Posted on 08/09/2011 10:53:23 AM PDT by neverdem
Researchers find molecules that might mark elusive syndrome.
Some patients with Lyme disease still show symptoms long after their treatment has finished. Now proteins have been discovered that set these people apart from those who are easily cured.
People who experience the symptoms of Lyme disease, which include fatigue, soreness and memory or concentration loss, after treatment for the disorder are sometimes diagnosed as having chronic Lyme disease or post-Lyme disease syndrome. But these diagnoses are difficult to make, because the individuals no longer seem to harbour the bacteria that cause Lyme disease. And the symptoms could instead be indicative of chronic fatigue syndrome or depression.
Now Armin Alaedini at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York and his colleagues have found that patients diagnosed with post-Lyme disease syndrome have antibodies that suggest they carried the infection for an unusually long time. The finding, published in Clinical Immunology1, might help the syndrome to be better understood, diagnosed and treated.
Alaedini's team looked at antibodies made in response to a protein called VlsE, which is found on the surface of Borrelia burgdorferi, the tick-borne bacterium that causes Lyme disease.
The antibodies recognize a snippet of the protein called an epitope, and recruit the immune system to attack the bacterium. The researchers found that post-Lyme sufferers have a greater variety of antibodies to this epitope than patients whose infection cleared up quickly.
This finding suggests that patients with chronic symptoms have experienced a prolonged infection, caused by microbes that have evaded the immune system by varying the epitopes they carry. As a result of these variations, the body makes new antibodies targeting the modified protein. The longer the microbe manages to keep changing, the more diverse its host's antibodies become...
(Excerpt) Read more at nature.com ...
Maybe it's some progress. It sounds better than saying it's all in your head, but I don't think the test will be cheap any time soon.
micro/immunology ping
Gee, I can remember back when they vehemently denied that Lyme even existed. How times can change.
There was a vaccine years ago and I got it. My doctor told me that it was fairly successful. However, enter the TRAIL LAWYERS! It was pulled off the market because the risk/reward ratio became too high. Thanks LAWYER SCUM!
Plum Island
Ping
Hmm. I’ve heard that the real reason the vaccine was removed from the market is that people ended up getting lyme from the vaccine itself.
Not according to my physician. I believe theey still have the vaccine available for dogs.
Thank you for posting this. Lyme can certainly leave a person with nerve damage and chronic pain, but I pray that it is something that will eventually be overcome too. I fought Lyme with 3 years of medications, wondering many times if the drugs weren’t even worse than the disease itself. Advances in understanding Lyme Disease are very interesting to me.
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