joe the tick

February 12, 2010

Dutch Lyme Disease Group Wants Action

Debilitating Lyme disease is a growing concern in the Netherlands. A patients’ association has collected more than 65,000 signatures calling for government action on the tick-borne disease.

The Dutch Association for Lyme Patients wants to put Lyme disease on the parliamentary agenda. Its petition calls on the government to improve training for doctors in diagnosing the disease, set up a Lyme disease expertise centre, and increase public information on the danger of tick bites.

Lyme disease is caused by the Borrelia bacteria and is passed on to humans by sheep ticks. Tick numbers are increasing in the Dutch countryside. What’s more, a study by Wageningen University found that around 25 percent of ticks in the Netherlands carry the bacteria. This is far higher than the European average of 10 percent.

The disease can cause a range of symptoms, including severe arthritis, and may even be fatal. According to the Dutch Association for Lyme Patients half a million people in the Netherlands are currently suffering from Lyme disease, and ten thousand people are infected each year. The infection frequently goes undiagnosed, especially when patients fail to notice they have been bitten by a tick. As a result, the symptoms worsen and become harder to treat.

Source www.rnw.nl

December 4, 2009

Study finds Lyme in 90% of deer ticks

Filed under: Lyme Disease — Tags: , , , — joethetick @ 9:22 am

Written by Justin Reynolds, Mack Reid

A recent study of ticks collected in four nearby Fairfield County towns in 2008 and 2009 showed that 90% of them carried Lyme disease bacteria and 30% of them carried the parasites that cause babesiosis, a sometimes severe malaria-like disease that can be fatal.

Because there wasn’t money in the town budget for testing ticks that were collected in July at Slaughter Field in Wilton, no testing of those ticks was done, said Pat Sesto, Wilton’s director of environmental affairs and the chair of the Fairfield County Municipal Deer Management Alliance. But testing of ticks caught in Bethel, Newtown, Redding and Ridgefield showed high instances of infection.

“It’s fair to assume we are no different,” Ms. Sesto said Tuesday. “Most definitely we should take lessons from these results. Information leads to better decisions, certainly. The more we know about the various diseases that the ticks carry, the better understanding we’ll have moving forward.”

Ms. Sesto said a Department of Environmental Protection fly-over of Wilton last winter pegged the deer population in town to be somewhere in the 60 to 64 deer per square mile range.

“If you want to cause the tick population to substantially subside, you want to be in the eight to 10 range,” she said.

Ms. Sesto said the removal of deer through controlled hunts is the best way to solve the tick problem.

“Our position, the best way to deal with the tick population is to deal with the deer population,” Ms. Sesto said. “If the tick doesn’t get the last blood-meal from the deer, it won’t lay eggs. The adult tick either lays her eggs and dies or dies without laying eggs.”

Ticks need to get the blood-meal from a large mammal, which is almost always a deer, according to Kent Haydock, public education chair of the deer management alliance.

Ms. Sesto said ticks can be removed through the spraying of pesticides, but that method has ill effects on the environment.

“This is a community that values clean ground water and clean surface water,” she said. “You’d need universal spraying of the town to get rid of ticks, but then you also get rid of other things, too.” Ms. Sesto said the removal of these insects and other species adversely affects the food web as well.

Ms. Sesto said controlled deer hunts — on both private and public land — are necessary for reducing the tick population. She said property owners interested in hooking up with hunters should call her office at 563-0180.

“Contact my office. We have a lot of hunters who call,” Ms. Sesto said. “Hunters are out there, but the opportunity to connect with private property owners is weak. We need to build up a system that helps that connection along. It’s something I’d guess the Deer Committee will be focusing on.”

Ms. Sesto said property owners might feel a bit apprehensive about dealing with hunters for the first time, but that they can call her and she would tell them what sort of questions they should ask the hunters.

“Hunters are conscientious,” she said. “Working with them, it’s new for me. But the stereotypes you see in television and in the cartoons — it’s not the case. These are really the guys next door, the normal dad down at the soccer field.”

Hunters must be licensed, Ms. Sesto said.

“The state has criteria of training and proficiency,” Ms. Sesto said. “Every year, you have to get permits from the state. Otherwise, you are poaching. You are breaking the law.”

The study

The University of New Haven study led by Dr. Eva Sapi was done under contract with the Fairfield County Municipal Deer Management Alliance. The researchers collected 899 ticks from 15 locations in Ridgefield, Redding, Wilton, Bethel and Newtown from October 2008 to July 2009.

Overall, the study found 90% of the ticks tested were infected with the Lyme bacteria, with the range from 96% in Newtown to 88% in Redding.

The ticks collected in Ridgefield were not tested for the Lyme bacteria, but for the babesiosis parasite, Babesia microti. It was found in 33% of the ticks, far higher than the previously reported levels of 5% to 8%.

Combining results from all towns on the babesiosis parasite, the study found a 30% infection rate with a range from 28% in Newtown to Ridgefield’s 33%.

A different study by Columbia University researchers on ticks collected in nearby Westchester County, New York, 65% of ticks infected with the Lyme bacteria, Borrelia burgdorferi, and a total of 72% to ticks infected with either Lyme or one of four other tick-borne diseases.

The New York study found 32% of ticks infected with more than one pathogen.

November 21, 2009

Nurses with Lyme disease Form Southern Oregon Lyme Disease Support Group

By Bill Kettler
Mail Tribune

Put two nurses with 70 years of combined experience in the same room and chances are they’ll find plenty to talk about.

When both have Lyme disease, the conversation transcends the usual shop talk.
The first meeting of the Southern Oregon Lyme disease support group has been scheduled for 6:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday in the Smullin Center, Room 35, Rogue Valley Medical Center, 2825 E. Barnett Road, Medford.

For more information, call 944-5068 or 879-0222. For general information about Lyme disease in Oregon, contact the Oregon Lyme Disease Network at 541-312-3081 or visit the Web site at www.oregonlyme.org.

Sharon Lee of Eagle Point was infected some 30 years ago in California, when nobody on the West Coast knew much about the strange tick-borne disease that’s difficult to diagnose and produces a wide range of symptoms among its victims.

When Judi Johnston of Ashland came down with Lyme during the past year, she realized the Southern Oregon medical community still knows relatively little about the disease.

“I don’t know what made me more upset,” Johnston says. “Personally, not being able to find the (treatment) resources, or professionally, knowing the resources aren’t here.”

Lee and Johnston plan to use their nursing experience and training to assist Rogue Valley residents who may not even know they have Lyme disease. They’re organizing a support group to help local people determine whether they’re infected, and steer them to physicians who can give them appropriate care.

“There’s far more Lyme disease than is being recognized,” says Johnston, a nurse for more than 30 years. “And we don’t have Lyme-literate physicians in this part of the country.”

The group’s first meeting is scheduled for Thursday at the Smullin Center on the campus of Rogue Valley Medical Center.

The bacterium that causes Lyme disease is transmitted to humans by certain species of ticks, including the blacklegged tick (Ixodes pacificus), which thrives in Southern Oregon and California. The bacterium is also carried by tick nymphs, which are so tiny people often fail to realize they may have been bitten.

Johnston says she “never did see the tick,” that infected her.

Lee describes the bacterium itself as “a stealth organism” that evades the body’s natural defense mechanisms. If it establishes itself in the body over time, “your immune system can’t even find it,” she says.

Symptoms vary widely from person to person. The bacterium may attack the joints, the heart, the brain or other parts of the nervous system. Lyme has been confused with a number of other diseases, including multiple sclerosis, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and even Alzheimer’s.

“Some people can be sidelined and in a wheelchair,” says Lee, who retired to Eagle Point after 45 years in nursing. “Others can respond (to treatment) and do pretty well.”

Ticks often carry a number of other infectious agents, and Lee says researchers now believe the wide variety of symptoms associated with Lyme may be related to those other tick-borne diseases.

She says early diagnosis is critical for effective treatment, but tests don’t always provide conclusive proof of infection. Some people produce a rash with a characteristic bulls-eye pattern soon after they’re infected, but others may not, further complicating the diagnostic process.

Lee says she and Johnston hope to recruit a local physician who might be willing to learn more about Lyme disease so that local people can get effective treatment without traveling to California.

“We want this to be more than a support group,” Johnston says. “We want to educate people, too.”

Reach reporter Bill Kettler at 776-4492 or e-mail bkettler@mailtribune.com

November 14, 2009

How To Repel Ticks Naturally

Filed under: Lyme Disease — Tags: , , , — joethetick @ 9:05 pm

Protect yourself from Lyme disease, naturally without exposing yourself to a lot of pesticides.

November 2, 2009

Ticks – the mini-vampires lurking in the countryside

There’s a simple reason why there are unlikely to have been any victims of vampires over Halloween: there’s no such thing as a vampire. Despite the concerns of some Christian groups, Halloween is just a time of fantasies and fun, disowned as a serious event by those fringe groups who are seriously interested in matters of the occult.

But don’t get too relaxed – there is a real-life “mini vampire” that can cause serious health issues. At this time of year, there’s a surge in the population of ticks, those spider-like creatures that attach themselves to warm-blooded creatures to get the blood meal that they need to reproduce. Ticks lurk in woodlands and meadows, hiding in vegetation underfoot then throwing themselves at passing mammals, including farm animals, horses, dogs, cats and humans. They can be as small as pinheads when they crawl onto you, but can swell to the size of coffee beans as they fill up with blood.

Ticks cause major problems by transmitting blood-borne parasites in many countries, but in the UK’s temperate climate they’ve traditionally been regarded as just an irritating nuisance for pets and people. This view is now being challenged, and there’s increasing awareness of the threat of a bacterial disease that’s passed on by ticks – Lyme Disease. Humans, dogs and horses can be affected. Signs include include behavioural changes (e.g. depression, lethargy and lack of appetite), fever, swollen joints, and muscle stiffness. The disease can be easy to treat if caught in the early stages, by giving a three-week course of a particular antibiotic. One of the main problems is that it’s often not diagnosed until it’s become well established, when affected parts of the body (such as joints and nervous tissue) may already have been seriously damaged. Antibiotics can be effective at eradicating the Lyme Disease bacteria, but damaged organs can be slow to heal, and signs of Lyme Disease can linger for years, or even for life.

Not every tick is infected with Lyme Disease, and not every tick bite will transmit the disease, but the longer a tick is allowed to remain on its host, the more likely it is that Lyme Disease infection will result. It’s worth taking steps to avoid ticks, and to remove them as soon as possible if they do attach themselves to you or your pet.

How do you avoid ticks? Cover up bare skin below hip level when you’re walking in tick country, and apply preventive drops, sprays or collars to your pets.

And how do you remove ticks? Traditional methods should be avoided: if ticks are stabbed with lighted cigarettes, smothered with oil, or plucked out with fingers, they’re liable to regurgitate their stomach contents, injecting infection directly into their host. It’s far better to use fine-tipped tweezers to pluck them out without squeezing their bodies, or to use a specially designed tick removing tool, which does the job rapidly and efficiently.

Once you’ve done the job, don’t just throw the tick on the ground, or it may reattach to the next passing person or animal.Throw them into an open fire, flush them down the toilet, or place them in a sealed plastic bag before crushing them. Without opening the bag, dispose of it in an outside dustbin. Wash your hands with soap and water once you’re finished, to be double-sure that you’re not carrying any bacteria after handling the tick.

Most people don’t know about Lyme Disease until it’s too late, and they’re already a victim. There’s an excellent website that will tell you more if you want to know, but my main message is simple: ticks may look small and harmless, but thanks to Lyme Disease, they can pack a punch way about their weight.

telegraph.co.uk

October 24, 2009

Tick Cartoons by Mark Parisi

Filed under: Lyme Disease — Tags: , , , , , , , , — joethetick @ 6:56 pm

Check out these funny tick cartoons drawn by cartoonist Mark Parisi. You can find more of hist art at his website where he is offering limited editions signed prints.


dog canine vet veterinarian tick biological clock age aging urgent urgency baby goal anthropomorphic humor
Tick Cartoon # 2008-12-03 (1 of 10)

Dog’s biological clock ticks.

Veterinarian finds ticks and dog become anxious.

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tic tick animal deer dear tictac breath mint bad fresh lyme disease lemon flavor tweezer humor
Tick Cartoon # 2008-06-17 (2 of 10)

Tic Tac Tic Attac Parody

Container of well known breath mint Tic Tacs have been replaced
by lemon lyme ticks.

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dog canine pet animal mammal anthropomorphic flea tick poll polling politician political mite satire
Tick Cartoon # 2008-03-06 (3 of 10)

Dog Flea Opinion Poll

Wandering within a dog’s furry coat, a flea is polling fellow
fleas about the dog’s direction.

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maryann flea tick parasite bug pest infest infestation infested cat kitty kitten feline pet comics
Tick Cartoon # 2006-03-06 (4 of 10)

Ticking Ticks

Ticks moving because of cat’s purring contentment.

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cartoon comic character parody strip woodstock bird mite flea tick pest parasite parasitic humor
Tick Cartoon # 1999-03-21 (5 of 10)

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relationship date dating romance ignore tick bug insect parasite bloodsucking blood sucking cartoons
Tick Cartoon # 1998-12-19 (6 of 10)

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party entertainment birthday balloon tick comics
Tick Cartoon # 1998-10-24 (7 of 10)

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cat feline pet animal mammal tick bug insect flea parasite meeting parodies
Tick Cartoon # 1997-08-21 (8 of 10)

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fashion fashionable clothing garment style outdoorsy rustic flea tick open wound show parodies
Tick Cartoon # 1996-01-18 (9 of 10)

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tick parasite arachnid parasitic tweezer rubbing alcohol phobia fear stressful grant bug satire
Tick Cartoon # 1994-12-20 (10 of 10)

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Life cycle of Babesia microti

Filed under: Babesiosis, Lyme Disease Documentary — Tags: , , , , , , , , — joethetick @ 7:15 am

Babesia are malaria-like parasites transmitted by blood feeding ticks. Infection with Babesia microti causes humans to become anemic, experience spiking fever and chills, and exhaustion. In some cases, the infection can be fatal. This 3 minute video demonstrates the life cycle of Babesia microti, starting in the blood of white-footed mice. Follow the parasite as it is ingested by deer ticks, and finally is transmitted to humans through tick saliva.

October 22, 2009

They want to suck your blood

Filed under: Lyme Disease, Lyme Disease News — Tags: , , , , , — joethetick @ 1:36 pm

Deer ticks that can transmit Lyme Disease are being found most often along the Red River corridor and into the Lake Winnipeg area. That’s the bad news students heard at Bug Day at University of Manitoba this week.

October 21, 2009

Better Blood Screening Process Needed To Prevent Babesiosis Transmission

Babesiosis is a potentially dangerous parasitic disease transmitted by ticks and is common in the Northeast and the upper Midwest. It can also be transmitted through a blood transfusion from an infected but otherwise asymptomatic blood donor. A new study finds a dramatic increase in the number of transfusion-transmitted babesiosis cases, leading to a call for a better screening test in blood donors living in areas of the country where babesiosis is prevalent.

October 19, 2009

Lice Join Ticks As Possible Disease Carriers

PhD students Anthony Martin and Graeme Brown from the Faculty of Science and Information Technology have just published research that shows lice could be a source of disease transmission.

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