There are tests that can be used to help devise a Lyme strategy. The Western Blot is one, but you need to deep-six the five bands mandate, as well as the IgM mandate that says no such thing as positive IgM's beond three months. You need to understand that a negative may not be a negative - that's why a WB is important: It allows you to know which bands are positive, and since certain bands are Bb specific, you can pretty much have a fair assumption if two or three bands lite up that are Bb specific you've got Lyme.
I am also a believer in the utility of the C6. It is very specific to borrelia, and if you're sporting a positive score post treatment, you got one hell of a strong indicator for an active infection, despite treatment.
There's also the George Mason urine test.
So, there are tests. But most labs only look for one strain of one species ( IGeneX uses 2 strains). Most labs wear blinders. So a negative in any of these tests may not be meaningful - then again it might.
All the while you are juggling in your mind the strengths and weaknesses of a single test for a single strain of a single species, you must never lose touch with the possibility your symptoms are caused by a co-infection like Bartonella or Babesia. Think tests for Bb are a cluster f**K? It arguably just as bad, and in some cases worse for co-infections.
If it were me, I'd order a Western Blot; I think you get the biggest bang for your buck that way. But go that route and you've a decision of whether to adhere to IDSA.CDC two tier protocol, or go rogue and adopt a diffferenet scheme - say, 2 Bb-specific bands are enough to prompt you to place an order for doxy.
With the WB, I'd get a C6 peptide, because the C6 peptide, when you run a series of them, can tell you numerically if you are improving or growing sicker.