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Long-term Outcomes of Persons With Lyme Disease
CONTEXT Few data exist about the long-term outcomes of patients with Lyme disease. OBJECTIVE To assess the long-term outcomes of patients with Lyme disease. DESIGN Two-part project including a community-based longitudinal cohort study and a matched cohort study. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS Six hundred...
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Published in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2000-02, Vol.283 (5), p.609-616 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | CONTEXT Few data exist about the long-term outcomes of patients with Lyme disease. OBJECTIVE To assess the long-term outcomes of patients with Lyme disease. DESIGN Two-part project including a community-based longitudinal cohort study
and a matched cohort study. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS Six hundred seventy-eight patients identified from a random sample of
all reports of Connecticut residents with suspected Lyme disease submitted
to the Connecticut Department of Public Health from 1984-1991 were evaluated
in the longitudinal study; for a random subsample of 212 patients from the
larger study, 212 age-matched controls without Lyme disease also were enrolled. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Self-reports or parents' reports of symptoms and ability to perform
certain daily activities since diagnosis of Lyme disease; scores on the 36-Item
Short-Form Health Survey and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression
scale, for adults, by case-definition status and between patients and controls. RESULTS Of the 678 patients, 51.6% were female, 34.4% were children, and 64.3%
met the national surveillance case definition for Lyme disease. Most patients
(85.6%) were treated with antimicrobial agents. Interviews were conducted
a median of 51 months after diagnosis (range, 15-135 months). An increased
frequency of symptoms (eg, pain, fatigue) or of difficulty with daily activities
(eg, performing housework, exercising) was reported by 69% of the patients,
although few (19%) of these problems were attributed to Lyme disease. Whenever
there was a statistically significant difference in the frequencies of either
increased symptoms or increased difficulties with typical activities between
those who did or did not meet the surveillance case definition, in all instances
the greater frequency of problems was in the group that did not meet the case
definition. The frequencies of reports of both increased symptoms and increased
difficulties with typical activities among patients who had been diagnosed
as having Lyme disease were similar to those among age-matched controls without
Lyme disease. CONCLUSIONS In this cohort, although many patients reported increases in symptoms
and/or increased difficulties with typical daily activities between 1 and
11 years after diagnosis of Lyme disease, the frequencies of these reports
were similar to the frequencies of such reports among age-matched controls
without Lyme disease. |
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ISSN: | 0098-7484 1538-3598 |
DOI: | 10.1001/jama.283.5.609 |