A 54-year-old male presented to me within the last few weeks, having self-diagnosed himself with Lyme disease. He asked for a Lyme test because of some unexplained tendinitis and a few unexplained aches and pains, which he appeared not be terribly concerned about. His past history was remarkable for a skin disorder diagnosed as intractable eczema, although treated with UV therapy, typical of psoriasis. He states there had been no allergy workup, that he knew about. He went to his family doctor and asked for a Lyme test. He told his GP that previously, doxycycline made his eczema flare, so amoxicillin was prescribed. When he was getting worse, now with significant joint pain, after 1-2 weeks, he sought my attention.
This amiable gentleman has a very positive demeanor and a healthy dose
of denial – maybe a little to “healthy.”
His IgE level of over 4000 was “off the chart.” I have another
patient with primary hyper-IgE syndrome which is an immune deficiency in and of
itself. In this case, the elevation is due to severe allergies (demonstrated
with food, RAST testing). This was not his chief complaint, but I have to see
where all symptoms and problems lead and connect the dots. Oddly, his repeat
Lyme test was negative, but his Babesia test was positive. (He has a history of
night sweat dating back years which he had discounted). To add another
layer of confusion, his rheumatoid and anti-CCP antibody tiers were sky high.
There was no history of significant joint swelling or joint
deformities. His joint pain was asymmetrical and involved primarily large,
rather than small joints.
I will segue from here to a discussion of elevated rheumatoid factor
level. A lot of patients see a rheumatologist long before seeing me, in
this case his only doctors were his GP and his dermatologist. I was the first
to order the tests.
RA or rheumatoid arthritis, is an autoimmune disorder, primarily
involving joints, but which may involve other organ systems at times
(extra-articular manifestations). It is also traditionally classified as a
collagen vascular disorder.
Typically, the disease affects young women, not middle age men. Typically,
involvement begins with small joints, hands and fingers (middle knuckles), is
symmetric and is associated with swelling, frequently progressing to
deformity.
There are atypical cases. A middle age man presenting with a unilateral
(single) knee swelling and pain, may indeed have rheumatoid arthritis: this
would be a rarity.
Rheumatoid arthritis has no connection to Lyme disease or any other
tickborne disease. Or does it? This patient has severe allergic disease
and may also have a form of autoimmune disease. Is there any connection? I
don’t think there is.
A positive rheumatoid factor is frequently elevated in my Lyme patients
and usually resolves with treatment.
I have tended to be dismissive of an elevated RA when the anti-CCP
antibody is negative – the confirmatory test.
All permutations are possible. It is possible to have RA with
both tests negative (RA factor and CCP antibodies) or with one negative and one
positive. Similarly, it is possible to NOT have RA with both tests positive. An
absolute diagnosis cannot be made simply based on finding one or both of these
antibodies. This concept applies to ANA and others markers of rheumatologic
disease. Both rheumatoid arthritis and Lyme are diagnosed clinically, not
reliably by a blood test. I have heard it said that there is no real
rheumatoid arthritis and no real lupus, it is all really Lyme. This is
incorrect. These diseases existed long before Lyme came onto the scene.
Lyme does not cause RA, at least not directly. I have several patients with classic RA triggered by Lyme disease. These patients were genetically predisposed to the illness. If not Lyme, something else may have triggered the disease at some point, including emotional stress.
Lyme does not cause RA, at least not directly. I have several patients with classic RA triggered by Lyme disease. These patients were genetically predisposed to the illness. If not Lyme, something else may have triggered the disease at some point, including emotional stress.
In the most common scenario, Lyme triggers false positive tests for
rheumatoid arthritis, usually rheumatoid factor, but occasionally anti-CCP
antibodies; and, these antibodies disappear when Lyme is successfully treated.
The term false positive may be confusing. These antibodies are in fact present
(real) but they are NOT elevated because of RA but because of Lyme inflammation
of joints. Successful treatment of Lyme refers to a therapy with antimicrobial
agents which eliminates all joint pain and swelling. Getting there may be
difficult. Over time, with treatment, RA factor and CCP antibodies slowly come
down and then disappear.
Plaquenil has may have some mild “anti-Lyme” properties. Some
patients benefit from its anti-inflammatory, immune modulating effects. (Also
used in RA and lupus).
The theory that Lyme persists in intracellular structures and that
alkalization of the intracellular milieu (with Plaquenil) facilitates the
antibacterial properties of drugs like Biaxin is NOT correct.
We know Lyme persistence has to do with pleomorphism (round bodied
forms) and biofilm formations. We also know that Lyme bacteria are predominantly
extracellular and rarely intracellular. Known facts contradict the
theory.
The skin disease is this patient is allergic and/or mast cell mediated,
not autoimmune and unrelated to Lyme disease.
It is important not to confuse different, abnormal (pathological)
immune responses: mast cell disease, allergic disease, autoimmune disease,
Herxheimer reactions (excessive immune responsiveness) and immunodeficiency.
These are all very different entities.
PS: High IgE not caused by Babesia, only caused by parasitic worms. (worms, wheezes and whacky diseases).
So are you saying that this patient's High IgE was caused by parasites? If so, what was your treatment?
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