Neurolyme disease

Lyme disease (LD) is a tick-borne infectious disease that has been recognized in recent years as a natural epidemic of humans and animals and affects many organs of the human body. Approximately 15% and 8% of patients, respectively, show significant neurological symptoms and signs of cardiac involvement. The nervous system can be manifested as meningitis, encephalitis, chorea, ataxia of the cerebellum, encephalitis, motor and sensory radiculitis, and myelitis, and other diseases, but with meningitis, encephalitis, and radiculitis See more. Lesions can recur and occasionally develop into dementia and personality disorders. The pathogen of Lyme disease is Borrelia Burgdorferi (BB). Since Burgdorferi and colleagues isolated Lyme disease pathogens in 1982, Lyme disease has developed rapidly in terms of epidemiology, etiology, clinical science, pathogenesis, and vaccines, deepening the understanding of Lyme disease.

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