View clinical trials related to Lyme Disease.
Filter by:Primary Aims: Modify an existing teleyoga intervention to use with Lyme disease (LD) patients and address the technical challenges of at-home teleyoga
This is a research study of the investigational drug 2217LS in healthy volunteers. Investigational means 2217LS is a new drug that has not been approved for the treatment of any disease. 2217LS is human antibody designed to provide protection from Lyme disease. Lyme disease is a disease carried by infected ticks and can cause the infection to spread to the joints, heart and nervous system in humans. This is the first time 2217LS will be given to humans. This is not a study of how well 2217LS works against Lyme disease. The only purposes of this study are to: 1) Learn about the safety and tolerability of a subcutaneous (SC [under the skin]) injection of 2217LS when administered to healthy volunteers. 2) Find out how much 2217LS is in the blood of healthy volunteers after receiving 2217LS SC. In this study, groups of healthy volunteers will be given different doses of 2217LS by SC injection. Volunteers will stay in the study unit for a total of 4 overnights. The planned duration of participation is up to 14 months. Study personnel will monitor their safety using standard procedures like physical examinations, electrocardiograms, questions about possible side effects, blood and urine tests. The amount of 2217LS in their blood will also be measured.
In this retrospective cohort study of patients with early Lyme neuroborreliosis (LNB), clinical and microbiologic characteristics and long-term outcome of definite vs. possible LNB were evaluated at a single university medical center in Slovenia. Severity of acute disease and long-term outcome during a 12-month follow-up were assessed using a composite clinical score based on objective clinical findings and subjective complaints.
ImmuneSense Lyme is a study, which is designed to better understand the immune response to Lyme disease. This is critically important because the immune system may be able to tell us important information about how our own bodies detect and respond to the disease that current tests cannot. Data collected from this study may accelerate the development of better diagnostics for Lyme disease and improve outcomes for many.
This study will determine the effectiveness of a nutraceutical in treating the lingering effects of Lyme Disease after antibiotic treatment.
To access the effectiveness of Acetogenins in treating Post-Lyme Disease Syndrome (PLDS).
In the Main Study Phase a total of 246 subjects were randomized 2:2:1 into three treatment groups to receive either VLA15 with Alum (lower or higher dose) or Placebo. Main Study Phase vaccinations were administered as intramuscular injections on Day 1, Day 57 and Day 180. In the Booster Phase subjects from the higher dose group who completed their primary immunization schedule according to protocol will be randomized 2:1 to receive an additional higher dose VLA15 vaccination or Placebo at Month 18. Study duration in the Main Study Phase per subject is a maximum of 20 months. Overall study Duration is estimated to be 22 months. Study duration per subject in the Booster Phase is a maximum of approximately 13 months. Study duration per subject in the Main Study Phase and Booster Phase together is estimated to be a maximum of approximately 33 months. Overall study duration (i.e., First-Subject-In to Last-Subject Out/ end of Booster Phase) is estimated to be approximately 37 months.
In Europe, tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus causing TBE is transmitted by the bite of Ixodes ricinus tick, which can also transmit Lyme borreliae , the causative agent of Lyme borreliosis (LB). Since TBE and LB are both endemic with high incidence rates in Slovenia, we should be attentive to the possibility of double infections. Double infections with TBE virus and Lyme borreliae were reported to occur rarely even in endemic countries, however reliable data on coinfection rates are rather limited. Microbiological diagnosis of TBE virus infection is quite straightforward, and there is no specific therapy for TBE available so far. This markedly differs from borrelial infection, in which case interpretation of serological test results demands more caution, but there is highly efficient antibiotic treatment available for LB. This may lead to over prescribing of antibiotics to TBE patients with documented borrelial antibodies in serum indicating possible coinfection with Lyme borreliae, but missing clinical or microbiological criteria for proven borrelial coinfection. Approximately 10% of patients who had been treated appropriately for LB and about one third of patients after TBE report nonspecific subjective complaints, such as fatigue, headache, arthralgia, and myalgia, termed post-Lyme and post-encephalitic symptoms, respectively. These may not be differentiated clearly from nonspecific symptoms occurring with a rather substantial incidence also in the general population. A trend of ascribing medically unexplained nonspecific subjective symptoms to LB in subjects with positive borrelial antibodies in serum puzzles the situation further. The aim of this prospective observational study was to assess the proportion and clinical implication of proven and possible coinfection with Lyme borreliae in patients with TBE, and to evaluate the association between anti-borrelial antibiotic therapy and clinical outcome in the subgroup of patients with possible coinfection.
Approximately 10-20% of patients experience ongoing symptoms despite having received standard antibiotic therapy for Lyme disease. Possible explanations for persistent symptoms include persistent infection and/or post-infectious causes. Recent in vitro studies indicate that disulfiram is effective at killing both the actively replicating and the more quiescent persister forms of Borrelia burgdorferi, the microbe that causes Lyme Disease. In this study, the investigators are examining the safety of disulfiram among patients with post-treatment Lyme disease symptoms. The investigators are also conducting a preliminary investigation regarding the relative benefit of 4 vs 8 weeks of treatment with disulfiram.
The aim of this study is to compare two different serological tests, IFA and LIAISON, for detection of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato IgM and IgG antibiodies in children with early disseminated Lyme borreliosis.