Lyme Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is lyme disease?

A
  • prototype emerging infectious disease
  • a multisystemic disorder
  • commonly presents as skin lesions (erythema migrans)
  • if untreated, can lead to arthritis, carditis and nervous system manifestations
  • most common vector-borne disease in North America
  • ‘Bullseye’ lesions on affected area
  • most were misdiagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis
  • many were noted to have a “bulls eye” rash prior to development of symptoms
  • rash was associated with a tick bite
  • a ‘spirochete’ was isolated from the ticks, and subsequently from skin, blood and cerebral spinal fluid of patients
  • Borrelia burgdorferi
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2
Q

What is borrelia burgdoferi

A
  • Named after Willie Burgdorfer
  • Gram negative spirochete
    thin (~0.5 µm) and long (>10 µm), spiral shaped
  • Lyme Borrelia are widely found throughout temperate zones in the Northern hemisphere
  • B. burgdorferi is the major cause in North America
    other species can cause Lyme Disease – collectively called B. burgdorferi sensu lato
  • B. burgdorferi are spread by the bite of ‘hard’ ticks (Ixodes species) = vector borne disease
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3
Q

Reservoir for Borrelia burgdorferi

A
  • B. burgdorferi is transmitted to different mammalian hosts through ticks
  • B. burgdorderi is only found in their vertebrate or arthropod hosts
  • white footed mice are the major reservoir
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4
Q

Ixodes Tick (black legged or deer tick)

A
  • hard bodied ticks
  • In North America, B. burgdorferi is transmitted primarily by Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes pacifica
  • other species transmit in Europe and Asia
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5
Q

Ixodes life cycle

A

3 stages:
- larva -> nymph -> adult
ticks require blood meals between stages
- no adult to egg transmission – ticks must acquire B. burgdorferi
- mice, squirrels and birds can carry B. burgdorferi
- majority of human infections come from nymphs

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6
Q

Lyme disease transmission

A
  • ticks do not fly or jump
  • ticks sit on grasses/shrubs and wait for a host to pass by
  • bites often occur in ‘hard-to-see’ areas
  • dogs and cats can get Lyme disease
  • no evidence of direct person to person transmission
  • tick inserts a feeding tube with barbs
  • secretes a local anesthetic
  • transmission is not thought to occur during the first ~24h following a bite
  • transmission increases >24h
  • nymphs normally transmit the disease
  • tick sucks blood slowly for several days
  • ticks appear grey when engorged
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7
Q

How to remove a tick

A
  • use fine tipped tweezers
  • grasp the tick as close to the skin as possible
  • steadily pull upwards
  • thoroughly wash the area
  • keep the tick

do not squish the tick body
do not burn the tick off
do not apply petroleum jelly

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8
Q

The pathogen: Borrelia burgdoferi

A
  • following initial infection, B. burgdorferi must cause disseminated and persistent infection to propagate through it’s life cycle
  • hematogenous dissemination is a central event in the development of Lyme Borreliosis
  • contain periplasmic flagella
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9
Q

Compounds in tick saliva are though to inhibit DC function on what levels?

A
  • decreased phagocytosis
  • decreased maturation
  • decreased inflammatory mediators
  • decreased antigen presentation
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10
Q

What is periplasmic flagella

A
  • axial filaments wrap around cells to produce cork-screw shape
  • rotation of the axial filament causes the bacteria to move in a corkscrew like manner
  • promotes movement through extracellular matrix of host tissues and invasion of vasculature
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11
Q

Why does B. burgdorferi contain an unusual outer membrane?

A
  • no LPS
  • many surfaces expressed lipoproteins that can act as adhesions
  • escape from the vasculature requires adhesion to slow down the bacteria
  • repetitive motility required to ivade endothelium
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12
Q

Why does B. burgdorferi have an unusual genetic structure?

A
  • ‘linear’ chromosome
  • multiple plasmids – some linear and some circular
  • plasmids are required for infection but are variable from strain to strain
  • limited metabolic capability
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13
Q

What happens at the early localized stage

A
  • most common symptom is erythema migrans – ‘Bulls-eye rash’ (~25% of patients do not have a rash)
  • occurs ~1-2 weeks after tick bite
  • groin, axilla, waist, back, legs, (head and neck in children)
  • rash will expand and if untreated can reach >12 inches diameter
  • flu-like symptoms including fever, chills, fatigue, body aches
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14
Q

What happens at the early disseminated stage (days to weeks)

A
  • occurs in untreated patients
  • multiple rashs would indicate dissemination of B. burgdorferi
  • pain and swelling of large joints
  • heart palpitations – interference with heart electrical signals
  • meningitis - severe headaches and neck stiffness
  • Bell’s (facial) palsy – loss of muscle tone on one or both sides of the face
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15
Q

What happens during the late disseminated stage (months to years)

A
  • can cause serious long-term disability
  • response to antibiotics takes longer
  • muscle pain
  • arthritis
  • severe pain and swelling in large joints
  • ~5% of patients can develop neurological problems
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16
Q

What is post-treatment lyme disease syndrome?

A
  • 10-20% experience symptoms following treatment with antibiotics
  • cause is unknown
  • lingering symptoms including
  • fatigue, muscle and joint pain, cognitive defects, sleep disturbances
  • may involve an autoimmune response or possibly persistent infection
  • most patients recover after a number of months
  • long-term antibiotics are not thought to help
17
Q

Prevention

A
  • avoid wooded areas endemic with Lyme disease
  • stay on paths, avoid low lying brush and long grass
  • wear long pants (tucked into socks) and long-sleeved shirts
  • light coloured clothing
  • repellants (containing DEET)
  • check for ticks and remove them
18
Q

Diagnosis

A
  • erythema migrans and other ‘typical’ symptoms
  • tick bite or reason to suspect tick exposure
  • anti-B. burgdorferi antibody tests (no ‘Gold-standard’)
  • detect antibodies to a laboratory strain of B. burgdorferi
  • false negatives often due to early testing (no antibody response yet) and genetic diversity of B. burgdorferi
  • sensitivity is somewhat controversial
  • submission of tick for testing (if you have it) to the National Microbiology Laboratory
19
Q

Treatment

A
  • if bitten by a black legged tick, watch for a rash (30 days) and be aware of symptoms
  • patients when diagnosed early will recover following antibiotic treatment
  • 2 - 4 week course of an antibiotic
  • without treatment can lead to joint, heart, nervous system problems
  • ~10-20% of patients, typically with a late diagnosis, have post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome
20
Q

What is “Chronic Lyme Disease”?

A
  • very controversial
  • some think this is due to chronic infection by B. burgdorferi
  • can be diagnosed without evidence of prior Lyme Disease
  • persistant symptoms including fatigue, headaches, sleep disturbances, cognitive dysfunction and other neurological problems
  • long-term antimicrobial therapy is not helpful – demonstrated by 4 clinical trials
21
Q

Lyme disease vaccine?

A
  • LYMErix – based on an outer membrane protein
  • human trial (11,000 adults) showed it to be 75% effective
  • ‘should be considered’ for those in high risk areas (not ’recommended’)
  • claims (and lawsuits) that the vaccine caused arthritis – no evidence
  • pulled from the market in 2002 due to ‘lack of demand’ – only now approved for dogs