| July 15,
2008
The New York Times
A Threat in a Grassy Stroll: Lyme Disease
By JANE E. BRODY
My friend Anne and her husband, Richard, spend summers at a resort
in Westchester County that has a swimming lake, tennis courts, gardens
and beautiful grounds surrounded by woods. But Anne never sets foot
on the grass.
The reason is Lyme disease. Anne says just about everyone she knows
who partakes of the greenery and gardens outside the cabins has
contracted the disease. So not only is she cautious about venturing
out, but she and her husband also check each other daily from head
to toe for the much-feared deer tick, which can transmit the disease
when it attaches to skin and feeds on blood.
This tick, which is the size of a pinhead when it starts searching
for a bloody meal, is responsible for about 20,000 reported cases
of Lyme disease each year in the United States (the actual number
is believed to be 10 times that) and 60,000 reported cases in Europe.
Cases have been reported in every state, with residents of the Northeast,
the Great Lakes region, northwestern Washington and parts of California
the most frequent victims.
In some areas, as many as half of the deer ticks are infected with
Borrelia, the Lyme disease bacteria. The disease got its name in
1975 from the first identified cluster of cases, among children
in Lyme, Conn., who had rheumatoid-like symptoms of swollen, painful
joints.
The white-tailed deer and white-footed mouse are the tick’s most
frequent hosts, but it also feeds on birds, dogs and other rodents,
including squirrels. The tiny nymphal form that emerges in spring
and early summer presents the greatest hazard to humans. It is also
the hardest to spot, especially on body parts covered with hair.
People usually acquire the tick while walking through grassy or
wooded areas. Sometimes pet dogs are the source: in Minnesota one
summer, our dog got more than 30 deer ticks on his face, apparently
from sticking his nose into a fresh carcass. Unlike the common dog
tick, which is round and very dark, the deer tick is elongated and
brownish.
A Challenging Diagnosis
The disease can be maddeningly difficult to diagnose. Only 50 to
70 percent of patients recall being bitten by a tick. Ordinary laboratory
tests are rarely helpful. Tests for antibodies to the bacterium
or for its genetic footprints result in many false-negative and
false-positive findings.
Rather, according to Dr. Robert L. Bratton and colleagues at the
Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Ariz., who reviewed the recent literature
on Lyme disease in the May issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, most
cases are best diagnosed and treated based on patients’ symptoms.
Thus, doctors everywhere must be alert when dealing with patients
who live or travel in areas where Lyme disease is prevalent, and
they must be willing to use appropriate antibiotics based on a clinical
assessment rather than laboratory findings.
Since signs and symptoms vary and often do not appear until one
to four weeks — or even months — after exposure, anyone bitten by
a deer tick may be wise to obtain preventive treatment with an antibiotic,
according to Lyme disease experts consulted by Constance A. Bean,
the author with Dr. Lesley Ann Fein of the new book “Beating Lyme”
(Amacom Books).
The most common sign is a reddish rash called erythema migrans
that often resembles a spreading bull’s-eye, though up to 20 percent
of patients never develop it. Common sites of the rash are the thigh,
groin, buttock and underarm. It may be accompanied by flulike symptoms:
fever, chills, body aches, headache and fatigue.
If untreated or inadequately treated, the infection can cause severe
migrating joint pain and swelling, most often in the knees, weeks
or months later. In addition, several weeks, months or even years
after an untreated infection, the bacterium can cause meningitis,
temporary facial paralysis, numbness or weakness of the arms and
legs, memory and concentration difficulties and changes in mood,
personality or sleep habits. Some untreated patients develop temporary
heart rhythm abnormalities, eye inflammation or hepatitis.
Controversial Guidelines
Antibiotics for early Lyme disease should be taken for at least
two to three weeks. The treatments recommended by the Infectious
Diseases Society of America include doxycycline for nonpregnant
patients and children 9 and older, or amoxicillin for pregnant women
and younger children. Other options include cefuroxime axetil (Ceftin)
and erythromycin.
But these guidelines are controversial. They have been challenged
by a nonprofit medical group, the International Lyme and Associated
Diseases Society, which says they are inadequate to combat the infection
in a significant number of patients, who go on to develop debilitating
chronic symptoms.
In May, the Infectious Diseases Society agreed to review its guidelines
as a result of an antitrust lawsuit by the Connecticut attorney
general, Richard Blumenthal, who said some of the society’s experts
had financial interests that could bias their judgment. (The society
denied that accusation.)
Although I cannot state with authority which side is correct, I
have encountered enough previously healthy people who have suffered
for months or years after initial treatment to suggest that there
is often more to this disease than “official” diagnostic and treatment
guidelines suggest.
Pamela Weintraub, a senior editor at Discover magazine, has produced
a thoroughly researched and well-written account of the disease’s
controversial history in her new book “Cure Unknown: Inside the
Lyme Epidemic” (St. Martin’s Press).
Treatment and Prevention
The Mayo doctors concluded that patients who developed arthritis
related to Lyme disease should be treated for one to two months
and that those with late or severe disease, including neurological
and cardiac symptoms, required intravenous antibiotics. Although
two studies, neither of which was long-term, found that repeated
antibiotic treatment did not reverse the pain and altered cognition
associated with Lyme disease, the experience of thousands of patients,
including Ms. Bean, contradict these findings.
There are no vaccines to prevent Lyme disease; an early attempt
was taken off the market in 2002 because of side effects and limited
effectiveness. Those who will not or cannot avoid grassy and wooded
areas should wear long sleeves and long pants with legs tucked into
socks, and spray exposed skin and clothing with tick repellent containing
20 to 30 percent DEET. Repellents should not be used on children
under 2.
Since the tick must usually feed for 24 hours to transmit significant
amounts of bacteria, daily body checks and showering with a washcloth
can help prevent infection. Clothing should be washed and dried
in a dryer. Additional preventive actions are described in “Beating
Lyme.”
If a tick is attached to skin, it should be removed with tweezers,
not fingers. Press into the skin, grasp the front of the tick’s
head and pull at right angles to the skin. Place the tick in a sealed
plastic bag for later identification. Then wash the area and your
hands thoroughly.
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