Literature DB >> 15534758

Acute peripheral facial palsy in Lyme disease -- a distal neuritis at the infection site.

H Eiffert1, A Karsten, T Schlott, A Ohlenbusch, R Laskawi, M Hoppert, H-J Christen.   

Abstract

AIM: Children with acute peripheral facial palsy have often suffered tick bites and/or erythema migrans in the head/neck region on the same side. With respect to the pathogenesis of neuroborreliosis this topographical association was investigated in an animal model.
METHODS: A Borrelia garinii strain, isolated from the CSF of a child with acute facial palsy, was injected in 9 rats intracutaneously in the right subauricular region. Infected rats were examined for clinical symptoms of Lyme disease, the spread of the spirochetes was investigated by PCR of necropsies (facial nerves, trigeminus nerves, heart, brain, skin) up to 47 days after infection. The nerve tissues were investigated by histology, immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy.
RESULTS: None of the rats developed a facial palsy or other symptoms of Lyme disease. Borrelia DNA was found in the heart after 5 days and in the brain after 7 days of infection up to the end of investigation (47 days), as well as in the ipsilateral peripheral nerves after 7 to 33 days. Borrelia was detected by electron microscopy near endoneural vessels of the facial nerve. Peri-, epi-, and endoneural infiltrations of macrophages, plasma cells and B cells characterized an inflammation of the facial and trigeminus nerves ipsilateral to the infection site.
CONCLUSION: An infection with Borrelia garinii in the subauricular region induces an ipsilateral neuritis of peripheral nerves. The particular vulnerability of the human facial nerve may be a result of its long intraosseus course. Thus, an inflammatory edema may injure the nerve in the canalis facialis.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15534758     DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-821174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropediatrics        ISSN: 0174-304X            Impact factor:   1.947


  6 in total

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Review 2.  Lyme disease--current state of knowledge.

Authors:  Roland Nau; Hans-Jürgen Christen; Helmut Eiffert
Journal:  Dtsch Arztebl Int       Date:  2009-01-30       Impact factor: 5.594

3.  Diagnosis and treatment of the neuromuscular manifestations of lyme disease.

Authors:  John J Halperin
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Neurol       Date:  2007-03       Impact factor: 3.598

4.  Intra-aural tick bite causing unilateral facial nerve palsy in 29 cases over 16 years in Kandy, Sri Lanka: is rickettsial aetiology possible?

Authors:  Senanayake A M Kularatne; Ranjan Fernando; Sinnadurai Selvaratnam; Chandrasiri Narampanawa; Kosala Weerakoon; Sujanthe Wickramasinghe; Manoji Pathirage; Vajira Weerasinghe; Anura Bandara; Jayanthe Rajapakse
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2018-08-22       Impact factor: 3.090

5.  Lyme Neuroborreliosis in a Patient with Breast Cancer: MRI and PET/CT Findings.

Authors:  Mathilde Ørbæk; Camilla Klausen; Anne-Mette Lebech; Helene Mens
Journal:  Diagnostics (Basel)       Date:  2020-01-09

6.  Anti-inflammatory effects of dexamethasone and meloxicam on Borrelia burgdorferi-induced inflammation in neuronal cultures of dorsal root ganglia and myelinating cells of the peripheral nervous system.

Authors:  Geeta Ramesh; Olivia C Meisner; Mario T Philipp
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  6 in total

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