Lyme arthritis. Spirochetes found in synovial microangiopathic lesions.

YE Johnston, PH Duray, AC Steere… - The American journal …, 1985 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
YE Johnston, PH Duray, AC Steere, M Kashgarian, J Buza, SE Malawista, PW Askenase
The American journal of pathology, 1985ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
In 17 patients with Lyme disease, synovial specimens, obtained by synovectomy or needle
biopsy, showed nonspecific villous hypertrophy, synovial cell hyperplasia, prominent
microvasculature, lymphoplasmacellular infiltration, and sometimes lymphoid follicles. The
larger surgically obtained specimens also showed striking deposition of fibrin in synovial
stroma and a form of endarteritis obliterans. In 2 patients, spirochetes were seen in and
around blood vessels by the Dieterle silver stain. Compared with 55 cases of other synovial …
Abstract
In 17 patients with Lyme disease, synovial specimens, obtained by synovectomy or needle biopsy, showed nonspecific villous hypertrophy, synovial cell hyperplasia, prominent microvasculature, lymphoplasmacellular infiltration, and sometimes lymphoid follicles. The larger surgically obtained specimens also showed striking deposition of fibrin in synovial stroma and a form of endarteritis obliterans. In 2 patients, spirochetes were seen in and around blood vessels by the Dieterle silver stain. Compared with 55 cases of other synovial disease, obliterative microvascular lesions were seen only in Lyme synovia, but marked stromal deposition of fibrin seemed nonspecific. These findings imply that the Lyme spirochete may survive for years in affected synovium and may be directly responsible for the microvascular injury.
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