Glinka Health Practice
Lyme
disease
(from
the review by Dr Paul Klenerman
What is Lyme disease?
Lyme
disease is an infection that derives from a tick bite. The disease has a variety of symptoms, including changes affecting the
skin, heart, joints and nervous system. It is also known as borrelia or borreliosis.
What causes Lyme disease?
Lyme disease is caused by an infection from a micro-organism (Borrelia
burghdor feri), itself transmitted by a bite from the wood tick, a blood-sucking parasite which normally lives on deer.
The wood tick is found in many areas,
particularly in forests where deer are common. A tick will settle anywhere on a human body, but prefers warm, moist and dark
places like the crotch or armpits.
When the tick has found a suitable place on
the body, it sticks in its probe to draw up blood, exposing the host to the risk of infection.
What does Lyme disease feel like?
Simply
seeing a tick somewhere on your body does not mean that you have contracted Lyme disease. Unfortunately, not everyone knows
when they have been bitten, so consult your GP if you detect the following symptoms.
A red spot around the location of the tick's bite. The spot will gradually grow
bigger, often with a pale area in the middle. This symptom is called erythema migrans.
Erythema migrans can also appear at other places on the body where the tick has not
bitten. Some people get many red spots.
Usually one to four weeks will pass between the bite and when erythema migrans
appears.
Some
patients with Lyme disease feel like they have caught influenza - the symptoms may be:
·
drowsiness
·
headaches
·
mild fever
·
joint and muscle pains
·
swollen lymph glands.
What complications may occur?
Acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans
This is a condition that often develops in older women. Several years may pass from
the tick bite until the development of this phenomenon. The symptoms usually involve changes in the skin around the tick bite,
such as:
swelling
bluish or reddish discoloration of the skin.
Neuro borrelia
About 15 per cent of people with borrelia develop so-called neuro borrelia, between
one and five weeks after the tick bite. The central nervous system is affected and the symptoms that result are very mixed and
not specific.
The symptoms often begin with back pain, typically between the shoulder blades and
in the neck like a slipped disc. The pain worsens at night.
Distorted feelings around the area of the bite. The nerves become numb, especially
in the face. This may occur at any time up to four weeks after the pain began.
Sometimes neuro borrelia may present itself as meningitis, with fever, headache and
stiffness in the neck.
In rare cases, the disease may become chronic, with a slowly developing destruction
of the nervous system, numbing, partial hearing impairment and the development of dementia.
Neuro borrelia demands immediate treatment, usually with an admission to hospital.
Inflammation
of the joints or Lyme arthritis
This condition may present itself in days or, rarely, years after the bite, but it
is very rare. The inflammation of the joints causes pain and swelling. Often, only one joint is inflamed and, rarely, more
than three. The most commonly affected joint is the knee followed by the shoulder, elbow, foot, and hip. It has symptoms
similar to arthritis.
When treated, the swelling will go away in
about one to four weeks but it may return in later months or even years.
Lyme disease may cause:
inflammation of the heart tissues, along with
arrhythmia
heart failure may develop in severe cases.
How
does the doctor make the diagnosis?
A
diagnosis of Lyme disease is more likely if the patient remembers a tick bite and presents the doctor with the erythema
migrans rash.
To make a firmer diagnosis the doctor may take
a blood sample to determine whether the patient has developed an antibody towards Lyme disease in their blood.
Antibodies can typically be found between two
and four weeks after contracting the disease, but sometimes the antibodies do not appear for up to eight weeks. This means
that people may have Lyme disease even if antibodies are not present at the very early phases, so repeat tests may be
necessary in order to detect the diagnostic antibody response.
On the other hand, a positive antibody test
does not necessarily mean that borrelia has recently been contracted. The antibodies may be found in the blood several years
after an infection is over. Unfortunately, the antibody test is not a very efficient diagnostic tool: false-positive results
are common.
If the doctor suspects neuro borrelia then
hospital admission is required for tests on fluids from the spinal canal. This is to determine whether Lyme disease has
entered the nervous system.
In cases of chronic neuro borrelia the
treatment may include a CT scan of the nervous system.
With
immediate and appropriate treatment the erythema migrans rash will often disappear within two weeks. Even without treatment,
most cases of erythema migrans will go away without leaving permanent effects. But treatment lessens the risk of later
symptoms in your nervous system and joints.
If the nervous system, joints, or heart are
affected, two to three years may pass before the symptoms go away.
In rare cases a chronic disease with permanent
symptoms may develop. This may happen several years after the tick bite.
What can the doctor do?
In
the early stages (erythema migrans) oral antibiotic treatment may be sufficient.
If there are other symptoms, he or she will
arrange hospital admission for further investigation and possible further treatment with antibiotics.
Medicines
used against Lyme disease include:
oral doxycycline (eg Vibramycin) (except in children), amoxicillin (eg Amoxil) or
cephalosporin antibiotics are the usual first choices.
when antibiotics by injection are being given, then
benzylpenicillin (eg Crystapen), cefotaxime (Claforan) and ceftriaxone (Rocephin) are the usual choices.
no particular choice and method is superior to another - the
decision is made by the infectious disease specialist and is dependent on the individual circumstances.
Practitioner's comment:
The Glinka Health Practice has a protocol for treating this condition, that has been successfully used by MORA practitioners world-wide.
For an
appointment or more information, please call us on 0161
628 2664.
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