2006
DOI: 10.1007/s00508-006-0659-1
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Erythema migrans nach Infektion durch Borrelia afzelii oder Borrelia garinii: Abhängigkeit des klinischen Erscheinungsbildes vom Geschlecht der Patienten

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Cited by 20 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 27 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…Borrelia garinii-associated macular EM is found in older patients, preferentially on the trunk, develops more rapidly and after a shorter incubation period, and is generally larger (Carlsson et al, 2003;Logar et al, 2004). These patients also more often have local and systemic symptoms and laboratory abnormalities (CRP, liver function tests) and are more frequently seropositive (Logar et al, 2004;Bennet et al, 2006). Thus B. garinii appears to induce a more virulent infection in European EM patients than does B. afzelii.…”
Section: Erythema Migrans In Europementioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Borrelia garinii-associated macular EM is found in older patients, preferentially on the trunk, develops more rapidly and after a shorter incubation period, and is generally larger (Carlsson et al, 2003;Logar et al, 2004). These patients also more often have local and systemic symptoms and laboratory abnormalities (CRP, liver function tests) and are more frequently seropositive (Logar et al, 2004;Bennet et al, 2006). Thus B. garinii appears to induce a more virulent infection in European EM patients than does B. afzelii.…”
Section: Erythema Migrans In Europementioning
confidence: 94%
“…The patient's immune response is influenced by several factors, including age and sex, inducing varying clinical expressions of Lyme borreliosis in children and adults (M€ ullegger, 2004;Bennet et al, 2006). Differences in tissue microenvironment, such as the presence of stromal cells in varying body sites and their interaction with infiltrating immune cells, as well as modulation of the immune response by ultraviolet radiation in sun-exposed surfaces, may be additional factors that influence the course of infection (Brown et al, 1995;Douglas et al, 2002).…”
Section: Pathogenesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 Central clearing is less frequent in B. garinii infection, which is common in Europe. 8 Multiple lesions caused by haematogenous spread of Borrelia spp. occur in around a quarter of cases.…”
Section: Erythema Migransmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multiple EM may also occur but are usually not the result of multiple tick bites; it rather indicates disseminated infection of the Borrelia spirochetes (Bratton et al, 2008). The diagnosis of EM is rather clinical than serological, patients with typical lesions are usually seronegative for Borrelia (Stanek et al, 1996;Strle, 1999 (Bennet et al, 2006;Cerar et al, 2008;Foldvari et al, 2005;Hulinska et al, 2009;Ornstein et al, 2001;Strle & Stanek, 2009). …”
Section: Erythema Migransmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second most common anatomical site of tick attachment recorded by the TBD STING-study participants was torso/dorsum (22%), followed by arms (18%), groin or genital (6%), and head or neck (4%). These proportions correspond arbitrarily to the anatomical distribution of EM that was found among LB patients (n = 118): legs (64%), torso/dorsum (25%), arms (10%) and genitalia (1.7%) (Bennet et al, 2006).…”
Section: Where On the Body Do Tick-bitten Persons Find Attached Ticks?mentioning
confidence: 99%