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Dr. Richard Horowitz I just had a letter published in the BMJ regarding the problems of diagnosing Lyme disease and implications for the population at large regarding long term disability:

I just had a letter published in the BMJ regarding the problems of diagnosing Lyme disease and implications for the population at large regarding long term disability:
Lyme disease: time to shift the paradigm. Approach to diagnosing Lyme disease misses a large proportion of cases
BMJ 2016; 352 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i113 (Published 13 January 2016) Cite this as: BMJ 2016;352:i113
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1. Richard I Horowitz, internist1
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1. medical@hvhac.com
Many physicians who care for patients with Lyme disease and who have followed the decades long debate on appropriate diagnosis and treatment agree that a new approach is needed.1
Numerous scientific papers have shown that the two tiered testing strategy for diagnosing Borrelia burgdorferimisses a large proportion of cases.2 This approach cannot diagnose new species of borrelia, including B miyamotoi and B burgdorferi sensu lato, which are also known to cause chronic illness.3 4 Persistence of borrelia has also been recently reported by Johns Hopkins researchers, and mechanisms of persistence have included immune evasion and formation of biofilms. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reported a 320% increase in the number of Lyme cases over the past two decades,5 so without a fundamental shift in the medical paradigm that we use to diagnose and treat Lyme disease the number of people chronically disabled from this illness will greatly increase.
Notes
Cite this as: BMJ 2016;352:i113
Footnotes
• Competing interests: None declared.
References
1. ↵
Borgermans L, Perronne C, Balicer R, et al. Lyme disease: time for a new approach? BMJ 2015;351:h6520. (3 December.)
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2. ↵
Ang CW, Notermans DW, Hommes M, et al. Large differences between test strategies for the detection of anti-Borrelia antibodies are revealed by comparing eight ELISAs and five immunoblots. Eur J Clin Microbiol Infect Dis2011;30:1027-32.
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3. ↵
Branda JA, Rosenberg ES. Borrelia miyamotoi: a lesson in disease discovery. Ann Intern Med2013;159:61-2.
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4. ↵
Rudenko N, Golovchenko M, Vancova M, et al. Isolation of live Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato spirochetes from patients with undefined disorders and symptoms not typical for Lyme borreliosis. Clin Microbiol Infect2015; published online 7 Dec.
5. ↵
Kugeler KJ, Farley GM, Forrester JD, et al. Geographic distribution and expansion of human Lyme disease, United States. Emerg Infect Dis2015;21:1455-7. http://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/21/8/14-1878_article.
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