Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Lyme Disease
by
Bonnie Gorman RN
Dr Sam Donta
presented a comprehensive, compassionate, cutting-edge lecture to Mass. CFIDS/FM
Association members on November 3rd, 2002. His topic was "The Interface of
Lyme Disease with CFS and FM: Diagnostic and Treatment Issues." Dr. Donta is a
nationally recognized expert on Lyme disease. He is the Director of the Lyme
Disease Unit at Boston Medical Center and a Professor of Medicine at BU Medical
School. He is a bacteriologist and an infectious disease specialist, who views
CFS and FM from that vantage point. He is also a consultant to the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), and presented at NIH's scientific meetings on CFS
research.
What does Lyme disease have to do with CFS and FM you might be asking?
Some people believe that Lyme disease may be one of the causative factors in
both CFS and FM. Others believe that some CFS and FM patients are really
misdiagnosed chronic Lyme disease patients and vice versa. Some believe that
there is no such thing as chronic Lyme disease, instead these patients actually
have CFS or FM. We asked Dr. Donta to help sort all this out.
Parallel Symptom Patterns
Dr. Donta presented the symptom lists for chronic Lyme
disease, chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), fibromyalgia (FM), and Gulf War Illness
(GWI). He pointed out the similarities between them, and found there were few
differences. He has treated hundreds of patients with these illnesses. He
found that CFS and GWI have identical symptoms, and FM is only distinguished by
a positive tender point exam, that is often positive in CFS and GWI as well.
Clinically it is almost impossible to distinguish or differentiate these
illnesses.
He has concluded that chronic Lyme disease is remarkably
similar to CFS, FM, and GWI. These multi-symptom disorders have similar symptom
patterns consisting of fatigue and neurocognitive dysfunction, along with
numerous other symptoms that probably relate to altered neurological function.
Musculoskeletal symptoms may be more frequent in FM and in some patients with
chronic Lyme than in CFS, but the definition of CFS and GWI also includes muscle
aches (myalgias) and joint aches (arthralgias).
Lyme Disease Symptoms
Flu-like illness, fever, malaise, fatigue, headache, muscle
aches (myalgia), and joint aches (arthralgia), intermittent swelling and pain of
one or a few joints, "bull's-eye" rash, early neurologic manifestations include
cognitive disorders, sleep disturbance, pain, paresthesias (including numbness,
tingling, crawling and itching sensations), as well as cognitive difficulties
and mood changes.
The only symptom difference in Lyme disease is the
expanding circular rash with a clearing area and center resembling a "bull's
eye." He pointed out that Lyme has multiple types of rashes and half of the
rashes are not typical, they may not even include the "bull's eye" rash. They
can appear from two day after the bite, then go on for a week or so. Patients
who are infected may not develop or see the rash, and may not develop any future
symptoms. In studies, only one third of the patients were actually aware of
their tick bites.
30-50% of acute Lyme disease patients went on to develop
chronic Lyme disease. Additionally, some previously asymptomatic patients may
reactivate their infection following various stressors such as trauma, surgery,
pregnancy, coexisting illness, antibiotics treatment, or severe psychological
stress. The Lyme vaccine can also reactivate their infection. Similar triggers
such as trauma, surgery etc. are known to precipitate CFS, FM and GWI as well.
This is not a new phenomenon with infectious diseases. We know infectious
diseases (i.e. TB) will reactivate after illnesses or surgery-- any stressor.
Dr. Donta reported on the effects of gender on host
susceptibility in Lyme disease, CFS, FM and other multi-symptom diseases. In
all these disorders, women appear to be more affected than men, usually at about
2:1 ratios. He noted that neural cells contain estrogen and progesterone
receptors, and that herpes viruses can utilize estrogen receptors to gain access
to the reservoir in the cell nucleus. Treatment of chronic Lyme disease also
seems to be gender-dependent to some degree, with men generally having more
speedy and complete recoveries compared to women. He concluded that gender
relationships are known for a number of infectious diseases, so it would not be
surprising that such a relationship exists for chronic Lyme disease, CFS, FM and
other multi-symptom disorders.
Etiology
Lyme Disease: A distinct difference between
Lyme disease, CFS and FM is that the origin of Lyme is clear. Lyme disease is
caused by spirochetal bacteria transmitted by the bite of an infected deer
tick. This bacteria is the Borrelia burgdorferi bacteria. It was
identified in the late 1900s in Europe. The US was late to recognize what
Europe had described. Lyme disease was not formally identified by the CDC until
1977 when arthritis was observed in a cluster of children in and around Lyme,
CT. Since that time Lyme disease has been identified in many states. The CDC
reports that it causes more than 16,000 infections per year in the US. Some
researchers feel that the prevalence is higher than that.
CFS and FM: Dr. Donta feels that Lyme disease
is an important cause of CFS and FM. In addition to Lyme, there are a number of
other possible causes. The evidence is still circumstantial though.
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), the major cause of infectious mononucleosis, continues
to be debated as a cause of CFS. It is uncertain whether EBV can cause symptoms
other than fatigue, such as myalgias and arthralgias that are not seen during
acute or reactivated EBV infection in patients who are being immunosuppressed,
but it remains possible that EBV could cause one type of chronic fatigue
disorder. There are also other herpes viruses i.e. HHV6 that are being
evaluated as potential culprits.
Dr. Donta reported that recently recognized species of Mycoplasma (Mycoplasma
fermentans, Mycoplasma genitalium) have been implicated in CFS, FM and GWI.
These same bacteria have also been implicated as causative agents of rheumatoid
arthritis, based on PCR-DNA evidence in patients with these disorders in which
50 percent are found to have the DNA of the Mycoplasma in circulating white
blood cells, compared to 5-10 percent of a normal population. Whether the
presence of this DNA represents past exposure or ongoing infection remains to be
resolved. No long-term studies have yet been performed in patients with CFS and
FM to determine whether the finding of Mycoplasma DNA persists over months or
years or whether such patients have any evidence of other infection such as Lyme
disease or infection with Chlamydia species.
Central Nervous System
Involvement
Dr. Donta reported that in Lyme disease, the nervous system
seems to be the primary target for the bacteria causing the disease. Patients
with Lyme disease express many neurologic symptoms such as pain, paresthesias
including numbness, tingling, crawling and itching sensations, as well as
cognitive difficulties and mood changes. Even the joint pains and occasional
arthritis appear to be neuropathic in origin, as anti-inflammatory agents such
as ibuprofen and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) have little
if any effect on the pain. Experimental evidence from animal models also affirm
the localization of B. burgdorferi DNA to the nervous system. Dr. Donta
postulates that the disease mechanisms could involve inflammatory responses,
autoimmune responses or toxin-associated disruption of neural function. Any
inflammatory responses appear to be weak, and there is no compelling evidence
that Lyme disease is a result of immunopathologic mechanisms.
Commenting on his research, Dr. Donta speculated that if
they are correct, and lyme bacteria is a nerve toxin that interferes with the
transmission of the nerve impulse, then that is all you need to impede the
normal flow of information. There is a lot of cross-talk in the nervous
system. This toxin will decrease that cross-talk causing delayed responses
resulting in cognitive problems-- the brain fog so commonly described in all
these multi-symptom disorders.
Although the disease pathways for other possible causes of
CFS and FM have not been defined, Dr. Donta postulates that the central nervous
system would appear to be a logical target for other pathogens or other disease
processes. These illnesses clearly affect the brain and are bound to cause many
neurological manifestations. Any changes in immunologic function would not
appear to be sufficient to explain the various symptoms, and are likely to be
secondary to other disease processes.
He feels we have been thinking too simplistically about
finding whole organisms replicating in chronic diseases. It is highly likely
that there is no single cause for these illnesses. It's more likely that there
are multiple causes-- different organisms causing the same final set of
symptoms. Researchers need a better algorithm to study these fatiguing
illnesses. We need to be more inclusive, rather than trying to separate the
illnesses. Sometimes in medicine, if an illness is too complex to study,
research interest dwindles. We have the technology to do the research, but
there hasn't been the will and the momentum to get it done.
Clinical Diagnosis
Dr. Donta reiterated that the diagnosis of Lyme disease is primarily
based on clinical grounds, just as with CFS and FM. Once other disorders are
ruled out, the combination of symptoms over months is sufficient to make a
presumptive clinical diagnosis. The diagnosis of Lyme is made easier if a
typical rash is present during the early phase of infection. After that, it is
difficult to distinguish the flu-like illness that can occur a few weeks later,
or can recur over a number of months.
Dr. Donta reported that some patients develop severe
headaches and an aseptic (infection free) meningitis, which frequently is
diagnosed instead as viral meningitis. If a Bell's palsy occurs (drooping of
one side of the face), the possibility of Lyme disease is likely. If an
unprovoked arthritis occurs, causing swelling of a single joint, especially the
knee, but sometimes more than one joint, then the possibility of Lyme disease
should also be given high consideration.
He emphasized that it is the chronic phase of the disease
that causes most problems for physicians and patients, because of the lack of
objective signs and the presence of so many symptoms that it causes some doctors
to attribute psychological reasons for the patients' symptoms. Many patients
then receive a diagnosis of CFS or FM, when they may have underlying chronic
Lyme disease as the cause of their symptoms.
Diagnostic Tests
Tests for Lyme disease, like tests for other infectious
diseases, are often confusing and circumstantial, and their analysis and
interpretation has often been flawed. In infectious diseases you do a Western
blot test to see if you have a specific reaction. Western blot separates
out proteins antigens of an organism you are looking for. It tells you if a
person has been exposed. It is not a direct measurement of the organism.
It is a measurement of whether the person has antibodies to it. Antibody tests
are useful in the early stages of illness as with other acute infectious
illnesses. Once the illness is in a chronic phase, antibody tests are not
useful.
Just as viruses change from year to year, we know the Lyme
bacteria mutates. There are a number of organisms that can shift their surface
protein in a matter of hours and that is how they evade detection and patients
test negative. These organisms attach themselves to proteins and conceal
themselves-- creating a cloaking mechanism that defies detection. This allows
them to get where they want to go-- the nervous system. Once they are
inside a cell, the immune system can't see them.
That said, Dr. Donta explained that lab tests have been
helpful is some patients with Lyme disease, especially those with arthritis, in
whom there are stronger antibody responses than in those with the chronic,
multi-symptom form of Lyme. The criteria for the laboratory diagnosis has been
patterned after the arthritic form of the disease, and not the chronic form; as
a result, there are many physicians who are misinformed about the test's lack of
value in chronic Lyme disease. The Lyme Western Blot is helpful when it shows
reactions against specific proteins of B. burgdorferi, but can be
negative in 25-30 percent of patients who otherwise have chronic Lyme disease.
PCR-DNA tests for Lyme in blood, urine and spinal
fluid are rarely positive, most likely because the bacteria and their DNA are
not present in those body fluids, but inside nerve cells. Additionally, PCR-DNA
studies are very easy to contaminate.
In chronic Lyme disease, the MRI exam of the brain
is positive in about 10-20 % of patients. It can show some white spots
(unidentified bright objects- UBO) in various areas, similar to those seen in
multiple sclerosis (MS), a neurologic disease of unknown cause that has some
overlapping symptoms with Lyme disease, CFS and FM, such as the numbness and
tingling or paresthesias. (There are also positive MRI findings in CFS and FM
patients as well.)
Dr. Donta reported that the brain SPECT scan shows
some changes in blood flow to various parts of the brain, primarily the temporal
(cognitive processing) and frontal (mood) lobes in about 75 percent of patients
with chronic Lyme disease. Patients with CFS have also been reported to have
some brain SPECT scan changes, frequently involving the occipital lobe. No
comparative studies have been made among patients with chronic Lyme disease, CFS
and FM. The mechanisms underlying these changes remain to be defined, but may
be due to a mild vasculitis (inflammation of blood vessels) or to a signaling
problem within the nerve network of the brain in those specific areas. It is
promising that these changes are reversible in most patients treated with
antibiotics that appear to be effective in treating the chronic Lyme disease.
These MRI changes are often slow and may take a year to reverse themselves.
These are covert organisms we are dealing with. We need
more direct detection methods for blood, spinal fluid and other body fluids.
How do you detect organisms in spinal nerve roots or brain? Right now we
can't. Nobody is going to biopsy patients. We need an illness registry so we
can do direct detection studies, particularly of the brain, after death.
Treatment: Persistence
Pays Off
Dr. Donta reported that there are lots of drugs that are
active against the Lyme bacteria in the test tube, but the big question
is whether the drug can get to the bacteria? Lyme bacteria lives in the cells
of the nervous system, perhaps other cells. Dr. Donta has experimented with
various intracellular-type antibiotics. He reviewed his journey through various
antibiotics. After listening to his patients he decided that some antibiotics
were better than others. He then looked at clarithromycin (Biaxin) and
azithromycin (Zithromax) which he found had powerful activity against Lyme
bacteria in a test tube.
But the antibiotics, by themselves, did not seem to do any
good. He found that you need to change the cellular pH (the degree of acidity
or alkalinity), making it more or less acidic, to maximize the effectiveness of
the antibiotic. This allows the antibiotic to work better i.e. doxycycline
seemed to work better when the pH was higher. Dr. Donta has experimented with
various agents to adjust pH i.e. amantadine (used to treat flu) and plaquenil
(used to treat malaria). He just submitted proposals to NIH to study various
agents to determine which is most effective.
Dr. Donta emphasized that the most important aspect of
treatment is that it must be long-term-- 12-18 months, sometimes 24-36
months. This length is not unusual in the treatment of infectious diseases i.e.
TB. In the first few months of treatment patients can expect an adverse
reaction, symptoms will increase and you'll feel worse. You need to be able to
hang in through this period, and allow 3-6 months of a treatment trial to
determine if it is working. The earlier in the disease process that you start
on treatment, the more successful it is. The more chronic the condition the
less successful it is, and you'll need to treat over a longer period of time.
This treatment resulted in substantial improvement and cures in 80-90% of
patients with chronic Lyme disease. There are 10-20% who do not respond--
generally those with a strongly positive Lyme test.
Dr. Donta reported that similar results have been found in
some patients with CFS and FM of unknown cause, supporting the hypothesis that
some patients with CFS and FM have an underlying infection responsive to those
antibiotics. Antibiotic trials in CFS and FM have been limited to one month, a
duration that is inadequate to properly evaluate the potential of certain
antibiotics to have a positive effect on the disease. Additional studies,
examining both potential etiologic agents of CFS and FM as well as treatment
trials should lead to a better understanding of both the cause and treatment of
patients with CFS and FM.
Q&A
Q: If the Lyme lab tests are inadequate and the
symptoms are the same as CFS and FM, why not just treat all CFS and FM patients
with the Lyme protocol?
A: You want to be conservative with your medicines. I
think we have enough info now to tell CFS and FM patients to consider going on a
3-6 month trial of antibiotics and see if you're better. Consider all the other
meds you are already taking that just treat symptoms and not the cause of your
illness. They all have side-effects that can be hazardous. Is it worth it to
you to consider a primary treatment aimed at a cause? There will be resistance
from some MDs. They need to be educated. Your primary MD will need to consult
an LD specialist re the treatment protocol.
Q: Do patients with Lyme disease also have bowel and
bladder problems like interstitial cystitis (IS) and irritable bowel syndrome
(IBS)? How are they affected by treatment?
A: Yes, many patients with Lyme have IS and IBS. He was
surprised how much the bowel disorders affected treatment. Tetracycline
generally helps the IBS. Plaquenil can sometimes irritate the bowel.
Q: I have received different results for the western
blot Lyme test. Why?
A: Lyme test results are not reproducible from one lab to
the next. You will get different findings from different labs. The western
blot is not a great test for Lyme since the responses to Lyme bacteria are
already very small responses.
Q: I've been sick for 15 years with CFS and my Lyme
test was negative. Is there any value in treating now?
A: If the test was negative but you have the complex of
symptoms and there is no other obvious answer, why not give antibiotics a try.
Q: I had the Lyme vaccine then got Lyme symptoms. Why?
A: Lyme vaccine was pulled from the market because it was
causing reactions and reactivating a slow onset of Lyme disease.
Q: What are the ocular problems in Lyme?
A: He sees optic neuritis, similar to that seen in
atypical MS patients.
Q: Is there any Lyme connection to cutaneous lymphoma?
A: He has looked closely for any cancer/ Lyme
associations, but has not seen many.
Q: Is there a connection with thyroid problems?
A: Thyroid problems are a very common co-existing
condition with Lyme, as they are with CFS.
Q: How do I differentiate itching from allergic
reactions?
A: The same sensory nerve fiber pathways that carry pain
carry itching, numbness, tingling etc. Rash is common symptom. Rashes could be
caused by medications, especially if they are body-wide. Is it an allergic
reaction or hypersensitivity reaction? Get a complete blood count (CBC) with
differential. Eosinophils will be elevated if allergic reaction. If not, then
it's a hypersensitivity reaction. Treatments are similar.
Q: How do we get funding for research to advance these
illnesses?
A: He stressed
how important it is to combine advocacy and research efforts. Ultimately it
will be a political solution. Get active legislatively in DC. The CFS
Coordinating Committee is a very good forum. Lyme does not have anything like
that. Groups need to work together, not fight with each other. There should be
a coalition of all these groups. We also need to show insurance companies the
benefits of primary treatment to patients, as well as to insurer's bottom line.
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