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fisher16
04-03-2006, 09:31 PM
Probably should have started this thread earlier before the warmer weather set in. My brother had a incident similiar to Bpapi one while fishing on Sunday. The only problem though is he missed on of the ticks and found it today burrowed into his skin. Here are some pictures of common ticks that are in our region, along with photos identifying them and photos of symptoms you should be looking for if you find a tick attached to your body.

http://www.aldf.com/images/Tick.jpghttp://www.aldf.com/images/Lpic1.jpghttp://re2.mm-a1.yimg.com/image/124574193 symptom lymes disease
http://www.dogbreedinfo.com/images8/Dog_Ticks_2.JPG does not carry lymes disease




Symptoms

The early symptoms of LD can be mild and easily overlooked. People who are aware of the risk of LD in their communities and who don't ignore the sometimes subtle early symptoms are most likely to seek medical attention and treatment early enough to be assured of a full recovery.

The first symptom is usually an expanding rash (called erythema migrans, or EM, in medical terms) which is thought to occur in 80% to 90% of all LD cases. An EM rash generally has the following characteristics:
Usually (but not always) radiates from the site of the tickbite
Appears either as a solid red expanding rash or blotch, OR a central spot surrounded by clear skin that is in turn ringed by an expanding red rash (looks like a bull's-eye)
Appears an average of 1 to 2 weeks (range = 3 to 30 days) after disease transmission
Has an average diameter of 5 to 6 inches (range = 2 inches to 2 feet)
Persists for about 3 to 5 weeks
May or may not be warm to the touch
Is usually not painful or itchyEM rashes appearing on brown-skinned or sun-tanned patients may be more difficult to identify because of decreased contrast between normal skin tones and the red rash. A dark, bruise-like appearance is more common on dark-skinned patients.

Ticks will attach anywhere on the body, but prefer body creases such as the armpit, groin, back of the knee, and nape of the neck; rashes will therefore often appear in (but are not restricted to) these areas. Please note that multiple rashes may, in some cases, appear elsewhere on the body some time after the initial rash, or, in a few cases, in the absence of an initial rash.

Around the time the rash appears, other symptoms such as joint pains, chills, fever, and fatigue are common, but they may not seem serious enough to require medical attention. These symptoms may be brief, only to recur as a broader spectrum of symptoms as the disease progresses.

As the LD spirochete continues disseminating through the body, a number of other symptoms including severe fatique, a stiff, aching neck, and peripheral nervous system (PNS) involvement such as tingling or numbness in the extremities or facial palsy (paralysis) can occur.

The more severe, potentially debilitating symptoms of later-stage LD may occur weeks, months, or, in a few cases, years after a tick bite. These can include severe headaches, painful arthritis and swelling of joints, cardiac abnormalities, and central nervous system (CNS) involvement leading to cognitive (mental) disorders.

The following is a checklist of common symptoms seen in various stages of LD:

Localized Early (Acute) Stage:

Solid red or bull's-eye rash, usually at site of bite
Swelling of lymph glands near tick bite
Generalized achiness
HeadacheEarly Disseminated Stage:

Two or more rashes not at site of bite
Migrating pains in joints/tendons
Headache
Stiff, aching neck
Facial palsy (facial paralysis similar to Bell's palsy)
Tingling or numbness in extremities
Multiple enlarged lymph glands
Abnormal pulse
Sore throat
Changes in vision
Fever of 100 to 102 F
Severe fatiqueLate Stage:

Arthritis (pain/swelling) of one or two large joints
Disabling neurological disorders (disorientation; confusion; dizziness; short-term memory loss; inability to concentrate, finish sentences or follow conversations; mental "fog")
Numbness in arms/hands or legs/feet
Prevention & Control

Larval and nymphal deer ticks often hide in shady, moist ground litter, but adults can often be found above the ground clinging to tall grass, brush, and shrubs. They also inhabit lawns and gardens, especially at the edges of woodlands and around old stone walls where deer and white-footed mice, the ticks' preferred hosts, thrive. Within the endemic range of B. burgdorferi (the spirochete that infects the deer tick and causes LD), no natural, vegetated area can be considered completely free of infected ticks.

Deer ticks cannot jump or fly, and do not drop from above onto a passing animal. Potential hosts (which include all wild birds and mammals, domestic animals, and humans) acquire ticks only by direct contact with them. Once a tick latches onto human skin it generally climbs upward until it reaches a protected or creased area, often the back of the knee, groin, navel, armpit, ears, or nape of the neck. It then begins the process of inserting its mouthparts into the skin until it reaches the blood supply.

In tick-infested areas, the best precaution against LD is to avoid contact with soil, leaf litter and vegetation as much as possible. However, if you garden, hike, camp, hunt, work outdoors or otherwise spend time in woods, brush or overgrown fields, you should use a combination of precautions to dramatically reduce your chances of getting Lyme disease:

First, using color and size as indicators, learn how to distinguish between:
deer tick* nymphs and adults [photos coming soon]
deer ticks and two other common tick species - dog ticks and Lone Star ticks (neither of which is known to transmit Lyme disease) [photos coming soon]

*Deer ticks are found east of the Rockies; their look-alike close relatives, the western black-legged ticks, are found and can transmit Lyme disease west of the Rockies.Then, when spending time outdoors, make these easy precautions part of your routine:

Wear enclosed shoes and light-colored clothing with a tight weave to spot ticks easily
Scan clothes and any exposed skin frequently for ticks while outdoors
Stay on cleared, well-traveled trails
Use insect repellant containing DEET (Diethyl-meta-toluamide) on skin or clothes if you intend to go off-trail or into overgrown areas
Avoid sitting directly on the ground or on stone walls (havens for ticks and their hosts)
Keep long hair tied back, especially when gardening
Do a final, full-body tick-check at the end of the day (also check children and pets)When taking the above precautions, consider these important facts:

If you tuck long pants into socks and shirts into pants, be aware that ticks that contact your clothes will climb upward in search of exposed skin. This means they may climb to hidden areas of the head and neck if not intercepted first; spot-check clothes frequently.
Clothes can be sprayed with either DEET or Permethrin. Only DEET can be used on exposed skin, but never in high concentrations; follow the manufacturer's directions.
Upon returning home, clothes can be spun in the dryer for 20 minutes to kill any unseen ticks
A shower and shampoo may help to dislodge crawling ticks, but is only somewhat effective. Inspect yourself and your children carefully after a shower. Keep in mind that nymphal deer ticks are the size of poppy seeds; adult deer ticks are the size of sesame seeds.Any contact with vegetation, even playing in the yard, can result in exposure to ticks, so careful daily self-inspection is necessary whenever you engage in outdoor activities and the temperature exceeds 40 degrees F (the temperature above which deer ticks are active). Frequent tick checks should be followed by a systematic, whole-body examination each night before going to bed. Performed consistently, this ritual is perhaps the single most effective current method for prevention of Lyme disease.


If you DO find a tick attached to your skin, there is no need to panic. Not all ticks are infected, and studies of infected deer ticks have shown that they begin transmitting Lyme disease an average of 36 to 48 hours after attachment. Therefore, your chances of contracting LD are greatly reduced if you remove a tick within the first 24 hours. Remember, too, that the majority of early Lyme disease cases are easily treated and cured.

To remove a tick, follow these steps:

Using a pair of pointed precision* tweezers, grasp the tick by the head or mouthparts right where they enter the skin. DO NOT grasp the tick by the body.
Without jerking, pull firmly and steadily directly outward. DO NOT twist the tick out or apply petroleum jelly, a hot match, alcohol or any other irritant to the tick in an attempt to get it to back out. These methods can backfire and even increase the chances of the tick transmitting the disease.
Place the tick in a vial or jar of alcohol to kill it.
Clean the bite wound with disinfectant.

*Keep in mind that certain types of fine-pointed tweezers, especially those that are etched, or rasped, at the tips, may not be effective in removing nymphal deer ticks. Choose unrasped fine-pointed tweezers whose tips align tightly when pressed firmly together.Then, monitor the site of the bite for the appearance of a rash beginning 3 to 30 days after the bite. At the same time, learn about the other early symptoms of Lyme disease and watch to see if they appear in about the same timeframe. If a rash or other early symptoms develop, see a physician immediately.

Finally, prevention is not limited to personal precautions. Those who enjoy spending time in their yards can reduce the tick population around the home by:

keeping lawns mowed and edges trimmed
clearing brush, leaf litter and tall grass around houses and at the edges of gardens and open stone walls
stacking woodpiles neatly in a dry location and preferably off the ground
clearing all leaf litter (including the remains of perennials) out of the garden in the fall
having a licensed professional spray the residential environment (only the areas frequented by humans) with an insecticide in late May (to control nymphs) and optionally in September (to control adults).

buckmanjr
04-03-2006, 09:45 PM
nasty stuff...ticks stink! lol

tuna
04-05-2006, 10:20 AM
Keeping your hair very short will help in finding them (I keep mine very close to the skin, if not shaved). Having someone else help you look will find them where you can't scratch or see.
I never heard about 20 minutes in the dryer to kill them, guess they don't like the spinning, I've got to try it. At least they can't make as much noise in the dryer as the cat does.:)

JayW
04-05-2006, 11:39 AM
Thanks for the good post Fisher. Hows your brother doing? Hopefully he didnt have a deer tick on him.

fisher16
04-05-2006, 03:08 PM
Spoke with him the other day, so far everything seems fine.

JayW
04-05-2006, 04:52 PM
Well thats good. Lyme disease is a very nasty thing to get.

fisher16
04-09-2006, 08:41 PM
Going to bump this back to the top of the forum.

Angler Tangler
04-27-2006, 10:02 PM
Recent CDC recommendations have been for a single dose of antibiotic (doxycycline or amoxicillin) for a bite by deer tick in an endemic area that has been embedded for at least 24 hours and has taken a blood meal.
This has been shown to reduce the liklihood of progression to Lyme disease.

JayW
05-14-2006, 08:45 PM
I was sitting at the computer just a few hours ago and I started to feel something biting my leg. Went to the bathroom and checked myself and saw a dam what appeared to be deer tick. The thing just started to bite me hadnt been biting for more than 1/2 hour tops. Im keeping it in a plastic bag just incase syptoms begin to appear. I think my friends dog must have given me the tick. Hopefully nothing will happen but just incase the tick will be kept.

fisher16
06-04-2006, 04:05 PM
UPDATE------------------------------------------------------- UPDATE

Lyme disease reports on rise


Sunday, June 04, 2006 By JENNIFER PICARD
jpicard@repub.com
Public health officials, concerned about last year's 44 percent increase of reported Lyme disease cases, are urging people to take precautions against tick bites this spring and summer.
Mild winter and spring weather means deer ticks, which carry the disease, and humans have encountered one another a little earlier than usual this year, said Dr. Bela T. Matyas, medical director of the state Department of Public Health's epidemiology program.
"Ticks are more active whenever the weather permits them to be, so they're generally active between early spring and late fall," Matyas said.
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Ted S. Wysocki, vice chairman of the Board of Health in Wales, said the tick population was already high in early May.
"This year, I've already had to go in the woods a few times, and have come back covered - eight or nine (ticks) per trip," Wysocki said.
Lyme disease cases across the state are rising. Statewide, preliminary counts show 2,330 confirmed cases in 2005, a 44 percent increase from the 1,617 cases recorded in 2004 by state public health officials.
"Last year, we had a huge increase over the year before, so it's certainly possible that (cases) could increase" this year, Matyas said.
"There is more Lyme disease in more counties, and what concerns us is seeing more cases than we had had before," he said.
In Hampden County, preliminary figures list 118 confirmed Lyme disease cases in 2005 with 88 cases in 2004. In Hampshire County, cases were up 55 percent from 2004 to 2005, from 44 cases to 68 reported in 2005, said Matyas.
Franklin County's cases increased by 60 percent in 2005, from 15 cases to 24, he said.
Preliminary results from a study conducted in Western Massachusetts towns about five years ago found that 3 percent of 250 people tested had antibodies for Lyme disease in their blood, said Dr. Peter J. Krause, who conducted the study. He is the head of infectious diseases at Connecticut Children's Medical Center in Hartford.
While the data means inland cases are on the rise, it doesn't distinguish where Western Massachusetts residents from Brimfield, Wales, Ludlow and other towns may have contracted the antibodies from a tick bite, said Krause. For example, some people tested may have been bitten by ticks while vacationing on Cape Cod.
"Most coastal areas have higher rates - at least, that's been traditionally so. Now, you're seeing higher rates (inland)," Krause said.
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Krause's study, which has not been published, was performed with a grant from the National Institute of Health's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, from 1997 to 2003. Krause said the study's funding was not renewed, but federal privacy regulations prohibit agency officials from commenting upon why a particular application was not funded or renewed, according to a spokesman for the allergy institute.
The bacteria that cause Lyme disease were discovered in the United States when a number of children in and around Lyme, Conn., developed arthritis-like symptoms in the mid-1970s.
People get it by being bitten by infected deer ticks, which are about the size of poppy seeds. An estimated 20,000 cases are reported each year in the United States, but some experts say cases may be vastly underreported.
Early symptoms include a reddish, bulls-eye rash where the bite was, followed by fever, headache, fatigue and muscle or joint pain. Lyme disease can be treated with antibiotics, but untreated cases can lead to complications including meningitis and heart abnormalities.
Matyas said prevention from tick bites is key. When walking in the woods, wear light-colored clothes, so ticks are easier to see, with long pants and sleeves, to minimize tick-to-skin contact. Using insect repellent and avoiding walks through tall grass can also help, he said.
Ticks embedded in the skin can be removed by pulling out the insect with tweezers, grasping the tick by its head, said Matyas.
Material from The Associated Press was used in this report

fisher16
07-31-2006, 07:02 PM
"Alternative" Lyme disease treatment can be fatal, warns Food and Drug Administration Associated Press — July 21, 2006



<!--textOnly = true and inlineElements = true--><!-- insertinlineAd --><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD>WASHINGTON — At least one person has died after being injected with a purported treatment for Lyme disease, health officials said Friday in warning doctors and patients to avoid the unapproved product.
The product is called bismacine or chromocine, and is mixed individually by druggists for use by injection, the Food and Drug Administration said.
The FDA is investigating the April 20, 2006, death of a person treated with bismacine, which contains high amounts of the heavy metal bismuth. The agency also is probing several reported injuries.
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<!-- END INLINE UNIT -->Bismuth poisoning can cause cardiovascular collapse and kidney failure, the FDA said.
Bismuth is used in some oral drugs to treat bacteria that cause stomach ulcers, but is not contained in any approved injection drug. Nor is bismacine specifically approved for any use, including as a treatment for the tick-borne bacterial disease.
Alternative health doctors, as well as people claiming to be medical doctors, prescribe and administer the product, the FDA said.
The FDA said in a statement that it is evaluating the suppliers of the product and "will take additional action as appropriate."
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