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Tick Tally Reveals Lyme Disease Risk

 
 
Reply Thu 2 Feb, 2012 12:01 pm
Tick Tally Reveals Lyme Disease Risk
by Kristofor Husted - NPR
February 1, 2012

This blacklegged tick, found in a Michigan forest, probably wouldn't mind you having her over for dinner.

Roll call for bloodsuckers. Vampires, step back.

For four years, researchers combed through hundreds of state parks and bushy areas looking for the culprit responsible for Lyme disease. The blacklegged tick, also known as a deer tick, transmits the disease through a bite.

About 20 percent of the 5,332 ticks collected in the Eastern half of the country were infected with the bacterium that causes Lyme disease.

Lead author Maria Diuk-Wasser says her suspicion about where her team would find infected ticks — and the subsequent risk for the disease — was confirmed when she mapped the data.

"We suspected strongly that we wouldn't find [infected ticks] in the South," the Yale epidemiologist tells Shots. "The tick is found in the South, but it's not infected and it doesn't feed on humans, but on lizards." Researchers found the highest risk of infection for humans in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Upper Midwest.

Previous maps have shown where people reported cases of the disease, but not where they contracted it. The new study includes a map of infected tick infestations. The findings appear in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

The highest human risk for Lyme disease lies in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Upper Midwest.
Maria Diuk-Wasser/Yale School of Public Health
Map photo:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/02/01/146211699/tick-tally-reveals-lyme-disease-risk

The highest human risk for Lyme disease lies in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Upper Midwest.

An estimated 30,000 cases of Lyme disease in the U.S. were reported in 2010, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To get sick with the disease, a person has to be bitten by a tick that's carrying the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi.

The ticks, usually in their immature, or nymphal, stage live in overgrown brush and leaf litter. The infection usually passes on to a human after a tick has been latched on for 36 to 48 hours. So, keep the ticks off you and make sure to check yourself after wading through shrubbery and other places the ticks hang out.

Early in the disease, people tend to suffer a bull's-eye-shaped rash, chills, a fever and aches. If treated early with antibiotics, patients usually recover in a few weeks. But if the condition goes untreated, later symptoms can include severe headaches, Bell's palsy and heart palpitations.

Lyme disease can be a tricky condition to diagnose, Diuk-Wasser says. Some activists believe the number of cases is actually higher than what is reported by CDC. (The center calculates the number of cases based on reports from county medical professionals.)

The western blacklegged tick (Ixodes pacificus) can also carry the bacterium that corresponds to Lyme disease. It lives along the Pacific Coast and feeds on birds, rodents, deer and other mammals.

The lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum) is a species prevalent in the South. It carries bacteria that can cause ehrlichiosis, tularemia and STARI, but not Lyme disease.

— Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

"It's more of a reporting problem," Phillip Baker, executive director of the American Lyme Disease Foundation, tells Shots. Diuk-Wasser agrees and says many cases are missed, misdiagnosed or aren't reported at all.

On the other hand, some tests can give false positives. There are a lot of people who think they have the disease but don't, Baker says.

Diuk-Wasser says she hopes the new map can act as a tool for doctors to understand how likely the disease is to show up in their neck of the woods.

"When a doctor sees a rash in the South, he shouldn't immediately be thinking it's Lyme disease," she says. "And in areas where the ticks are expanding to, doctors should start thinking that Lyme disease is a possibility."

She cautions that it's possible to get the disease in the South — just highly unlikely.

Next up for Diuk-Wasser is a closer examination of areas where the species may be moving in. She's already heard from some collaborators that the population is growing in Virginia.

"Ticks have expanded following reforestation and deer expansion," she says.
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farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Feb, 2012 03:02 pm
@BumbleBeeBoogie,
My wife and I both got nailed two summers ago qwhen we were hiking in Assateague Va. We walked in the hummocks looking for shells and since the deer and wild horses are all over the place we had the circle of doom on our legs in the next week. We both went to our family doc who gave us a supewr dose of some antibiotic to knock back the nascent infection at the stage where we were only developing a "titer" of the bacterial effects. It worked and we were symptom free almost immediately .
NOW, does that confer any immunity to subsequent deer tick bites? or must she and I check each other for ticks every time we go out
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Feb, 2012 03:06 pm
@farmerman,
AHEM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OctrGD4JW8U
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 17 Mar, 2012 11:52 am
@farmerman,
March 16, 2012 | 10:59 AM | By Carey Goldberg
Bad Lyme Disease Spring Predicted For Northeast, Begin Vigilance Now

This just in from the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies: We in the Northeast should expect an unusually large surge of Lyme disease this spring.

It’s not the extraordinarily mild winter that’s to blame, it’s the fluctuation of mouse populations and acorn harvests. (More on that later.) But the mild winter may mean that the danger period, when tiny young “nymph” ticks that carry Lyme are out for our blood, could begin earlier than usual. The bottom line from Dr. Richard S. Ostfeld, a Cary Institute disease ecologist: Watch out. Starting now.

Normally, Lyme disease risk ramps up in May. But “This past winter,” he said “was record-breaking mild, and when you get records, when you have extremes in weather events, to some degree all bets are off. We don’t really know whether the nymphs are going to start their activity earlier this year than in normal years. So it’s remotely possible they could be out as early as April. They’re cold-blooded creatures, so things get speeded up in terms of their metabolism and development when things are warmer. So it could be a bit earlier than usual. I wouldn’t wait to be vigilant. The time is now.” (What does such vigilance look like? Here are prevention tips from the CDC.)

I asked Dr. Ostfeld if he could offer some order of magnitude of the expected surge in Lyme disease. Very, very roughly, he said, we could see perhaps 20 percent more cases than usual.

Acorn production in 2010 set a record for the 20-plus years it has been monitored, he said, “and mouse abundance in the summer of 2011 was oh, perhaps 10 or 20 percent higher than we’ve ever recorded. So I would expect the Lyme disease risk should be at least that much higher than we’ve had in the past.” He emphasized: “This is a prediction based on past trends, and in ecology, as in economics — what do they say about stock portfolios? — past performance does not predict future returns. But that’s my best estimate as to what might happen.”

Now for a bit of the ecology behind the predictions. From the Cary Institute’s press release:

What do acorns have to do with illness? Acorn crops vary from year-to-year, with boom-and-bust cycles influencing the winter survival and breeding success of white-footed mice. These small mammals pack a one-two punch: they are preferred hosts for black-legged ticks and they are very effective at transmitting Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease.

“We had a boom in acorns, followed by a boom in mice. And now, on the heels of one of the smallest acorn crops we’ve ever seen, the mouse population is crashing,” Ostfeld explains. Adding, “This spring, there will be a lot of Borrelia burgdorferi-infected black-legged ticks in our forests looking for a blood meal. And instead of finding a white-footed mouse, they are going to find other mammals—like us.”

For more than two decades, Ostfeld, Cary Institute forest ecologist Dr. Charles D. Canham, and their research team have been investigating connections among acorn abundance, white-footed mice, black-legged ticks, and Lyme disease. In 2010, acorn crops were the heaviest recorded at their Millbrook-based research site. And in 2011, mouse populations followed suit, peaking in the summer months. The scarcity of acorns in the fall of 2011 set up a perfect storm for human Lyme disease risk.

Black-legged ticks take three bloodmeals—as larvae, as nymphs, and as adults. Larval ticks that fed on 2011’s booming mouse population will soon be in need of a nymphal meal. These tiny ticks—as small as poppy seeds—are very effective at transmitting Lyme to people. The last time Ostfeld’s research site experienced a heavy acorn crop (2006) followed by a sparse acorn crop (2007), nymphal black-legged ticks reached a 20-year high.

The May-July nymph season will be dangerous, and Ostfeld urges people to be aware when outdoors. Unlike white-footed mice, who can be infected with Lyme with minimal cost, the disease is debilitating to humans. Left undiagnosed, it can cause chronic fatigue, joint pain, and neurological problems. It is the most prevalent vector-borne illness in the U.S., with the majority of cases occurring in the Northeast.

Ostfeld says that mild winter weather does not cause a rise in tick populations, although it can change tick behavior. Adult ticks, which are slightly larger than a sesame seed, are normally dormant in winter but can seek a host whenever temperatures rise several degrees above freezing. The warm winter of 2011-2012 induced earlier than normal activity. While adult ticks can transmit Lyme, they are responsible for a small fraction of tick-borne disease, with spring-summer nymphs posing more of a human health threat.

Past research by Ostfeld and colleagues has highlighted the role that intact forest habitat and animal diversity play in buffering Lyme disease risks. He is currently working with health departments in impacted areas to educate citizens and physicians about the impending surge in Lyme disease.
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