We used a capture ELISA with biotinylated Borrelia burgdorferi flagella as antigen to analyze the kinetics of intrathecal antibody production against B burgdorferi in 27 patients with neuroborreliosis. All patients had lymphocytic pleocytosis, 13/27 had intrathecal specific IgM production, and 26/27 had intrathecal IgG synthesis against B burgdorferi before therapy. All patients improved after antibiotic treatment. At follow-up, 11 months to 8 years later (median, 1 1/2 years), 20 patients had had a complete clinical recovery, and seven suffered from sequelae. One patient without sequelae had persistent specific intrathecal IgM synthesis. Ten of 20 patients without sequelae and five of seven patients with sequelae had persistent intrathecal IgG production against B burgdorferi. None of the 16 patients with persistent specific intrathecal antibody synthesis had pleocytosis at follow-up. Therefore, intrathecal immunoglobulin production against B burgdorferi, especially IgG, may persist for years after treatment of neuroborreliosis without clinical signs of active disease.
To compare the efficacy of oral doxycycline and IV penicillin G for the treatment of neuroborreliosis, we randomized consecutive patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis to receive either IV penicillin G (3 g q 6 h) or oral deoxycycline (200 mg q 24 h) for 14 days. All patients had antibodies against Borrelia burgdorferi in serum, CSF, or both, or had a positive CSF culture. Twenty-three patients randomized to penicillin G and 31 patients to doxycycline were included in the study. All patients improved during treatment, and there were no significant differences between the two treatment groups in patient scoring, CSF analysis, or serologic and clinical follow-up during 1 year. There were no treatment failures, although one patient in each treatment group was re-treated because of residual symptoms. In conclusion, oral doxycycline is an adequate and cost-effective alternative to IV penicillin for the treatment of Lyme neuroborreliosis.
Attempts were made to culture spirochetes from cerebrospinal fluid samples of 105 patients suspected of having Lyme borreliosis with neurological complications. At the final evaluation, only 38 patients fulfilled the criteria of neuroborreliosis. Spirochetes were cultured from cerebrospinal fluid samples of four of these patients. Ail four patients had pleocytosis in their cerebrospinal fluid and a history of neurological symptoms of only 4 to 10 days in duration. Two of them had no detectable antibodies against any of the isolated spirochetes in their cerebrospinal fluid, both when tested with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and when tested by immunoblotting. An antibody reaction against the homologous isolate that was distinctly stronger than that against the heterologous isolates was found in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid samples from one patient. The cells of the isolates were morphologically similar and showed a very similar protein pattern when analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Cells of all isolates reacted with the monoclonal antibodies H5332 and H9724, which also react with Borrelia burgdorferi B31, the type strain. One isolate lost a major protein of 23 kilodaltons after subcultivation for 4 months. We conclude that isolation of spirochetes from cerebrospinal fluid might prove successful in clinically selected cases of Lyme borreliosis.
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