Usually, these feel intense and more similar to a
migraine than your run of the mill tension headache, Dr. Bhayani says. In addition to throbbing pain, you might also experience hypersensitivity to noise or light.
Severe pain, numbness, or tingling in your joints and muscles Around 60% of patients will develop
joint pain or even
arthritis as their Lyme disease progresses, according to a Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
study. Usually, it starts in the joints closest to where you were bitten and can spread from there, especially to areas like the knees. The pain isn’t usually constant, though. Experts don’t fully understand why, but “the symptoms can wax and wane over a period of weeks or months,” Sellati says. Over time, the disease can attack the cartilage in the joints and lead to tissue damage, says
Linda Yancey, M.D., an infectious disease specialist with Memorial Hermann Katy Hospital in Katy, TX. Like many of the other problems caused by Lyme disease, this one is also triggered by inflammation. “The damage to tissues, bone, and cartilage is caused by the production of pro-inflammatory proteins, the same protein responsible for damage caused by
rheumatoid arthritis,” Sellati says.
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