In the International Medical Case Reports Journal, researchers describe a 31-year-old woman with PTLDS “whose pain was refractory to treatment options such as radiofrequency ablation, vitamin infusion therapy, opioid analgesics, and other pharmacotherapies.” [2] Her pain began gradually, 3 years prior and a short time after being diagnosed and treated for Lyme disease, explains Hanna from the Florida Spine Institute in Clearwater, Florida. “The patient complained of diffuse body pain (6–7/10), fatigue, headache, and brain fog (7–8/10).” [2]
The woman’s pain worsened despite treatment, increasing during everyday activity. “Her current treatment regimen,” according to Hanna and colleagues, “included fentanyl transdermal patches, clonazepam, oxycodone hydrochloride, and citalopram hydrobromide.” Physical therapy, IV vitamin infusions, trigger point injections and a radiofrequency ablation procedure did not alleviate her pain.
The authors’ surmised that the woman’s pain may be related to an immune dysfunction brought on by the infection. Ketamine exhibits anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory actions, explains Hanna, which may be useful in the treatment of PTLDS. [2] It is also an anesthetic and has been proven successful “in placebo-controlled clinical trials for the treatment of depression, suicidal ideations, and pain.”
[bctt tweet=”Ketamine is found to reduce pain in patient with post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome. ” username=”DrDanielCameron”]
The patient was prescribed ketamine off label for pain. “Ketamine has been utilized off-label as an effective option for treating certain neuropathic pain conditions that currently do not have gold standard treatment options such as complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) and fibromyalgia,” states Hanna. [2]
Ketamine was found to effectively lessen the woman’s pain, decreasing it by approximately 71%. Furthermore, her pain relief was achieved without using increased doses of opioid analgesics. And, in fact, the patient was able to reduce her fentanyl dosage by 40%, from 125 μg to 75 μg, every 48 hours, explains Hanna. “The patient’s depression and suicidal ideations were also eliminated post-ketamine infusion.”
Given these findings, Hanna suggests, “Opioid-sparing therapies, such as ketamine, should be used more frequently for the management of chronic pain.”
The authors did not address the concerns raised by physicians as to whether a persistent Lyme disease infection or tick-borne co-infection might underlie the illness.
Related articles:
The risk of pain and fatigue after three weeks of Lyme disease treatment
Women with chronic Lyme disease may suffer from a severe immune response triggered by the disease
References:
- Bechtold KT, Rebman AW, Crowder LA, Johnson-Greene D, Aucott JN. Standardized Symptom Measurement of Individuals with Early Lyme Disease Over Time. Arch Clin Neuropsychol. 2017;32(2):129-141.
- Hanna AF, Abraham B, Hanna A, Smith AJ. Effects of intravenous ketamine in a patient with post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome. Int Med Case Rep J. 2017;10:305-308.
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