Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2021)

Are Differences in Presentation of Early Lyme Borreliosis in Europe and North America a Consequence of a More Frequent Spirochetemia in American Patients?

  • Vera Maraspin,
  • Petra Bogovič,
  • Katarina Ogrinc,
  • Tereza Rojko,
  • Eva Ružić-Sabljić,
  • Andrej Kastrin,
  • Klemen Strle,
  • Gary P. Wormser,
  • Franc Strle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10071448
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. 1448

Abstract

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To assess whether differences in presentation between US and European patients with early Lyme borreliosis are due to the lower rate of spirochetemia in Europe, we compared multiple variables for patients with erythema migrans (EM), restricting the analysis to subjects with a positive blood culture at the time of presentation: 93 US patients infected with Borrelia burgdorferi versus 183 European patients infected with Borrelia afzelii (No = 144) or Borrelia garinii (No = 39). Compared to spirochetemic Slovenian EM patients infected with B. afzelii, US patients with a positive blood culture significantly less often recalled a preceding tick bite at the site of the EM skin lesion, had a shorter duration of EM prior to diagnosis and more often had multiple EM lesions, regional lymphadenopathy, constitutional symptoms, an increased ESR value, a low blood lymphocyte count and detectable borrelia antibodies in acute and convalescent phase blood samples. Similar differences were observed when US patients were compared to Slovenian patients with B. garinii infection, but not all reached statistical significance. The findings are comparable to those previously reported for the corresponding skin culture positive patients and do not support the hypothesis that a higher frequency of spirochetemia at the time of presentation in US patients with EM, compared with European EM patients, is the reason for the observed differences.

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