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Query: UMLS:C0016053 (fibromyalgia)
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Lyme disease is a multisystem inflammatory disease caused by infection with Borrelia burgdorferi. Soon after the tick bite which transmits the infection, the pathognomonic skin rash erythema chronicum migrans occurs in 50 to 70% of patients, often with associated symptoms resembling a 'summer cold' or viral infection. Therapy for this stage of disease consists of 3 to 4 weeks of oral therapy. The agents currently used are: amoxicillin (500 mg 3 or 4 times daily) with or without probenecid 500 mg 3 times daily, doxycycline (100 mg twice daily), or tetracycline (500 mg 4 times daily). Longer duration therapy has never been evaluated and therefore is not currently indicated. Even patients with severe early manifestations of Lyme disease should be treated orally. Later features of Lyme disease include carditis and neurological disease, which can occur days to approximately 9 months after the onset of illness, and arthritis and neurological disease which can occur weeks to years after the onset of the illness. Treatment at this stage is with 2 to 3 weeks of intravenous antibiotics, currently cefotaxime (3 g every 12 hours), ceftriaxone (1 g every 12 hours or 2 g every day) and benzylpenicillin (14 g in divided doses). There is no evidence that longer duration therapy is indicated or more efficacious. The exception to this suggestion is the patient with isolated facial seventh cranial nerve palsy; if such a patient has no other signs or symptoms to suggest Lyme disease and has normal spinal fluid, oral therapy is usually sufficient, although some physicians will give concomitant corticosteroids to hasten the resolution of the palsy. Of major consequence to the practitioner and patient is the possibility that persistent symptoms (e.g. fibromyalgia) may be caused by a process which is no longer antibiotic-sensitive. Special care in the management of so-called 'chronic Lyme disease' is crucial lest the clinician prescribes prolonged or unending courses of antibiotics for such noninfectious problems.
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PMID:Current recommendations for the treatment of Lyme disease. 137 47

In areas endemic for Lyme disease there is increasing concern and anxiety about possible chronic and untreatable manifestations of the disease. The authors have diagnosed fibromyalgia in many patients with chronic musculoskeletal complaints in whom chronic Lyme arthritis had previously been diagnosed as the cause of their joint pains. Fibromyalgia is a common disorder, causing arthralgia (not true arthritis), fatigue, and debility. The repeated and/or long-term antibiotic therapy prescribed for "chronic Lyme disease" is not successful in curing the symptoms of fibromyalgia. Especially in areas where anxiety about Lyme disease is great, it is important to be careful in diagnosing chronic Lyme disease. Fibromyalgia is a potentially treatable and curable cause of chronic complaints and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of "refractory Lyme arthritis."
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PMID:Lyme arthritis as the incorrect diagnosis in pediatric and adolescent fibromyalgia. 140 3

Fear of Lyme disease may be as powerful as the disease itself. Patients may insist on being tested for infection although little evidence of it exists, and a positive result in the face of vague symptoms can add to the problem. Physicians should explain to these patients the differences in "background" seropositivity in various geographic locations and the drawbacks of instituting unnecessary treatment. Fibrositis may evolve over time after Lyme disease infection. Many factors may trigger this disorder, but some investigators propose that it is a result of musculoskeletal pain, sleep disturbance, and anxiety over the disease.
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PMID:Special concerns in Lyme disease. Seropositivity with vague symptoms and development of fibrositis. 158 69

Lyme encephalopathy, primarily manifested by disturbances in memory, mood, and sleep, is a common late neurologic manifestation of Lyme disease. We compared 20 patients with Lyme encephalopathy with 11 fibromyalgia patients and 11 nonpsychotically depressed patients using the California Verbal Learning Test, Wechsler Memory Scale, Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Test, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI), and Beck Depression Inventory. Compared with patients with fibromyalgia or depression, the Lyme encephalopathy group showed mild, but statistically significant, memory deficits on two of the three memory tests. In contrast, the patients with fibromyalgia scored significantly higher than both other groups on the MMPI scale most sensitive to somatic concerns (scale 1), while the depressed patients scored higher than the Lyme patients on the scales most sensitive to depression (scale 2) and anxiety (scale 7). Physical complaints and depression were not major factors in memory performance among Lyme patients. These data support the hypothesis that Lyme encephalopathy is caused by CNS dysfunction and cannot be explained as a psychological response to chronic illness.
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PMID:Memory impairment and depression in patients with Lyme encephalopathy: comparison with fibromyalgia and nonpsychotically depressed patients. 162 Mar 29

Four children with monarthritis of the knee had no further manifestations of Lyme borreliosis, but a positive antibody titer against Borrelia burgdorferi as measured by Elisa. About 3 years after antibiotic therapy none of the children had arthritis, but one suffered from fibromyalgia and another child had still a vigorous reactivity against Borrelia burgdorferi antigens by Elisa and immunoblot. In this study 4 out of 20 children with recently recognized arthritis had Lyme arthritis which makes it a rather frequent disease. The clinical presentation could not distinguish these 4 children from 4 other children with monarthritis of the knee of unknown origin. In the absence of better diagnostic criteria, the association of monarthritis, not otherwise explained, with a positive Lyme serology seems to be sufficient evidence to establish a diagnosis of Lyme arthritis. After confirmation of the diagnosis children should be treated without delay.
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PMID:[Lyme arthritis in childhood: monarthritis of the knee joint, clinically indistinguishable from monarthritis of unknown origin]. 177 41

Neurological manifestations of Lyme disease are as multifarious as the entire spectrum of this common infection. In stage I, fibromyalgia and, more rarely, painful muscular fasciculation, dominate the clinical picture. In the individual case, mild psychic abnormalities may already be observed. Characteristic of the 2nd stage is lymphocytic meningopolyneuritis. Involvements of the CNS are expressed not so much in focal deficits, as in diffuse psychopathological disorders. In stage 3, CNS manifestations are characterized by chronic, in part multifocal, encephalitides and encephalomyelitides, isolated transverse myelitides and cerebral vasculitic disorders. The clinical symptomatology may be dominated by severe psychiatric syndromes. Connatal and subclinical latent infections of the nervous system with Borrelia represent special forms.
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PMID:[Lyme borreliosis in neurology and psychiatry]. 218 78

A 29-year-old male tennis player was examined for neck pain, limited mobility, and right elbow pain. The patient was treated for cervical facet syndrome by chiropractic manipulative therapy (CMT) for a period of 6 weeks. After this time the patient had a relapse of cervical pain, spinal myofascitis, dermatitis and migratory arthropathy. Several specialists were consulted throughout the case including a rheumatologist, and a tentative diagnosis of psoriatic arthritis and fibromyalgia was made. A follow-up blood evaluation led to a new diagnosis of Lyme disease.
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PMID:Lyme disease. 239 50

Musculoskeletal involvement, particularly arthritis, is a common feature of Lyme disease. Early in the illness, patients may experience migratory musculoskeletal pain in joints, bursae, tendons, muscle, or bone in one or a few locations at a time, frequently lasting only hours or days in a given location. Weeks to months later, after the development of a marked cellular and humoral immune response to the spirochete, untreated patients often have intermittent or chronic monoarticular or oligoarticular arthritis-primarily in large joints, especially the knee-during a period of several years. The diagnosis of Lyme arthritis is usually based on the presence of this characteristic clinical picture, exposure in an endemic area, and an elevated immunoglobulin G antibody response to Borrelia burgdorferi. In addition, spirochetal DNA can often be detected in joint fluid by polymerase chain reaction. Lyme arthritis can usually be treated successfully with 1-month courses of oral doxycycline or amoxicillin or with 2- to 4-week courses of intravenous ceftriaxone. However, patients with certain genetic and immune markers may have persistent arthritis, despite treatment with oral or intravenous antibiotics. B. burgdorferi may occasionally trigger fibromyalgia, a chronic pain syndrome with diffuse joint and muscle symptoms. This syndrome does not appear to respond to antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Musculoskeletal manifestations of Lyme disease. 772 91

Two important studies in which nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used convincingly demonstrated that muscle is not the primary pathologic factor in fibromyalgia. There were further studies reporting that fibromyalgia-chronic fatigue syndrome may follow well treated Lyme disease or mimic Lyme disease. The longest therapeutic trial to date in fibromyalgia demonstrated an initial modest effect of tricyclic medications, but at 6 months that efficacy was no longer evident. Investigation in both fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome now focuses on the central nervous system. The use of new technology, eg, neurohormonal assays and imaging such as single-photon emission computed tomography scan, may be important in understanding these elusive conditions.
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PMID:Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain syndrome. 776 93

No major pathophysiologic or therapeutic findings have appeared over the past year regarding fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain syndrome, three poorly understood, controversial, and overlapping syndromes. The frequent prevalence of these disorders in association with Lyme disease and other medical and psychiatric illness was emphasized. New studies demonstrated the potential role for central nervous system activation in fibromyalgia and chronic fatigue syndrome.
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PMID:Fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and myofascial pain syndrome. 802 71


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