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Lyme Arthritis: A 50-Year Journey

Allen C. Steere

2024The Journal of Infectious Diseases23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lyme arthritis (LA) was recognized as a separate entity in 1975 because of geographic clustering of children often diagnosed with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in Lyme, Connecticut. After identification of erythema migrans as a common early feature of the illness, a prospective study of such patients implicated Ixodes scapularis ticks in disease transmission. In 1982, the causative agent, now called Borrelia burgdorferi, was cultured from these ticks and from Lyme disease patients. Subsequently, it was shown that LA could usually be treated successfully with oral antibiotics but sometimes required intravenous antibiotics. Yet, a small percentage of patients developed a dysregulated, proinflammatory immune response leading to persistent postinfectious synovitis with vascular damage, cytotoxic and autoimmune responses, and fibroblast proliferation, a lesion similar to that of rheumatoid arthritis. The message from postinfectious LA for other autoimmune arthritides is that a complex immune response with autoimmune features can begin with a microbial infection.

Topics & Concepts

Lyme diseaseErythema chronicum migransMedicineImmunologyArthritisErythema migransBorrelia burgdorferiIxodes scapularisSynovitisRheumatoid arthritisJuvenile rheumatoid arthritisSpirochaetaceaeDermatologyAntibodyLyme borreliosisVector-borne infectious diseasesViral Infections and VectorsVector-Borne Animal Diseases
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