0521779407-13 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:15
Lyme Disease 929
management
■If tick available, identify as Ixodes (2–4 mm with black legs and red
body); if still attached, remove with fine tweezers by pulling firmly on
the mouth where it enters the skin; tick analysis to see if it is infected
not indicated
■Prophylactic antibiotics NOT indicated except in highly endemic
areas, following bite by nymphal or adult engorged Ixodes tick
■Serologic tests early in disease are often negative and should not be
done.
specific therapy
■Localized erythema migrans or disseminated erythema migrans
in the absence of third-degree heart block or neurologic
manifestations-doxycycline or amoxicillin for 14–21 days; cefurox-
ime axetil equally as efficacious, but more costly; macrolides less
effective and not recommended as first line therapy
■First and second-degree heart block treated as erythema migrans;
third-degree block treated with ceftriaxone for 14–21 days
■Bell’s palsy, if not associated with CNS involvement, treated like ery-
thema migrans; if associated with CNS involvement, ceftriaxone for
14–28 days (lumbar puncture may be required to determine if CNS
involvement present)
■Meningitis, encephalopathy and peripheral neuropathy treated with
ceftriaxone for 14–28 days; cefotaxime or penicillin (18–24 million
units in equally divided doses every 4 hours) are alternatives
■Arthritis treated initially with oral regimens of doxycycline or amox-
icillin for 28 days; failures or recurrences treated with ceftriaxone for
14–28 days
follow-up
■After adequate therapy of early disease, nonspecific symptoms
(fatigue, arthralgias, myalgias) may persist for weeks or months;
therapy is symptomatic – additional antibiotic therapy NOT indi-
cated
■Symptoms of arthritis slow to resolve; after initial therapy, if symp-
toms persist, wait several months before retreating; if symptoms per-
sist after second course of antibiotics, treat symptomatically, not with
additional or prolonged courses of antibiotics
■Coinfection with Ehrlichia species or Babesia microti, on rare occa-
sions, can cause prolonged symptoms and should be excluded.