New Book on Lyme Disease Takes Controversial Stance
You get bitten by a tick and then develop a bull's-eye rash—the one you've heard can mean Lyme disease. What should you do next? The best bet is to see a doctor right away, because a prompt prescription for antibiotics can keep the infection from spreading to the nervous system, the heart, and the joints, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Nearly 20,000 cases of Lyme disease were reported to the CDC in 2006. The infection is transmitted to people through the bite of an infected deer tick (aka black-legged tick). Symptoms include fever, fatigue, headache, and a characteristic rash called erythema migrans. Doctors diagnose the condition on the basis of those symptoms if a patient has potentially been exposed to deer ticks.
Many people get Lyme disease, take a few weeks of antibiotics, and recover fully, experts say. But there is also a debate over whether some people, long after being bitten by a tick, continue to be affected by a "chronic" form of Lyme disease. The crux of the issue is whether certain persistent symptoms—including pain, fatigue, and other problems—that some people complain of are due to a lingering Lyme infection rather than some other cause. People in this camp say chronic Lyme symptoms necessitate long-term antibiotic therapy, with pills or IV meds given for months or years.
A new book, called Beating Lyme: Understanding and Treating This Complex and Often Misdiagnosed Disease, provides insight into the arguments that supporters of the chronic Lyme viewpoint make in favor of aggressively treating the condition. The book recounts the experiences of those who say they have long-lasting and at times debilitating symptoms of the condition years after being bitten by a tick. The book just hit store shelves.
Many medical experts, however, don't believe chronic Lyme disease exists. After the infection is initially treated with a few weeks of antibiotics, they maintain, it clears up, making further antibiotic therapy unnecessary. While people with chronic problems after a tick bite may indeed be sick, these doctors say, their symptoms are not due to a lingering Lyme infection, and they risk problems associated with overuse of antibiotics by continuing such treatment.
An October New England Journal of Medicine article took this viewpoint, in contrast to that of the new book. It issued a "critical appraisal" of chronic Lyme disease, a term sometimes used interchangeably with "late Lyme disease." The "chronic" diagnosis is used, according to the NEJM piece, in North America and Europe, for people who experience persistent pain, fatigue, and neurocognitive symptoms, with or without prior evidence of Lyme disease. The article's authors question the use of the term "chronic Lyme" to explain these patients' symptoms—and they say long-term antibiotic therapy isn't the answer to treating these patients. Instead, the goal should be to provide support and management of pain, fatigue, or other symptoms, the authors write, and doctors should explain to patients that no antibiotic can cure lingering symptoms.
Henry M. Feder Jr., the lead author of the NEJM piece, says that he believes some patients still feel ill long after initial treatment for Lyme, but research shows that using antibiotics to treat them long term doesn't work. "It does seem that after Lyme, some people seem to have some lingering complaints," Feder says. Supporters of the chronic Lyme diagnosis argue that such symptoms are due to persistent infections, but Feder says that there have been studies done "where they've treated these patients [with antibiotics], and treatment showed no difference. Further antibiotic therapy didn't help."
Still, some patients, like Beating Lyme's coauthor Constance A. Bean, say that antibiotics—which she took on and off for about 12 years after a 1993 tick bite—made all the difference. "I improved on antibiotics," Bean says. "I stopped having to go to the hospital.... People have to do what works for them."
The best way to avoid Lyme disease altogether is to avoid tick bites. Here are three tips on preventing infection.
Reader Comments
i hate lymes
I was told i had lymes in 2001. NOW it is 2009. I had the antibiotics thought i was good but i was not. It has attact my body as whole, I have had several sugerys for reason (well it just quit working or your bone and joints are getting weak) I can no longer work,I'm sick all the time and now if any thing else goes wrong i'll need to have people to donate body parts i'm running out my own.
lyme information
I was bitten in 2001. It took almost 2 years and traveling out of state to get real help. I am a productive person again only because a lyme literate doctor treated it and the co-infections very aggressively. I will remain on some kind of treatment for the rest of my life to try and stay well. I do have some symptons that continue to plaque me. There are chronic infections out there that are accepted such as chronic bronchidis and other COPD infections. Lyme can and does become chronic and if we are to help our health care system rein in costs, then ignoring and minimizing treatment for lyme and the related co-infections is NOT the way to do it. Education is always key and it appears in this situation it is the doctors that most need to be educated. It is a very serious infection and needs to be treated aggressively. Most of all we need doctors to beleive us and not tell us we need a councilor, or give us prednisone and send us home to suffer.
Chronic Lyme
I was first treated for my Lyme in 1990. After many different antibiotics and finally IV treatment, we thought I was "cured". I too was a robust, fun loving young woman, and slowly became angry at those in the medical field who cannot believe that not only did I HAVE Lyme,but continue to have residual effects on my body. Every local doctor, lecture me on the inconsistencies of testing and therefore deny my ever being dianosed. At the time I was 18 yrs old, and my mother listened to docs who said my problems were stress, hypochondria, and psychologically induced. She persisted and after all the treatments I received began to notice a decrease in the joint pain, headaches, and fatigue. why is it that they diagnose all sorts of diseases doctors DO believe in every day, but they continue to pooh whoo the existence of Lyme Disease chronic or not?
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