Highlights
Lyme Disease Rates Double in Past 15 Years
The annual number of people newly infected with Lyme disease has doubled from around 10,000 cases per year in the early 1990s to about 20,000 cases per year now. Improved diagnosis and reporting probably contribute to this increase. In the United States, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania have reported the highest number of Lyme disease cases in recent years. People ages of 5 - 14 years and 45- 54 years are at highest risk for contracting Lyme disease.
New Guidelines for Treatment of Neurological Lyme Disease
Most cases of Lyme disease can be prevented or cured with prompt antibiotic treatment following a deer tick bite. However, neurological complications can later develop in some patients. In 2007, the American Academy of Neurology released new guidelines for the treatment of nervous system Lyme disease. The guidelines recommend that patients with severe disease receive a 2 - 4 week course of intravenous antibiotics (penicillin, ceftriaxone, or cefotaxime). Patients with milder neurological cases may do well with a 2 - 4 week course of oral doxycycline. No guidelines currently recommend long-term antibiotic treatment for any stage or complication of Lyme disease.
Introduction
Lyme disease is the most commonly reported tick-borne disease in the United States. Vector-borne infections are transmitted by insects.
Borrelia Burgdorferi
The Lyme disease infection in the U.S. is caused by a spirochete called Borrelia (B.) burgdorferi. A spirochete is a bacteria-like organism with a cylinder-like shape surrounded by an outer membrane.
Lyme researchers have the completion of DNA encoding of B. burgdorferi. Researchers learned that certain proteins coat its outer surface. These proteins, collectively called Osp, are responsible for attaching the spirochete to cells in humans and other mammals.
Ixodes Ticks
The vector that carries B. burgdorferi in the U.S. Northeast and North Central states is the Ixodes scapularis tick. The Ixodes scapularis tick goes through three stages over the course of about two years:
- It is born from eggs as a larva.
- It develops into the nymph stage.
- It develops into the adult stage.
The Cycle of Infection
Cycle of Infection in the Northeast and North Central U.S. For Lyme disease to exist in these regions, three factors must come into close contact:
- The Borrelia (B.) burgdorferi spirochete
- The spirochete's host, the Ixodes scapularis tick
- The mammal for the tick to bite
The following describes the most common cycle in the Northeast and North Central U.S. by which the Lyme disease infection eventually reaches a person:
- The cycle of infection is related to the tick's life cycle, which requires 2 years to complete. The tick typically first picks up the spirochete during its larva stage, when it needs a blood meal to mature further.
- The tick's initial meal is typically blood from the white-footed mouse, which is commonly infected with Borrelia burgdorferi. After it dines on the infected blood, the tick then becomes a carrier of this spirochete.
- Borrelia burgdorferi lodges in the tick throughout one of both of its following life stages, nymph and adult. It is during these stages that the infection is passed on to other animals, including humans. Nymph ticks emerge around mid-June and can be about the size of poppy seeds. They are very difficult to spot and are estimated to be responsible for 90% of all Lyme disease cases. Adult ticks can be as large as a raisin after feeding, and easy to spot, but they usually prefer their dinner on the white-tailed deer.
- The infected nymph or adult tick crawls (it does not fly or jump) onto another animal, which can be mice or larger animals, such as deer, birds, or humans. If the tick bites these animals, it may then infect them with the B. Burgdorferi spirochete. (It should be noted that infected humans cannot pass the spirochete on to other humans by any means, including infected blood or urine or sexual contact.)
- A tick can feed for several days while being imbedded in the skin, after which it falls off. The tick's bite is painless, however, so only about half of people with Lyme disease recall being bitten.
Cycle of Infection in the Northwest. In the Northwest, the infecting insect is the Western blacklegged tick, Ixodes Pacificus. Here, the frequency of Lyme disease is much lower than in the other two regions because the animal carrier of the infection is the dusky-footed wood rat. This animal is bitten and infected by the Ixodes neotomae tick, which does not bite humans. The actual tick that spreads B. burgdorferi to people is Ixodes pacificus, which must feed first on an already infected wood rat.

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