I met this 58 year old male one month ago; I am now seeing
him for a follow-up visit. Seven weeks
ago he went to the ER in his local Southern Maryland hospital. He presented
with fever, malaise, chills, sweats, headache and achiness. He told the ER
staff he heard voices. He states a psychiatrist evaluated him in the hospital
and found nothing wrong. He was diagnosed with a virus. Upon discharge he
adamantly insisted on a Lyme test which was reluctantly performed. The results
were positive and he was started on a 4 week course of doxycycline of which he
was in the middle of when we first met. Obtaining a history I asked about the
voices. I dug for a little more information. The voices were fairly benign;
they would repeat what he said and told him they were not going away. He heard
three distinct voices, both male and female. I asked for how long had he heard
voices. Although the voices became more boisterous and intrusive with the
recent illness, he had in fact heard voices for 10 years. Otherwise, he
functioned normally – did well at work, had friends and socialized appropriately
and he denied any history of psychiatric disease or treatment. He told me the
voices started when he moved into his deceased parent’s 170 year old farm house.
He went on to tell me the house was haunted. He wasn’t the only one who
experienced it. Things fell off counters, doors slammed, footsteps were heard
on the stairs and he told me that something tugged or pulled at him at times.
He told me that 8 separate friends had tried to stay over at the house and none
could stay the night, terrified by similar ghostly encounters. He went on to
tell me that ghost hunters came to the house; set up all kinds of equipment and
never came back. No one else ever heard
voices, only he did. About 4 years ago he moved out of the home into a new
domicile: the voices followed him. He thought that supernatural spirits
followed him from one house to the next.
At our first visit he admitted to some brain fog; he was not
as sharp as usual. Perhaps his mood was a little down and he was a bit snappy.
He did complain of ongoing fatigue and malaise, low grade fevers and some aches
and pains. He did not appear to be terribly ill.
Following the dictum: Lyme plus Bartonella makes you crazy;
I ran some tests and I treated him with doxycycline and rifampin. I also
prescribed a low dose of the antipsychotic drug Risperdal.
A week later the results were back. The ELISA was positive
and every Western Blot band on the MDL test was highly positive. All of the IgG
bands were reactive. He was also positive for antibodies to Bartonella
henselae. Interesting. He is a very likeable fellow. He appears to be sincere.
His speech patterns are normal and his thinking appears cogent, clear and
coherent. He shows no signs of delusional thinking (other than the story above)
and no signs of paranoia.
I saw him today after a month of therapy. He told me he felt
80% better. “How about the voices?” “Gone,
completely gone doc.” The voices had been gone for more than 2 weeks. This was
the first time he had been free of voices for 10 years! This gentleman spends
most of his time outdoors in a Lyme endemic region. Was this his first
encounter with Lyme? No. The positive 31 and 34 bands only appear after some
time, at least 6 months to a year. This was clearly not his first exposure to
Lyme. Something acute had happened. The Bartonella was both IgM and IgG
positive, suggesting a new infection.
Could he be schizophrenic?
I don’t think so. Aside from auditory hallucinations he is
not psychotic. Schizophrenia doesn’t suddenly come on at age 48. The usual age
of onset is around 20. Schizophrenics typically exhibit concrete thinking or
loose, disjointed thoughts and expressions (psychosis), are socially isolated
(this guy appears to have lots of friends) and I would have expected the
condition to further decompensate over-time if left untreated. Also, I would not have expected the lowest
dose of Risperdal to have been so incredibly effective. What dispatched the
voices? The antibiotics? The antipsychotic? Time will tell. For now, the spirits are gone
and his mind is peaceful.