Abstract
The clinical case describes the difficulties of differential diagnosis of polyneuropathy that developed after Gam-Covid-Vac vaccination on the background of combined infectious pathology (HIV infection, tick-borne borreliosis, COVID-19) in a young woman. It is shown that various infectious and non-infectious diseases with similar clinical symptoms (peripheral nervous system affliction) occurring simultaneously in one patient can significantly affect each other’s course and complicate the establishment of the true cause of polyneuropathy. It should be noted that in this example, the establishment of a final diagnosis was carried out collectively, by consensus, and was based on the effectiveness of etiotropic (antibacterial) treatment, which in fact was an ex juvantibus therapy option, which made it possible to establish the most probable etiology of polyneuropathy – tick-borne borreliosis. In turn, HIV infection and possibly vaccination, according to the authors, could cause immunosuppression, which affected the degree of dissemination of Borrelia burgdorferi. It is also likely that the insufficient immune response in combination with the cascade plasma filtration session affected the initial dubious results of the serological tests, which further complicated the diagnosis.
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