The Clinical Evolution of Lyme Arthritis

  1. ALLEN C. STEERE, M.D.;
  2. ROBERT T. SCHOEN, M.D.; and
  3. ELISE TAYLOR, B.A.
  1. New Haven, Connecticut

    Abstract

    To determine the clinical evolution of Lyme arthritis, 55 patients who did not receive antibiotic therapy for erythema chronicum migrans were followed longitudinally for a mean duration of 6 years. Of the 55 patients, 11 (20%) had no subsequent manifestations of Lyme disease. From 1 day to 8 weeks after disease onset, 10 of the patients (18%) began to have brief episodes of joint, periarticular, or musculoskeletal pain for as long as 6 years, but they never developed objective joint abnormalities. From 4 days to 2 years after disease onset, 28 (51%) had one episode or began to have intermittent attacks of frank arthritis, primarily in large joints; a few had polyarticular movement. The total number of these patients who continued to have recurrences decreased by 10% to 20% each year. The remaining 6 patients (11%) developed chronic synovitis later in the illness; of these, 2 (4%) had erosions, and 1 (2%), permanent joint disability. The spectrum of Lyme arthritis ranges from subjective joint pain, to intermittent attacks of arthritis, to chronic erosive disease.

    Article and Author Information

    • ▸From the Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.

    • Grant support: in part by grants AM-20358, AM-07107, and RR-05443 from the United States Public Health Service and the Arthritis Foundation.

    • ▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Allen C. Steere, M.D.; New England Medical Center, Division of Rheumatology and Immunology, Box 406, 750 Washington Street; Boston, MA 02111.

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