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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, Jan 1997, 85-88, Vol 4, No. 1
PT Fawcett, CD Rose, KM Gibney and RA Doughty
Response to treatment with antibiotics was compared with serologic
reactivity and clinical symptoms in a pediatric population with presumptive
diagnoses of Lyme borreliosis. The population analyzed for this study
consisted of a subset of a larger Lyme clinic population being monitored as
part of a prospective study on pediatric Lyme borreliosis. All patients
resided in an area in which Ixodes scapularis and Borrelia burgdorferi are
considered endemic. Serum from patients was tested by enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay and Western blotting. Response to antibiotics was
evaluated by members of a pediatric Lyme clinic. Results showed that
positive serologic test results correlate with a favorable response to
antibiotics, as does the presence of erythema migrans (EM), regardless of
serologic status. Seronegative patients without EM had chronic fatigue and
arthralgia and/or myalgia as primary symptoms and did not respond to
antibiotics, even when multiple courses of treatment were given. These
results indicate that serologic tests designed to have high specificity can
reliably rule out Lyme borreliosis in patients with chronic symptoms, thus
preventing unnecessary treatment with antibiotics.
Copyright © 1997 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Correlation of seroreactivity with response to antibiotics in pediatric Lyme borreliosis
Department of Clinical Science, Alfred I. duPont Institute, Wilmington, Delaware 19899, USA.
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