Colocalization of Radicular Pain and Erythema Migrans in Patients with Bannwarth Syndrome Suggests a Direct Spread of Borrelia into the Central Nervous System

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Abstract

Background: There is a general assumption that after deposition into skin, Lyme borreliae disseminate hematogenously to other organs, resulting in extracutaneous manifestations of Lyme borreliosis, including Lyme neuroborreliosis. However, our experience over the past 40 years, along with several published case reports that observed colocalization of radicular pain and erythema migrans (EM) in patients with borrelial meningoradiculoneuritis (Bannwarth syndrome), argues against hematogenous dissemination in Lyme neuroborreliosis. Methods: We compared the location of EM in 112 patients with Bannwarth syndrome to 12315 EM patients without neurological involvement. Moreover, we assessed the colocalization of EM and radicular pain in patients with Bannwarth syndrome. Results: Compared to >12000 EM patients without neurological involvement, patients with Bannwarth syndrome had a significantly higher frequency of EM on head/neck (6% vs 1%; P=.0005) and trunk (47% vs 24%; P

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Ogrinc, K., Kastrin, A., Lotrič-Furlan, S., Bogovič, P., Rojko, T., Maraspin, V., … Strle, F. (2022). Colocalization of Radicular Pain and Erythema Migrans in Patients with Bannwarth Syndrome Suggests a Direct Spread of Borrelia into the Central Nervous System. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 75(1), 81–87. https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciab867

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