PMID: 15369225Sep 17, 2004Paper

Pharmacological aspects of Lyme borreliosis

Ceská a Slovenská farmacie : casopis Ceské farmaceutické spolecnosti a Slovenské farmaceutické spolecnosti
J Dvoráková, V Celer

Abstract

Clinical signs of Lyme boreliosis in humans are versatile and in their whole scope they finally affect the nervous system, heart, and joints. The therapeutic effect of antibiotics is maximal in the first acute stage of the disease when doxycycline and amoxiciline are administered. These antibiotics possess a comparable in vitro effect, tissue penetration, pharmacokinetics, and therapeutic effect. The treatment of disseminated infections in the second stage, such as neuroborreliosis, carditis, and iritis, is difficult and with relative success they are treated with large doses of penicillin G, or cefriaxon, and doxycycline. The treatment of the third stage of borreliosis aims at chronic inflammatory changes in the affected organs. Antibiotics, however, are successfully effective only in 50% of cases. Administration of antibiotics, such as tetracycline, cefuroxim, doxycycline, or large doses of penicillin is a long-term one, coming up to four weeks. A special therapeutic regimen is used in pregnant women and children.

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