1. World problems
  2. Tick-borne diseases

Tick-borne diseases

Nature

Ticks carry bacteria and other agents that cause disease. Ticks may be the primary (necessary) hosts of infective organisms which may cause illness in higher animals. Ticks are beginning to be suspected in many diseases where the pathways of transmittal seem fuzzy.

Background

The infective agent is transmitted from tick to tick in salivary secretions. The transmission cycle of the disease in the secondary host, say a cat or human, begins with a competent (infected) tick taking a blood meal from an uninfected vertebrate, passing on the disease organism into the blood of the host. Very often the tick is unaffected by its role as a primary host.

Incidence

Lyme disease, human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) and babesiosis are contracted by humans who have been bitten by ticks carrying a bacterium also carried by the white-footed mouse. The 3 diseases respond to different drugs: Lyme disease to antibiotics, HGE to only certain antibiotics, and babesiosis to anti-malarial drugs, such as quinine and one antibiotic only. The drugs induce partial recovery in a first step of stopping bacterial growth, but the patient's immune system must kill the them. Patients with weakened immune systems recover more slowly and may need more drugs.

Broader

Narrower

Lyme disease
Excellent
Tularaemia
Presentable
Spotted fevers
Presentable
Relapsing fever
Presentable
Q fever
Presentable
East Coast fever
Presentable
Babesiosis
Presentable
Anaplasmosis
Presentable
Tick paralysis
Yet to rate
Bovine anaemia
Yet to rate

Aggravated by

Ticks as pests
Presentable

Value

Disease
Yet to rate

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(E) Emanations of other problems
Subject
  • Invertebrates » Insects
  • Medicine » Pathology
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Oct 4, 2020