When I was getting diagnosed 17 years ago with MS, I created a file on my computer, one titled simply “Lyme” dated March 17, 2006. A full 54 pages, culled from dozens of websites, all discussing how easy it is to misdiagnose the tick-borne disease for multiple sclerosis. How negative test results could not be trusted. How CSF banding was in no way definitive. How paying attention to the clinical signs was paramount. How lesions on MRI could deceive.
There was no specific mention of a high heart rate and only 2/3 of the way down on page 40 were knees ever mentioned. (SAE stands for Serious Adverse Event, my suspected stroke.) I must have skimmed past it. And missed the ominous and foretelling all caps warning.
Here it is, from the deep archives.
https://files.constantcontact.com/0b...8.pdf?rdr=true
There was no specific mention of a high heart rate and only 2/3 of the way down on page 40 were knees ever mentioned. (SAE stands for Serious Adverse Event, my suspected stroke.) I must have skimmed past it. And missed the ominous and foretelling all caps warning.
Most typically, patients present with SAE, most often combined with polyneuropathy. Brief episodes of arthritis, primarily involving the knees, generally predate the symptoms and may persist after onset of neurological abnormalities. The TRIAD OF SAE, POLYNEUROPATHY, AND ARTHRITIS IS HIGHLY SUSPICIOUS FOR NEUROBORRELIOSIS.
https://files.constantcontact.com/0b...8.pdf?rdr=true
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