Cognitive Decline in Post-treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome (Touradji et al, 2018)

Dolphin

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Post-treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome seems to be a condition like CFS/postinfectious fatigue syndrome

https://academic.oup.com/acn/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/arclin/acy051/5045218

Cognitive Decline in Post-treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome

Pegah Touradji John N Aucott Ting Yang Alison W Rebman Kathleen T Bechtold

Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
, acy051, https://doi.org/10.1093/arclin/acy051
Published: 26 June 2018

Abstract
Objective
Patient-reported cognitive complaints are common in those with post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS). Objective evidence of cognitive impairment in this population is variable in part due to methodological variability in existing studies. In this study, we sought to use a systematic approach to characterizing PTLDS based on the most current consensus diagnosis. We further examined PTLDS-related cognitive decline, operationalized as a significant decline in cognitive test performance relative to premorbid cognitive ability.

Method
We enrolled a case series of 124 patients with confirmed PTLDS defined by Infectious Diseases Society of America-proposed case definition. Cognitive functioning was evaluated using standardized neuropsychological measures.

Results
The majority (92%) of participants endorsed some level of cognitive difficulty, yet 50% of the sample showed no statistically or clinically significant cognitive decline, 26% of the sample evidenced significant cognitive decline on measures of memory and variably on measures of processing speed, and 24% of the sample were excluded from analyses due to suboptimal test engagement.

Conclusions
The current findings are consistent with the literature showing that the most robust neurocognitive deficit associated with PTLDS is in verbal memory and with variable decline in processing speed. Compared to population normative comparison standards, PTLDS-related cognitive decline remains mild. Thus, further research is needed to better understand factors related to the magnitude of subjective cognitive complaints as well as objective evidence of mild cognitive decline.

Infections diseases, non-HIV, Mild cognitive impairment
 
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