Abstract | PURPOSE: METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal, prospective study among 234 participants with and 49 participants without prior LD. All completed survey metrics for fatigue, pain, sleep, depression, and quality of life. An operationalized PTLD definition was applied to both cohorts, and the distributions of clinical outcomes and symptoms were examined. RESULTS: In total, 13·7% of participants with a history of prior LD met criteria for PTLD compared with 4·1% of those without a history of prior LD. Participants with prior LD were approximately 5·28 times as likely to meet PTLD criteria compared with those without prior LD (p = 0·042) and had 8-15 times as high odds of reporting moderate or severe fatigue and muscle pain (p = 0·002, 0·047, respectively). Risk of meeting PTLD criteria was also independently increased among females and those with higher exposure to previous traumatic life events. CONCLUSION: Participants ideally diagnosed and treated for prior LD reported more symptoms on standardized surveys and were more likely to meet criteria for PTLD than those without prior LD.
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Authors | John N Aucott, Ting Yang, Isaac Yoon, Debra Powell, Steven A Geller, Alison W Rebman |
Journal | International journal of infectious diseases : IJID : official publication of the International Society for Infectious Diseases
(Int J Infect Dis)
Vol. 116
Pg. 230-237
(Mar 2022)
ISSN: 1878-3511 [Electronic] Canada |
PMID | 35066160
(Publication Type: Journal Article)
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Copyright | Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved. |
Topics |
- Fatigue
(etiology)
- Female
- Humans
- Lyme Disease
(diagnosis, drug therapy, epidemiology)
- Post-Lyme Disease Syndrome
- Prospective Studies
- Quality of Life
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