Borrelia valaisiana
in Cerebrospinal Fluid
Eudoxia Diza,* Anna Papa,*>
Eleni Vezyri,* Stefanos Tsounis,* Ioannis Milonas,* and Antonis Antoniadis*
*Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece
To the Editor: Lyme borreliosis is the most common tickborne human
disease in the Northern Hemisphere. The incidence of the disease is not
the same throughout Europe; in southern Europe, the incidence ranges from
43% in Croatia to 1.1% in Greece. Suspected borreliosis cases have been
reported in Greece, none were confirmed. Ixodes ricinus, the principal
tick vector of Borrelia burgdorferi in Europe, is found in northern
Greece. A low prevalence of B. burgdorferi antibodies was found
in healthy persons in Greece (1,2); a frequency of 7.3%
was found in arthritis patients (1), while a frequency
of 16.9% was found in patients with neurologic disorders (E. Diza, unpub.
data).
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has been used to detect B. burgdorferi
DNA in humans and to determine genospecies (3). Isolates
found in the United States have constituted a homogeneous group. In Europe,
five different genospecies from the original B. burgdorferi, now
called burgdorferi sensu lato complex, have been described: B.
burgdorferi sensu stricto, B. garinii, B. afzelii, B. valaisiana,
and B. lusitaniae. Pathogenicity for humans remains uncertain for
B. valaisiana and B. lusitaniae (4).
Neuroborreliosis, the most serious manifestation of disseminated Lyme
disease, has become the most frequently recognized arthropodborne infection
of the nervous system in the United States and Europe. B. garinii,
B. afzelii, and B. burgdorferi sensu stricto are confirmed
causes of neuroborreliosis (5); however, B. valaisiana
has not been isolated from cerebrspinal fluid (CSF) until this report.
We report the genetic detection of B. valaisiana in the CSF of
a 61-year-old man with a history of spastic paraparesis, which is strong
clinical evidence of advanced neuroborreliosis. Symptoms, mainly difficulty
in walking, began approximately 10 years earlier, with a slow progressive
course of neuroborreliosis. His medical history showed an unidentified
sexually transmitted disease in 1982, an undefined episode of arthritis
in the lower limbs in 1990, and a nonspecific rash in the genitals in
1995. The patient lived in South Africa from 1961 to 1997 and visited
Thassos Island in northern Greece every year. The neurologic examination
demonstrated an intense pyramidal spasticity in the lower limbs and moderate
weakness (Medical Research Council grade 3) of the proximal muscles. Serial
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain showed small hyperintensities
in the periventricular area on T2-weighted images; MRI of the spinal cord
showed no abnormalities. Multiple sclerosis, B12 deficiency, human T-cell
lymphotrophic virus-1 infection, structural inflammatory lesions of the
spinal cord, motor neuron disease, and hereditary spastic paraplegia have
been excluded. The patient was treated occasionally with intravenous penicillin
G, as well as with corticosteroids, but no clinical improvement was achieved.
Venereal disease reaction level was negative and all tests for syphilis
in CSF were negative.
DNA was extracted from CSF, and a region of the chromosomal flagellin
gene of B. burgdorferi was amplified by nested PCR (3).
B. afzelii (VS461) DNA was used as a positive control. All precautions
were taken to avoid contamination. The amplified PCR product was sequenced,
and the sequence (Th1) was deposited in GenBank with the accession no.
AY270021. Phylogenetic analysis showed that strain Th1 was clustering
with strains belonging to B. valaisiana genomic group. Specifically,
a nucleotide difference of 0.38% was observed among Th1 and isolates Ku10
and To76 (accession no. AYO83505 and AYO83504, respectively), which belong
to B. valaisiana genomic group and were isolated from ricinus
in Sweden (6). A genetic difference of 0.77% was observed
between Th1 and B. valaisiana strain Tr29 (accession no. ABO91805)
isolated from I. ricinus in Turkey (7), while
the genetic difference between Th1 and B. burgdorferi (X15661)
was much greater, 6.83%.
This report is the first of genetic detection of B. valaisiana
in CSF, which indicates a probable association of this genospecies with
disease in humans. B. valaisiana has been isolated from I. ricinus
ticks collected from vegetation and from ticks engorged on birds, in several
European countries, including Turkey (7). The pathogenic
capabilities of B. valaisiana are still uncertain; it has been
detected by PCR and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis
in skin biopsy specimens from two erythema migrans patients and from patients
with mixed infection (erythema migrans and acrodermatitis chronica atrophicans)
(4). Indirect evidence suggests that B. valaisiana
is involved in some chronic clinical manifestations (8).
Borreliosis is difficult to diagnose by serologic evaluation and Western
blot interpretation. In our patient, no intrathecal antibodies were produced
to support clinical suspicion of disease. The low antibody titers could
be attributed to antigenic variation between B. valaisiana and
B. burgdorferi sensu stricto, which was used as antigen because
no commercial kit is specific for B. valaisiana. Differences between
the strain causing infection and the antigen may play a role in the false-negative
results (9). The low antibody response in our patient
could be caused by antimicrobial drugs and corticosteroid medication.
The high homology of the nucleotide sequence from our patient and respective
B. valaisiana sequences from other European countries suggests
that he likely was infected in Greece. The status of Lyme disease in southern
Africa is unknown, but Ixodes spp. ticks have been found there,
and preliminary evidence indicates that the disease may occur in humans
in South Africa (10).
We detected B. valaisiana DNA in CSF of a patient with slow progressive
spastic paraparesis, which suggests that this microorganism might be the
causative agent of the disease. Nucleotide sequence information of Borrelia
strains from clinical cases and ticks from different countries will elucidate
the molecular epidemiology of the disease.
Acknowledgment
We thank O. Peter
for providing DNA control samples.
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