Discovery of New Bacterium Further Muddles Lyme Disease Diagnosis
This finding could eventually represent an important advance in a poorly understood field, but several hurdles stand in the way of therapeutic relevance. In particular, further testing is needed to conclusively determine if this new microbe causes Lyme disease. To distinguish causation from mere correlation, researchers may infect a mouse or rabbit with the bacterium and observe whether the animal develops Lyme-like symptoms. If the animal gets sick, being able to recover the suspected pathogen from the diseased animal would provide additional support for causality.
If true, a new cause of Lyme disease could help to explain why Lyme remains such a nebulous diagnosis. Surprisingly little is known about Borrelia bacteria – especially how they interact with ticks and humans – because they often grow poorly in the laboratory. As a result, doctors must rely upon highly variable symptoms and indirect measures of infection when offering diagnoses. Any new data regarding the underlying biology of Lyme disease, therefore, will be a welcome sight to microbiologists and physicians alike.
Acknowledgments: Many thanks to Dr. Daria Van Tyne, a postdoctoral fellow in the Gilmore Lab at Harvard Medical School, for providing her expertise and commentary on the topic.
Managing Correspondent: Christopher Gerry
Original Research Article: Identification of a novel pathogenic Borrelia species causing Lyme borreliosis with unusually high spirochaetaemia: a descriptive study – The Lancet Infectious Diseases
Media Coverage: New Cause for Lyme Disease Complicates Already Murky Diagnosis – Scientific American