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Volume 2, Number 1—January 1996
Dispatch

Cluster of Lyme Disease Cases at a Summer Camp in Kent County, Maryland

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Author affiliations: *University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA; †Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Baltimore, Maryland, USA; ‡Kent County Health Department, Chestertown, Maryland, USA §Private practice of medicine, Chestertown, Maryland, USA; ¶U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal Research Station, Laramie, Wyoming, USA; #Division of Vector-Borne Infectious Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA.

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Lyme disease is the second most prevalent emerging infectious disease in the United States; more than 65,000 cases have been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since the disease was first described by Steere and colleagues in 1977 (1).

In July 1994, a physician in Chestertown, Maryland, reported eight cases of Lyme disease to the Kent County Health Department. Five were from a summer camp 10 miles north of Rock Hall on the Chesapeake Bay. In one case-patient, a 9-year-old camper from Pennsylvania, erythema migrans (EM) rash and left facial nerve palsy developed the day after she arrived at the camp.

To determine whether Lyme disease was present at the camp, we interviewed the eight counselors who had EM or febrile illnesses during July and 43 of the remaining 91 camp employees. Clusters of cases of Lyme disease with a short and specific exposure period (i.e., 10–12 weeks for the 100 counselors and 2–4 weeks for the 1,600 campers) had not been investigated in recent years.

All 51 surveyed camp employees gave histories of tick exposure throughout the summer. Four counselors had EM of 5 cm in diameter without other symptoms or signs and were treated with amoxicillin by the camp physician. Four other counselors had recurrent fever of 102F to 104F, severe headaches, somnolence, malaise, fatigue, myalgia, and anorexia. All four described extensive fatigue, drowsiness, and difficulty in getting out of bed. Three described shaking chills, and one had watery diarrhea. The camp physician admitted them all to the camp dispensary; Lyme disease was not diagnosed in any of them; only the patient with diarrhea was given an antimicrobial agent, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole. All patients improved in 3 to 5 days.

Sera were obtained in mid-August from the 51 employees; for the eight patients described above, this was 4 to 7 weeks after the onset of illness. All sera were nonreactive in indirect fluorescence antibody (IFA) tests against antigens for Rickettsia rickettsii and Ehrlichia equi (used to screen for human granulocytic ehrlichiosis). One patient, who had an EM-like rash but no other symptoms, had an IFA titer of 512 for E. chaffeensis (used to screen for human monocytic ehrlichiosis). Serologic testing for Borrelia burgdorferi by enzyme immunoassay (EIA) (Lyme Stat, BioWhittker, Walkersville, Maryland) identified patients with positive or borderline results (Table).

Hard ticks were collected by dragging felt material at several sites within the camp on three occasions during August. Collected adult Ixodes scapularis were tested by an antigen capture EIA for outer surface protein A (2). Ten (16.9%) of 59 male ticks were positive for B. burgdorferi. Although the infection rate was higher in female ticks collected from the camp, the results cannot be interpreted because the female ticks were co-fed on rabbits; it is not certain whether this could cross-infect ticks feeding on the same animals.

We considered exposure to B. burgdorferi in this camp to be high (suspected acute Lyme disease-like illness incidence of 6% to 8%). The incidence rate depends on whether patients 6 and 7, who had flulike illnesses and positive EIAs and negative Western blot results (Marblot Strip Test System, Mardex Diagnostics, Carlsbad, California) are considered to have had Lyme disease, and on assuming that the 49 unexamined counselors did not have Lyme disease. Also, Kent County has one of the highest incidences of Lyme disease in the state (3), many deer were present in the woods and fields in and around the camp, and all counselors reported frequent exposure to ticks.

The four patients who had an acute febrile illness without cutaneous lesions were not initially suspected to have acute Lyme disease. We believe that flulike illness without EM is a more common manifestation of acute Lyme disease than is generally appreciated since, as in patients 5 through 8 (Table), Lyme disease is often not considered in the differential diagnosis (4). Acutely febrile patients, who have been bitten by a tick in Lyme disease-endemic areas also should be considered for early antibiotic therapy. Doxycycline or another tetracycline is effective for Lyme disease as well as for infections with E. chaffeensis and R. rickettsii, which are also transmitted by ticks and may have a similar clinical syndrome (5). Serologic testing, although it can confirm the diagnosis during the convalescence phase, may not establish an early diagnosis in either case, since antibody responses to all three infections are usually delayed until 2 to 4 weeks after the onset of symptoms and may not occur in patients treated with antibiotics (5-8).

We interpreted the Western blots according to criteria proposed at the Second National Meeting on Serological Diagnosis of Lyme disease (6). Of the four patients with EM and with EIAs positive for B. burgdorferi, patient 3, who had antibodies to E. chaffeensis, did not have IgG and/or IgM evidence of B. burgdorferi infection by Western blot. He also had no symptoms compatible with monocytic ehrlichiosis. Two (patients 6 and 7) of the four with flulike illnesses and with EIAs positive for B. burgdorferi did not have B. burgdorferi infection confirmed by Western blot. Positive or borderline serologic results for B. burgdorferi infection in patients 9 through 16 (Table) who did not have a clinical history compatible with Lyme disease could have been caused by asymptomatic infection, antibody responses from prior infections, cross-reactions from other infections, or false-positive reactions (8). Many of the counselors had been at the camp during previous summers and could have had prior mild, nondiagnosed infections with B. burgdorferi. Another possibility is that the EIA titers in some of the patients were high normal values, which may have been the case for patients 9, 14, 15, and 16. Patient 13 who had IgM evidence of recent infection on Western blot may have had a mild infection with B. burgdorferi during the previous month. However, this is impossible to confirm without acute-phase and convalescent-phase (or preexposure and post-exposure) serum samples. This is also pertinent to those with flulike symptoms and negative Western blot results (patients 6 and 7).

The usefulness of using EIA screening and Western blot confirmation in seroepidemiologic studies for Lyme disease has not been established. The positive predictive value of a diagnostic test is highly dependent on the prevalence of the disease being studied. If the prevalence of Lyme disease in the population screened is very low, the positive predictive value of testing may be too low to be diagnostically useful.

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Acknowledgment

Dr. James Olson, Viral and Rickettsial Diseases Branch, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, performed IFA testing for R. rickettsii and E. chaffeensis antibodies. Dr. J. Stephen Dumler, Pathology Department, University of Maryland School of Medicine, performed the IFA testing for E. equi antibodies. We also thank Mr. Charles Hayword and his camp staff, including Ms. Carol M. Brown, for assisting in this investigation and Dr. Ebenezer Israel, Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, for advice and assistance. This project was supported by the Epidemiology and Disease Control Program, Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, and by the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research Grant 5 RO1 HSO7813.

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References

  1. Steere  AC, Maliwista  SE, Snydman  DR, Shope  RE, Andiman  WA, Ross  MR, Lyme arthritis: an epidemic of oligoarticular arthritis in children and adults in three Connecticut communities. Arthritis Rheum. 1977;20:717. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  2. Burkot  TR, Patrican  L, Piesman  J. Field trial of an outer surface protein A (OspA) antigen-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect Borrelia burgdorferi in Ixodes scapularis. Am J Trop Med Hyg. 1994;50:3548.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  3. Steinberg  SH, Strickland  GT, Pena  C, Israel  E. Lyme disease surveillance in Maryland, 1992. Ann Epidemiol. 1996;6. In press. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar
  4. Feder  HM Jr, Gerber  MA, Krause  PJ, Ryan  R. Shapiro Ed. Early Lyme disease: a flu-like illness without erythema migrans. Pediatrics. 1993;91:4569.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  5. Dumler  JS, Bakken  JS. Ehrlichial diseases of humans: emerging tick-borne infections. Clin Infect Dis. 1995;20:110210.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  6. Recommendations for test performance and interpretation from the Second National Conference on Serologic Diagnosis of Lyme Disease. MMWR. 1995;44:5901.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  7. Engstrom  SM, Shoop  E, Johnson  RC. J Clin Microbiol. 1995;33:41927. Immunoblot interpretation criteria for serodiagnosis of early Lyme disease.PubMedGoogle Scholar
  8. Magnarelli  LA. Current status of laboratory diagnosis for Lyme disease. Am J Med. 1995;98:10S4S. DOIPubMedGoogle Scholar

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid0201.960105

Table of Contents – Volume 2, Number 1—January 1996

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Page created: December 20, 2010
Page updated: December 20, 2010
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The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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