Experience at a Referral Center for Patients with Suspected Lyme Disease in an Area of Nonendemicity: First 65 Patients

A multidisciplinary referral center was established at a university hospital for prospectively assessing patients with possible Lyme disease. Borrelia burgdorferi is not known to be endemic in this region, but considerable anxiety about Lyme disease has developed among the general public. Sixty-five...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Clinical infectious diseases Vol. 16; no. 4; pp. 558 - 560
Main Authors: Burdge, David R., O'Hanlon, David P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Chicago, IL The University of Chicago Press 01-04-1993
University of Chicago Press
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Summary:A multidisciplinary referral center was established at a university hospital for prospectively assessing patients with possible Lyme disease. Borrelia burgdorferi is not known to be endemic in this region, but considerable anxiety about Lyme disease has developed among the general public. Sixty-five patients were referred for suspected Lyme borreliosis. Detailed histories were obtained and physical examinations were performed; patients were investigated aggressively in accordance with their symptom complexes. Strict diagnostic criteria consistent with published standards were applied. Only two of the 65 patients were judged to have probable Lyme disease. Definite major alternate diagnoses were made for 50 patients (77%); firm medical diagnoses (11 dermatologic, 9 rheumatologic, 9 infectious disease, 6 gastrointestinal, 4 neurological, and 2 miscellaneous) were made for 41 patients (63%); and major psychiatric diagnoses were made for 9 patients (14%). Probable diagnoses of chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia were made for 11 patients (17%). The conditions of four patients (6%) were undiagnosed. A referral center for patients with suspected Lyme disease can be useful even in an area of nonendemicity, and careful clinical assessment will reveal treatable alternate diagnoses for many patients with suspected Lyme disease.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/HXZ-NNQ68S2N-G
Reprints or correspondence: Dr. David R. Burdge, Division of Infectious Diseases, University Hospital—Shaughnessy Site, G611, 4500 Oak Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6H 3N1.
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ISSN:1058-4838
1537-6591
DOI:10.1093/clind/16.4.558