that the normal conversion of IgM to IgG antibody responses is abrogated (11).

Treatment Issues

As if confirming the diagnosis isn’t sufficiently difficult, the treatment of relapsing or persisting symptoms has presented its own challenges. There are many antibiotics that are active in vitro against the Lyme bacteria, but have not been clinically very effective. In early Lyme disease, treatment with doxycycline, amoxicillin, or cefuroxime over a period of a few weeks is generally effective. It is in patients with relapsing or persisting symptoms, including those previously treated, inadequately treated, or untreated, that the question arises as to whether any further antibiotic treatment is effective. The answer appears to be yes, if one looks at the pharmacology of specific antibiotics.

Doxycycline appears to have limited efficacy in patients with persisting or relapsing symptoms, especially in patients with symptoms present for greater than a few months. Doxycycline is highly protein-bound in the circulation, and it is unlikely that sufficient antibiotic can diffuse into tissues and cells to affect the borrelia. In contrast, tetracycline, which is not highly protein bound, appears to be clinically effective (10). Our observational results in several thousands of patients since our initial publication attests to both the greater efficacy of tetracycline vs. doxycycline in terms of both dosing and duration of treatment (12).

Beta-lactam antibiotics, including intravenous ceftriaxone, appear to be of limited clinical efficacy, perhaps because (a) that class of antibiotic has its effects on multiplying organisms, and there is no evidence that the Lyme borrelia are multiplying in persistent or relapsing disease, and (b) they are incapable of intracellular penetration. These antibiotics may offer temporary symptom relief, which might be due to their effects on glutamate accumulation during neurotransmission (13), without resolving the underlying infection.

Of particular interest are the effects of macrolide antibiotics (e.g., erythromycin, clarithromycin, azithromycin) on Lyme disease. They are highly active in vitro, and are capable of intracellular penetration, but appear to be of limited clinical value in patients with persistent symptoms. In analyzing the possible reasons, if the borrelia reside intracellularly in an acidic endosome, as is the case for numerous other microbes capable of intracellular persistence, macrolide antibiotics are not very active at an acidic pH. The use of a lysosomotropic agent (e.g., hydroxychloroquine, amantadine) to alkalinize the acidic endosome appears to result in clinical efficacy (14).

There have been two clinical trials using differing antibiotic regimens over a 3 month period of time in patients with persisting symptoms of Lyme disease. In the first trial, patients were given a month of ceftriaxone followed by 2 months of doxycycline vs. placebo treatment, and positive PCR reactivity to Borrelia burgdorferi was an exclusionary criterim for this study (15). In the other trial, patients with persisting symptoms were given an initial week of IV ceftriaxone, then randomized to being given the combination of clarithromycin and hydroxychloroquine vs. placebo for 3 months (16). In neither trial was there any reported greater improvement between the antibiotic treatment arms and placebo arms. The results of these studies have been reviewed with several reservations being expressed about study design, the instruments used to measure changes in symptoms, and interpretation of the results (17). In the former trial, neither ceftriaxone nor doxycycline were given for 3 months, and the assumption that both antibiotics are of equal efficacy is not supportable according to differing mechanisms of action. In the case of ceftriaxone, its antibiotic activity is based on its interference with replicating organisms, and given that there is no evidence to indicate that, once B. burgdorferi has established itself, there is any multiplication of note, it would not be expected to be effective in patients with persistent symptoms. And in the author’s observational experience, even the use of ceftriaxone over periods of time up to 6 months or more was without much if any benefit, with any possible benefit in a few patients due to ceftriaxone’s interference with the glutamate receptor system. In the case of doxycycline, whether a longer duration of treatment or increased dosing would have been effective remains unanswered. Observations by numerous clinicians suggest that higher doses of doxycycline, i.e., 300–400 mg/day might be more effective than the commonly used dosing of 200 mg/day.

In the trial utilizing the combination of clarithromycin and hydroxychloroquine, based on our initial published report, the trial was contaminated by the use of ceftriaxone in all patients prior to randomization to the active or placebo groups. Of greater importance is the failure to consider both the duration of prior symptomatology and the duration of treatment itself. As indicated in our published observations (12, 14), patients with persistent or relapsing symptoms for less than a year appeared to be cured, ie no recurring symptoms for greater than a year, by a treatment course of 3–6 months. In patients with persisting symptoms for >2 or more years, however, treatment success required a treatment duration of 6 or more months, and up to 18 months in patients with persisting symptoms for >5 or more years. Another likely flaw in that trial was not controlling for the use of adjunctive vitamin C. Supplemental vitamin C can be a strong acidifying agent, counteracting the effects of hydroxychloroquine (7, 14), and thus possibly accounting for some of the trial’s failure to show any benefit of this treatment.

Future Directions

The key remaining questions are whether there can be found a better, more direct detection test to indicate the presence or absence of active B. burgdorferi, and whether additional controlled treatment trials using longer durations of treatment with the tetracycline or clarithromycin/hydroxychloroquine regimen, or regimens utilizing different antibiotics or combination of certain antibiotics that might prove effective. The results of recent in vitro and early animal model experiments by Zhang (18) and by Lewis (19) might hold promise of other potentially effective approaches to the management of patients with persistent symptoms of Lyme disease.

Of additional likely importance is the potential role of antibiotic tolerance as a mechanism of persistence and “resistance” of B.burgdoferi to treatment in patients with persisting symptoms. Recent results of experiments with other bacterial organisms that can persist demonstrate the likely role of antibiotic-tolerance as the mechanism by which they persist (20). This mechanism apparently relies on a ribonuclease produced by the organisms. If our preliminary results with BB0755, an annotated ribonuclease, that demonstrated cytotoxic activity with tissue-cultured cells of neural origin (21), is due to its ribonuclease activity, then this possibility might offer an explanation to B.burgdorferi’s antibiotic tolerance.

There are additional questions that a better understanding of the pathophysiology of Lyme disease might lead to better approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease, especially in its persistent form. These include the possible role of antibiotic-tolerant persisters.

Author Contributions

The author confirms being the sole contributor of this work and has approved it for publication.

Conflict of Interest

The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher’s Note

All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.

References

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Keywords: Lyme disease, Lyme diagnosis, Lyme pathogenesis, Lyme treatment, Lyme serology

Citation: Donta ST (2022) What We Know and Don’t Know About Lyme Disease. Front. Public Health 9:819541. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.819541

Received: 21 November 2021; Accepted: 20 December 2021;
Published: 21 January 2022.

Edited by:  Christian Perronne, Assistance Publique Hopitaux De Paris, France

Reviewed by:  Robert Carroll Bransfield, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, United States

Copyright © 2022 Donta. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

Neuropathogenicity of Non-Viable Borrelia burgdorferi Ex Vivo

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-03837

Neuropathogenicity of non-viable Borrelia burgdorferi ex vivo

Geetha ParthasarathyShiva Kumar Goud Gadila

Abstract

Even after appropriate treatment, a proportion of Lyme disease patients suffer from a constellation of symptoms, collectively called Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (PTLDS). Brain PET scan of patients with PTLDS have demonstrated likely glial activation indicating persistent neuroinflammatory processes.

It is possible that unresolved bacterial remnants can continue to cause neuroinflammation.

In previous studies, we have shown that non-viable Borrelia burgdorferi can induce neuroinflammation and apoptosis in an oligodendrocyte cell line.

In this follow-up study, we analyze the effect of sonicated remnants of B. burgdorferi on primary rhesus frontal cortex (FC) and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) explants. Five FC and three DRG tissue fragments from rhesus macaques were exposed to sonicated B. burgdorferi and analyzed for 26 inflammatory mediators. Live bacteria and medium alone served as positive and negative control, respectively. Tissues were also analyzed for cell types mediating inflammation and overall apoptotic changes.

Non-viable B. burgdorferi induced significant levels of several inflammatory mediators in both FC and DRG, similar to live bacteria. However, the levels induced by non-viable B. burgdorferi was often (several fold) higher than those induced by live ones, especially for IL-6, CXCL8 and CCL2. This effect was also more profound in the FC than in the DRG. Although the levels often differed, both live and dead fragments induced the same mediators, with significant overlap between FC and DRG. In the FC, immunohistochemical staining for several inflammatory mediators showed the presence of multiple mediators in astrocytes, followed by microglia and oligodendrocytes, in response to bacterial remnants. Staining was also seen in endothelial cells. In the DRG, chemokine/cytokine staining was predominantly seen in S100 positive (glial) cells. B. burgdorferi remnants also induced significant levels of apoptosis in both the FC and DRG. Apoptosis was confined to S100 + cells in the DRG while distinct neuronal apoptosis was also detected in most FC tissues in response to sonicated bacteria.

Non-viable B. burgdorferi can continue to be neuropathogenic to both CNS and PNS tissues with effects likely more profound in the former. Persistence of remnant-induced neuroinflammatory processes can lead to long term health consequences.

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**Comment**

An important work for sure which shows even non-viable pathogen remnants cause health problems in patients.  The fact remains; however, that unresolved infections CAN ALSO cause major health problems in patients, yet is not politically correct and therefore researched by those espousing with the current accepted narrative.

Bannwarth Syndrome in Early Disseminated Lyme Disease

https://danielcameronmd.com/bannwarth-syndrome-lyme-disease/  Video Here

Bannwarth syndrome in early disseminated Lyme disease

Man with Bannwarth syndrome and lyme disease huntched over and holding his lower back.

Welcome to another Inside Lyme Podcast with your host Dr. Daniel Cameron. In this episode, Dr. Cameron will be discussing the case of a 66-year-old man with Bannwarth syndrome with urinary retention in early Lyme disease.

Omotosho and colleagues described this case in an article entitled “A Unique Case of Bannwarth Syndrome in Early Disseminated Lyme Disease.”¹

The man presented to the emergency room with generalized myalgia, fatigue, and severe neck pain. The symptoms had been occurring for two weeks and began shortly after he was bitten by two ticks while performing yard work.

The patient reported having dull mid-back pain, intermittent headaches, and neck stiffness. His doctor initially suspected he had pneumonia and prescribed an antibiotic. But his symptoms worsened.

“His pain then radiated down his entire spine into his upper and lower extremities, leading to right arm weakness and new urine retention onset,” the authors wrote.

“His paraspinal tenderness and diminished deep tendon reflexes bilaterally.” His pain score was 8 out of 10. The ESR rate was 100 and C-reactive protein of 8.8 mg/L.

“Physicians need to be aware of the rare neurological manifestations of [Lyme neuroborreliosis] … Prompt diagnosis and treatment with antibiotics can reduce unnecessary imaging, patient anxiety, and, most importantly, avert debilitating complications.”

Test results indicated a white blood cell count of 12 k/uL, C-reactive protein of 8.8 mg/L, sedimentation rate of 100 mm/h, and creatinine kinase of 27 units/L.

Western blot and ELISA Lyme disease tests were positive and confirmed an early stage infection with Borrelia burgdorferi. In addition, a spinal tap showed lymphocytic pleocytosis and a positive Lyme disease titer.

The man was diagnosed with Bannwarth syndrome (BWS) based on his severe radiculopathy, upper extremity weakness, and urinary dysfunction. “All of these findings are pathognomonic for [Bannwarth syndrome],” wrote the authors.

Typically, Bannwarth syndrome affects a person’s limbs. In this case, Lyme disease induced sacral radiculitis leading to neurogenic urinary dysfunction.

The authors were not sure why the patient’s urinary tract was affected. They suggested, “the influence of the radiculitis on innervating fibers” and “direct invasion of the spirochetes into the bladder wall” might have played a role.

“Early recognition of this rare presentation associated with Lyme disease and treatment with antibiotics can prevent disease progression and detrimental neurological sequelae.”

The man was treated with a 21-day course of IV ceftriaxone and “his symptoms improved with complete resolution of his urinary retention,” the authors wrote.

About Bannwarth syndrome

Bannwarth syndrome has been reported most often in Europe. And despite disputes over its incidence in the United States, “the condition does occur but is often misdiagnosed.”

BWS is characterized by a wide range of symptoms including:

  • radicular pain (100%)
  • sleep disturbances (75.3%)
  • headache (46.8%)
  • fatigue (44.2%)
  • malaise (39%)
  • paresthesia (32.5%)
  • peripheral nerve palsy (36.4%)
  • meningeal signs (19.5%)
  • paresis (7.8%)

The syndrome can cause severe pain. “BWS typically manifests itself with severe zoster-like segmental pain that is worse at night,” the authors wrote. “The pain has a burning, stabbing, biting, or tearing character and usually responds poorly to all common analgesics.”

Author’s Conclusion:

“The constellation of neurological symptoms, particularly when associated with a recent or suspected tick bite in an endemic region, should prompt thorough evaluation for [Lyme neuroborreliosis] and assessment for BWS,” the authors wrote.

The following questions are addressed in this Podcast episode:

  1. What is Bannwarth syndrome?
  2. How is BWS diagnosed and treated?
  3. What is radicular pain?
  4. What is the significance of the spinal tap findings?
  5. What is the significance of an elevated sedimentation rate and c-reactive protein?
  6. Why is BWS rarely diagnosed in the USA?
  7. What can we learn from this case?

Thanks for listening to another Inside Lyme Podcast. Please remember that the advice given is general and not intended as specific advice to any particular patient. If you require specific advice, please seek that advice from an experienced professional.

Inside Lyme Podcast Series

This Inside Lyme case series will be discussed on my Facebook page and made available on podcast and YouTube.  As always, it is your likes, comments, and shares that help spread the word about this series and our work. If you can, please leave a review on iTunes or wherever else you get your podcasts.

Brain Surgery Helped Thomas ‘Appreciate’ How ‘Lucky’ They Are

https://www.usmagazine.com/celebrity-news/news/rob-thomas-how-my-wife-marisols-brain-surgery-changed-me    5 Min Video Here

Two decades of experience. Rob Thomas has been married to Marisol Maldonado for over 21 years — and after she was diagnosed with several diseases following brain surgery, he realized how thankful he is for their life together.

The Matchbox Twenty singer, 49, exclusively told Us Weekly that he doesn’t have a big secret to a long-lasting marriage. He just really loves Maldonado, 51.

“We’re friends. Above everything else, she’s my best friend,” Thomas told Us. “She’s the one that I like to spend the most time with. If something’s happening and she doesn’t know about it, it doesn’t feel like it’s happening.” (See link for article and video)

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**Comment**

For those of you who are unaware, Marisol suffers with Lyme/MSIDS.

Excerpt:

Marisol’s late-stage diagnosis and presence of multiple infections means it’s harder to manage. Her treatment is constantly tweaked according to which infection is flaring up most, and involves a mixture of pharmaceutical meds and holistic therapies, some of which are not easily obtainable due to being commercially unviable.

STARI & Lyme Disease

https://danielcameronmd.com/southern-tick-associated-rash-illness-stari-and-lyme-disease/

Southern Tick-Associated Rash Illness (STARI) and Lyme disease

Welcome to another Inside Lyme Podcast with your host Dr. Daniel Cameron. In this episode, Dr. Cameron will be discussing the case of a 63-year-old woman who was diagnosed with Southern Tick-Associated Rash Illness (STARI).

In their article “Southern Tick-Associated Rash Illness: Florida’s Lyme Disease” Abdelmaseih and colleagues describe the woman’s case, highlighting the differences between STARI and Lyme disease.¹

WATCH PODCAST BELOW

http://

The patient was bitten by a lone-star tick on her right leg while camping in Gainesville, Florida. She noticed a pruritic target erythematous lesion after removing the tick.

Two weeks later she was evaluated and reported having a persistent fever, headache, and diffuse myalgias for 4 days following the tick bite. On presentation, she had a fever of 100.5 F and a tachycardia of 127 BPM, low white count, anemia, low platelet count and elevated liver function tests.

Fortunately, the patient’s symptoms resolved with a 14-day course of doxycycline.

The authors discuss the differences and similarities of STARI and Lyme disease:

  • “The associated rash is similar if not indistinguishable from Lyme disease erythema migrans, with lymphocytic dermal infiltrate.”
  • Both the diagnosis of STARI and Lyme disease are based on clinical evidence. “At the present time, there is no approved diagnostic modality to identify STARI; thus, the diagnosis must be made on clinical evidence including erythema migrans and tick exposure.”
  • The diagnosis of STARI and Lyme disease often rely on geography. “Diagnosis usually relies on geographic association (STARI from central Texas and Oklahoma eastward across the southern states and along the Atlantic coast as far north as Maine, versus Lyme disease in northeast, mid-Atlantic, and upper mid-west).”

However, the authors did not address reports documenting the presence of lone-star ticks in the Northeast, mid-Atlantic, and upper Midwest and of deer ticks in the South.

It has been assumed that STARI does not have any long-term sequelae.

“A recent study has suggested that STARI is transmitted by the lone-star tick Amblyoma americanum; however, it may take some time before all the necessary data can be collected, since much is still unknown about STARI.”

The treatment of STARI is also uncertain. “STARI is often treated as Lyme disease with doxycycline twice daily for 14 days; however, there is no approved treatment yet.”

The authors conclude, “STARI is an emerging Lyme-like illness that causes the characteristic rash, erythema migrans. The current incidence of STARI remains unknown as it is not nationally reportable.”

The following questions are addressed in this Podcast episode:

  1. What is STARI?
  2. Are there differences between STARI and Lyme disease rashes?
  3. Are there differences in the ticks?
  4. How is STARI diagnosed, compared to Lyme disease?
  5. What clinical evidence does one need to diagnose STARI?
  6. What are the consequences if Lyme disease or co-infections is overlooked?
  7. What do we know about ticks in the South?

Thanks for listening to another Inside Lyme Podcast. Please remember that the advice given is general and not intended as specific advice to any particular patient. If you require specific advice, please seek that advice from an experienced professional.

Inside Lyme Podcast Series

This Inside Lyme case series will be discussed on my Facebook page and made available on podcast and YouTube.  As always, it is your likes, comments, and shares that help spread the word about this series and our work. If you can, please leave a review on iTunes or wherever else you get your podcasts.

References:
  1. Abdelmaseih R, Ashraf B, Abdelmasih R, Dunn S, Nasser H. Southern Tick-Associated Rash Illness: Florida’s Lyme Disease Variant. Cureus. May 28 2021;13(5):e15306. doi:10.7759/cureus.15306

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**Comment**

When I speak with experts they state STARI IS LYME.  Southerners have fought to be heard.  Patients have been turned away undiagnosed and untreated and are told, “You can’t have Lyme because Lyme doesn’t exist here,” which of course is asinine.  Until the birds quit flying, rodents quit crawling, lizards and humans quit moving, and transporting ticks everywhere they go, ticks will continue to travel.