2013年9月28日星期六

February | 2013 | lyme at home


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Due to Lyme disease causing stiffness, joint pain, and weakness, people with Lyme spend most of their time in bed, relaxing, and limiting their movements.  Although exercise causes herxing and pain, it is very important to fit some exercise into your schedule.  Beside the pain and joint damage, your whole body changes.  Every part of your body becomes at risk.  By involving exercise and a healthy diet, future problems can be avoided.


Some recommendations include stretching, breathing, free weights, walking, pool workouts, and doing these things every other day.  It’s important to know your limits.  Just because you were able to do something before the Lyme doesn’t mean you will be at your best after the Lyme.


An important thing to remember is to avoid cardio at first.  Start slow and work your way into harder exercises.  You don’t want to over do it and discourage yourself.  It will hurt because the oxygen flowing through your system is killing off the Lyme bacteria.


No pain no gain!





I read an article that talked about a new tick transmitted disease that is similar to Lyme disease.  The organism that is this new disease is called Borrelia miyamotoi.  It was first found in Japan in 1995 then in Central Russia in 2011.  In 2001 and 2006, cases were found in deer ticks in Connecticut and Northern California.  Cases of this show fever that burns for days and then disappears.  It can cause flu like symptoms, headache, muscle aches, stiff neck, and fatigue.  A round of doxycycline or amoxycilin will prevent further symptoms.


This seems to be a cousin of Lyme disease.  Luckily it also seems to be treated the same way.  I’m not surprised a similar disease has been found due to the fact that Lyme disease is capable to hiding in the body from antibiotics.  It’s a smart disease and like many other disease and virus’, they soon mutate and become stronger due to the antibiotics.


As spring approaches, be sure to look for ticks in your area!






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Lately I’ve heard discussions about hand sanitizer vs. soap and water.  Everywhere you go now in public offer free hand sanitizers in the bathrooms.  People carry around small containers of hand sanitizer with them throughout the day.  There are alcohol and nonalcoholic-based hand sanitizers along with antibacterial soaps and normal hand soap.  The public is so germ sensitive today that there are many options to control germs and it can be overwhelming.


I’ve found some information to help clear up some talk about which is better.


Soap and water should be used as a #1 priority.  Soap and water can clean off dirt and grime.  Hand sanitizer will not clean off dirt but will kill germs on the spot.  There is only a slight difference between antibacterial soap and regular soap.  When using hand sanitizer, the 60% alcohol ones will kill germs the best.  In the end, soap and water should be used before hand sanitizer.  For on the go, can’t get to soap and water, hand sanitizer is the next best thing!






 
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Living in the northeast and having animals, I’ve always been aware of ticks.  Constantly checking myself and my animals for ticks has been a habit that I normally don’t think much of.  On this blog I’ve only talked about my personal experience with Lyme disease and posted information geared towards humans.  I recently brought my cat to the vet and while we were sitting there waiting, I noticed a pamphlet for Lyme disease in dogs.


Today I decided to share some info I learned for those who have animals.  Prevention in animals is the same as it is for humans.  Avoiding tick-infested areas in the spring is a good idea.  Checking for ticks and removing them correctly is also important.  There are products for animals to help with prevention, similar to flea prevention.


If you dog has been affected, it’s rare for them to have a rash or target spot.  However, if the vet tests the dog as positive there is an antibiotic of dogs.  Some symptoms include a period of lameness in the dog.  Inflammation in the joints and kidney infection are also signs.  Sensitive to touch, fever, lack of appetite, nervous system complications, and difficulty breathing are also signs to head to a vet.






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Positively Positive is a great website that I visit everyday.  It’s a collection of blog posts that inspire well being, change, hope, and anything positive. Today I came across When It All Seems to be Falling Apart .  This post talks about when a crisis happens, whatever it might be, you should find a positive aspect.  Change is scary whether it be a move, a sickness, etc.  When things seem to be falling apart it could be a good thing in the end.


2012 held a lot of change for me including discovering Lyme disease.  At some points during this process I’ve asked myself why this was happening to me.  It’s like you get one step ahead in life and then fall back 5 steps.  Throughout all the sickness and doctors appointments, there were times when I shouldn’t have been able to do anything.  Some how I managed to push through and live a semi normal life along the lines of my lifestyle.


A hardship in life allows you to discover how strong of a person you really are.  Thinking back on all thats happened in the past makes me ask myself how did I find the strength to over come those obstacles.  I surprise myself everyday  with the things that I achieve.


This post reminded me to be grateful and not to worry about hardships that are happening in my life.  Every change is a learning experience and it meant to show you how strong you can be.



Dog Lyme-disease Symptoms | Treatment



Lyme disease is not only able to transmit to humans, but also can attack your pets, like your dog! The disease is caused by bacteria what we call as ‘Borrelia burgdorferi’ (it is a kind of spirochete bacteria which can spread to human and pets through a bite of deer tick). If you love your dog and you live in areas with high population of deer tick, you need to clearly understand about Lymes disease symptoms in dogs!

You may also like to read about dog arthritis treatment and congestive heart failure in dogs, before continuing!




Old Lyme is a town in the U.S where the disease discovered for the first time in 1975. And today, there are more states in the U.S that are suggested as the high population of deer tick — for more in-depth information, ask to a local health department!




How is Lyme disease transmitted to dogs?


The period from ‘spring’ to ‘autumn’ is the most active period of ticks — grass and tall brush are some of common places where they live in this period. As written before, Lyme disease in dogs is spread by deer tick or also familiar called as ‘Ixodes scapularis’.


We all agree that summer is great time to enjoy outdoor with your dog, but it also can be major factor to put you and your dog at higher risk of getting a tick bite. And like Lyme disease in humans, the disease can be spread to dog through a tick bite (especially by an infected tick).


Once your dog get an attached tick & tick bite (in many cases it attaches around ear, neck, feet, and head area), your dog has a higher risk of having Lyme disease. Dogs with high exposure of ticks might be more prone to have Lyme disease. 


Additionally, there are also other types of tick that also can affect the health of your dog. Some of them are ‘Dermacentor variabilis’ (the American tick) and ‘Rhipicephalus sanguineus’ (brown dog tick).


How to notice any tick in your dog?


You need to extra precautions during the active season of ticks. Fortunately, we can see an attached tick with our naked eyes. Check your dog regularly during warmer months!


If you notice any attached tick in your dog, be careful in removing it. If you in doubt on how to do it properly, call a pet healthcare or veterinarian if necessary to remove the attached ticks completely and prevent/eliminate future infection! Any contact with the blood of tick can spread the infection to you and your dog. Make sure the attached tick is completely removed as soon as possible, because the transmission of Lyme disease ‘from an infected tick to your dog’ usually only takes a few hours.


Dog Lyme disease symptoms


Once your dog has had Lyme disease, there is chance for your dog to experience the same condition for the second time — particularly for the recurrent lameness of the limbs which usually caused by the joint inflammation.


Dogs with Lyme disease may experience acute lameness in the legs. It usually lasts for 2-4 days, but will come back /recur days or weeks later in the same of area (the infected leg of dog) or may also infect other legs if left untreated.


Untreated Lyme disease in dog may also generate problems associated with the kidney, which then may cause dysfunction & inflammation in the glomeruli of the kidney! This condition finally will lead to the kidney failure and then will generate some symptoms, such as; fluid buildup in some areas of the body (under the skin, legs, and abdomen), weight loss (poor appetite), vomiting, thirst /increased urination, and diarrhea.


Other signs of dogs with Lyme disease may include:


  1. In rare cases, dog may also experience complications associated with nervous system.

  2. Swollen in the site of getting a bite tick.

  3. Shortness of breath /difficult to breath. And in rare cases, problems that indicate heart abnormalities may occur.

  4. Your dog is getting more sensitive if you touch!

  5. And fever.


Furthermore, a tick bite is not only associated with Lyme disease. There are also other complications that can be caused by a tick bite in your dog. Some of them are skin irritation, anemia or blood loss, tick paralysis, and ehrlichiosis!


How about with the prevention and treatment?


The best idea in preventing Lyme disease is by protecting your dog to keep far away from a tick bite. There are available some products that not only effective to kill ticks but also can treat fleas. These products are usually also purposed to protect your dog from the future infection. Dogs with the environment of high tick population are usually recommended to use these topical treatments.


Talk more with a vet to find the right advices about a specific product that you should choose for your pets! Ask also to her/him for more tips to eliminate the distribution of ticks in your local environment! Don’t forget also to ask about the use of vaccine for your dog, it may help your pet in preventing Lyme disease.


How about with the treatment? Below are helpful checklists:


  1. Like the treatment of Lyme disease in humans, the treatment of the disease in dogs also involves antibiotics. And antibiotics are the primer component of the treatment in any stage of Lyme disease. There are some types of antibiotics to choose from. The right one that will be given by your vet is closely dependent to the stage of the disease and the symptoms that occur. 

  2. Infected dog with mild symptoms (the early stage of Lyme disease) are usually considered with outpatient treatment, unless if its condition is severe!

  3. Your vet usually gives advice to keep your pet in warm & dry place. Furthermore, you need to keep monitoring the activities of your pet and the progress of its symptoms!

  4. You may want to use some pain medications, but much better to avoid them until your vet recommends them!

  5. How about with the dietary changes? It is usually not required, but sometimes may be recommended by your vet.


In addition, read also the previous post about Lyme disease in children!

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Reference: WebMD and PetMD
Image credit to ‘shutterstock’ for illustration

Ticks and Lyme Disease


You might recall the hell Luke went through last year as he and The Boys were walking through Ohio. They were crawling with ticks and Luke was afraid they would have to take time off the road because the problem was so serious.

The Boys are now in Connecticut, a state (as is much of the Eastern Seaboard) heavily infested with the ticks that carry Lyme disease, and Luke is rightly concerned that they’ll experience a similar situation as in Ohio.





It is a popular misconception that Lyme disease was discovered in the late 1970′s in Lyme, Connecticut. However, medical literature is rich with more than a century of writing about the condition, although most of it has been published only in Europe. The first record of a condition associated with Lyme disease dates back to 1883 in Breslau, Germany.

In 1976, the first US case of clustering of this disease was reported by researchers at the Naval Submarine Medical in Southwestern Connecticut. In 1977, physician Allen Steere et al described the first clustering of the disease misdiagnosed as juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. They named this condition ‘Lyme arthritis.’ This clustering paved the way for further research into the disease.


Because of the severity of the problem The Boys were experiencing last year, they were put in touch with Vectra 3D, manufactured by Summit VetPharm, and their tick problem was solved. Luke writes, I don’t know if any of you visited Ohio last summer but by all accounts it was the worst tick season on record. It was so bad that we almost quit the walk – I picked a total of 120 ticks off of Murphy in two days and to make matters worse they brought them into the tent. All night long I was picking them off of me. I couldn’t sleep and quite literally was going mad. A vet turned us onto Vectra 3D and we haven’t had a single tick since. Summit Vet Pharm saved the walk.


Vectra 3D offers “6-way protection, repels and kills fleas, ticks, mosquitoes, lice, sand flies and mites. It kills 4 species of ticks, 3 species of mosquitoes, and all stages of fleas. And it repels and kills ticks that may cause Lyme Disease Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and a host of other diseases. Vectra is only available from licensed veterinarians” and is NOT to be applied to cats, although VetPharm does carry a similar product for cats.


For additional information, contact VetPharm at 1-800-999-0297 or surf to their web page. Read the entire label before each use, follow directions exactly, and use only on dogs or puppies over 7 weeks old. It is not to be used on animals with compromised immune systems, and check with your vet before you use it on your geriatric dog. “Do not use this product on debilitated, aged, medicated, pregnant or nursing animals, or animals known to be sensitive to pesticide products without first consulting a veterinarian.”


Vectra 3D contains the following: Dinotefuran (4.9%), Pyriproxyfen (0.44%), Permethrin (36.08%), and other ingredients (58.53%). For further information on their products at their site.




Here’s a bit more information for those of you who are interested in the science and medicine of Lyme disease.



Parasites that transmit disease are called vectors. When an infected vector, such as a tick or mosquito, bites your pet, it could make your pet very sick. Many of us in the South are more familiar with Heartworm (spread by mosquitoes) than the folks in the North and East who may have more experience with Lyme disease, but both are examples of diseases spread by vectors.




VetPharm has an excellent chart on their website showing vector borne diseases in dogs.

As you probably know, Canine Lyme disease is transmitted by deer ticks (or related ticks). What you may not know is in areas where the disease is common, up to 75% of dogs will test positive for exposure. The good news is is that it is believed that only 5-10% of these positive dogs will ever show clinical signs of disease. However, Lyme disease is present in all 48 of the mainland United States. 85% of cases in humans and dogs are found in the eastern coastal states, from Massachusetts to Virginia, 10% of cases are seen in the Upper Midwest states and 4% are in Northern California. All other states combined make up the last 1%.


These deer (and related) ticks, feed on humans, small mice, deer, and other animals that they are able to latch onto. After latching on, the deer tick takes a blood meal and in doing so passes on the Lyme disease causing spirochetes to the animal’s blood stream. The tick must remain attached for as much as 2-3 days in order to take a complete meal, and is able to transmit the spirochetes during this time. These ticks exhibit a 2 year life cycle, making certain seasons most common for new Lyme infections.


As with other diseases, Lyme disease can affect individual pets differently. Some animals may display no symptoms. Other animals may develop fever, loss of appetite, painful joints, lethargy, and vomiting. If left untreated, the spirochete may damage the eyes, heart, kidneys, and nervous system. Lyme disease has been diagnosed in humans, dogs, cats, horses, goats, and cattle. Other species may also be at risk.




Protecting Your Pet




This link has some great suggestions for protecting your pets from Lyme disease, but here are the highlights:

(1) When necessary, apply tick-killing chemicals to your animals in order to protect them from disease spreading ticks. Precautions should be taken when applying insecticides as some animals may be sensitive to the chemicals. Always follow the manufacturer’s instructions.


(2) Take precautions to guard against ticks when entering tick habitat, such as grassy, shrubby, wooded, or beach grass areas. Cut/mow grassy areas regularly to reduce tick habitation.


(3) Conduct frequent Tick-Checks! Examine animals closely in order to detect embedded ticks.


(4) Remove attached ticks properly and promptly to reduce the chance of transmission of the LD bacterium. Place fine point tweezers around the tick’s mouthparts (the place where the tick is attached) and gently pull upwards until the tick detaches. Do not use your bare fingers! Disinfect the bite site and tweezers after removal. Wash your hands.


(5) Have your animal(s) examined as soon as possible if you notice any symptoms of disease; the sooner a disease is diagnosed, the easier it is to treat.


As with all chemicals and pesticides, decide what’s best for your particular pet and situation.


While Luke was hesitant to apply any chemicals to Hudson and Murphy, he had to weigh the risks from disease against the use of chemicals. And because all three Boys were literally covered in ticks on a daily basis, Luke chose to use Vectra 3D, a product that worked when no other product did.


It’s an educated decision we all have to make, especially as we find ourselves finally approaching Spring and fun outside with our animals. Do the research, consult with your vet and friends, and decide what options are best for you.




Here’s to a wonderful and healthy Spring and Summer! Puppy up!




Please Note: Per the FTC Final Guides Governing Endorsements and Testimonials, bloggers who make an endorsement must disclose the material connections they share with the seller of the product or service. Summit VetPharm is a donor of Vectra 3D for Hudson and Murphy. The experiences with the product expressed here are those of Luke Robinson. Please consult your own veterinarian before using this or any product on or for your animal(s).


Delaware, Vermont have highest Lyme disease rates

Fall brings new potential victims into the woods.



2013 Lyme Disease Forecast

The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) predicts the threat of Lyme Disease for dogs will be extremely high this year. See map of northeast published by CAPC. This recent notification was just sent to the veterinary community (June 18, 2013), although other organizations have notified us previously. This prediction is based on many factor which include: increase in reported cases of Lyme Disease in humans and dogs, outside temperature, precipitation, humidity, population density, deer population, and forest cover, and evidence that some of the previously used popular topical medication for tick prevention have lost their effectiveness. There is strong evidence that ticks and even fleas have the capability of developing resistance to products that are used repetitively. That is why the CDC recommend we alternate products or use newer products on the market available to veterinar ians. The topical products plus vaccination is the best way to protect your dog. Prevention is the best medicine. The newer vaccines that protect your dog against Lyme disease have proven to be safe and effective. Don’t forget, dogs can bring ticks into the house which can get on you. Slight lameness is one of the earliest signs we see in dogs with Lyme disease. It can progress to lethargy and loss of appetite and even further progress to swollen joints, pain and even kidney disease. The CAPC recommends, along with the Center for Communicable Diseases (CDC) that all dogs and cats get year-round parasite-control medications. This requires topical and oral 1 x each month preventative medications readily available from your veterinarian.



The Lyme controversy

This morning at grand rounds, the room was more crowded than I have ever seen it. Every Friday morning, from 8-9 am, a resident or intern presents on a particular topic. People come if they are interested and if they are free. I have seen grand rounds have as few as a dozen people in attendance. There must have been at least fifty today. I have seen rounds where no one asks a question. There were about a dozen questions asked today. The resident closed her talk with a picture of boxing gloves and announced, “This is a controversial topic, so let’s keep our gloves on while we ask questions, okay?” The topic was Lyme disease.


What is Lyme disease?
Lyme disease occurs in humans and dogs, though it presents differently in the two species. (Cats don’t get clinical signs of Lyme.) The disease is caused by a bacteria called Borrelia burgdorferi. The disease is often not serious, with clinical signs like lameness, loss of appetite, and lethargy. These signs are usually resolved after a course of antibiotics, usually doxycycline.


However, Lyme is associated with Lyme nephropathy, a disease of the kidneys which can be fatal. This is a less common outcome, but a very serious one.


Lyme has been studied in laboratory dogs. However, Lyme nephropathy appears to occur most often in Labrador retrievers and golden retrievers; it is possible that they have a genetic predisposition for it. So what we have learned in laboratory dogs (who are almost exclusively Beagles) may or may not apply to retrievers.


Should I vaccinate my dog for Lyme?
This is the first part of the controversy. Different veterinarians have different answers for you.


Some say: Yes! The vaccine is very safe and effective. The possibility of Lyme nephropathy makes any risks associated with vaccination to be well worth taking.


Some say: No! We don’t actually know that Borrelia causes Lyme nephropathy. Some people suspect that it may in fact be associated with the Lyme vaccine. Moreover, 95% of dogs who are exposed to Borrelia never develop any clinical signs. In other words, they never become sick. The few who do develop clinical signs are almost always easily managed with antibiotics. Why take a chance with a vaccine, which may have side effects, when the chances that your dog will develop Lyme nephropathy are so low?


My dog is Lyme positive. Should I treat him with antibiotics?
If your dog shows signs of lameness, fever, lethargy, and has a positive Lyme titer, then definitely he should receive a course of antibiotics. (Of course, a vet will rule out any other likely diagnoses first.)


What if your dog shows no clinical signs? This is the second part of the controversy.


Some say: Yes, the dog should be treated. Otherwise, he is at risk of eventually developing Lyme nephropathy. Best not to risk that.


Some say: No. The likelihood is that the dog will never develop any clinical signs (that he will remain healthy). We don’t actually know, again, that Lyme nephropathy is actually “Lyme” nephropathy. Antibiotics are not 100% safe, and may have side effects. Administration of them may lead to antibiotic resistance. Additionally, most dogs who are treated for Lyme with antibiotics maintain a positive titer for Borrelia after treatment is concluded. In other words, their immune system continues to produce antibodies against the bacteria, suggesting that they still have Borrelia in their systems, despite treatment (though presumably lower levels of it). We may actually be breeding resistant strains of Borrelia in our own dogs by treating unneccessarily. Again, 95% of dogs who have positive Borrelia titers never develop signs of the disease.


It is possible (and probably a good idea) to monitor Lyme-positive dogs by periodically checking their urine for extra protein (“proteinuria”). This is a sign of kidney issues. Even this is up for debate, though, as the test can be expensive and it’s not clear how often it actually catches a problem.


One interesting point made during the discussion at the end of the lecture was from an IDEXX representative. She said that a veterinarian had told her that he routinely treated Lyme-positive dogs, and on re-testing found their Lyme titers to be reduced. A faculty member pointed out in response that as no control group had been tested, it is possible that Lyme-positive dogs see titer reductions after some period of time anyways.


What do I do?
My dog, Jack, tested positive for Lyme this past spring for the first time. There are indeed plenty of ticks in my back yard (though I do my best to manage them with frequent mowing). His positive Lyme titer means that he has “seen” the disease — been bitten by a tick which carries Borrelia. His immune system has responded appropriately, making antibodies to the bacteria. He shows no clinicial signs; his appetite is excellent, and he is no more lethargic than any other aging golden retriever. I had his urine tested; he has normal protein levels. I have not treated him with antibiotics.

References
I’m reporting what I learned in this morning’s talk from memory. I hope that I did not misreport any facts, but please take all statements with a grain of salt, as I have only completed two years of veterinary school.

For more information, see:



2013年9月27日星期五

Dogs, Cats and Lymes Disease Symptoms and Communication

Lymes disease is competent to touch particular pets differently. Bound pets show no symptoms, lymes disease symptoms various others march feverishness, poignant joints, ejection, tiredness, and amount of craving. The spirochaete may change uneasy group, spirit, eyes, and kidneys of pets, if their Lymes disease is not bound in minute.


Cats:


Cats are prospective to demo walking difficulties, red of craving, eye hurt, uncommon respiration, and fever. Several cats infected with Lymes disease also pretence panoptic symptoms.


Dogs:


Dogs diagnosed with Lymes disease may be stuporous, and can person feverishness ranging between 103°F – 105°F, along with beggarly craving. They may also undergo gameness. Disposition disorders, lymes disease symptoms loser, action, and embarrassment are separate Lymes disease symptoms seen in dogs.


From my individualized pet’s live, I can say that dogs are septic to Lymes bacterium, but they do not show open Lymes disease symptoms. They also impart the unvaried locution for the disease as of humans.


Protective Measures:


In benignity with my individualized see and explore, beneath mentioned are fated deterrent measures that you can rely on to improve your pets fulfill withdraw from Lymes disease contagion:


o Allot tick-terminating chemicals on your pet’s surface to protect them from Lymes disease broad contractable ticks. lymes disease symptoms can use dips and sprays containing pyrethrins and permethrins to negative ticks on horses, cats, and dogs. Bring the employment very carefully, as individual pets are sensitized or are photosensitive to these sprays and chemicals.


o You can use safe handwear during the remedy knowledge. Mark collars testament also aid to demoralize ticks from attacking your pets. Assure that you never refer duple repellents on your pet, because a coinage of different chemicals could piss your pet real displeased.


o Assure to pass your pet against ticks when admitting in a beat environment, much as beach marihuana, silvan, lymes disease symptoms, or sedgelike areas. Tidy grasslike areas oftentimes to disparage stitch habitation, which is the set crusade of Lymes disease.


o Aver help of the surround with insecticides witting specifically for ticks. One decisive artefact that I would equal to add is to refrain infectious water, as experts human advisable to spray insecticides at small 75 feet departed grade a healed or any crapulence element body.


o Make regular tick-checks and investigate your pets closely to bit any embedded ticks, which can seriously affect your pet with Lymes disease incident.


Eventually, my adulthood tip for you lymes disease symptoms to consult your veterinary to obtain an expedient handling for your pet’s Lymes disease


Treating Canine Lyme Disease

It has been 40 years since a cluster of arthritis cases have been diagnosed in Connecticut in humans and later on in dogs. This case led to the need for Lyme disease treatment options and medications,
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Morgan...Lyme Disease, Anaplasmosis, Dogs And Cattle, (Chickens?)



Since Morgan is currently being treated with Doxycycline, (4 tablets once a day for 21 days, because she tested positive for anaplasmosis, and Lyme Disease) I have become very curious about Lyme Disease and why she wasn’t sick before the treatment started. I do think the Doxycycline is making her a bit nauseous.


Morgan had gone to the vets to get her shots and the anaplasmosis and Lyme Disease antibodies were found during the blood test.






I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised to find most of the information I found about Lyme Disease was about its effect on cattle since they lose millions of dollars a year because of Lyme Disease.


It seems that if the cattle contract the disease when they are young they can survive (and then don’t show symptoms) but then become infected carriers, however if they get the disease when they are older they can easily die.


So, I got to wondering if Morgan was bitten when she was a puppy or fairly young might she be an infected carrier? Or maybe it doesn’t work the same way on dogs? I searched a lot of sites, but didn’t find an answer.


I did find that since blood is a vector that the deer tick, the horse fly and man can be responsible for transmitting the disease (when working with animals using different instruments that would get blood on them such as: when dehorning, tattooing, when tagging ears, using needles, etc. Sounds like if the infected blood is moved to a new host the disease can come along with the blood.


And deer ticks don’t jump! That’s comforting… but they do get on you when you brush against foliage and they climb on you. So, when I’m out working in the forest I do take the precautions of staying away from bushes, having my jeans tucked in my boots, wearing long sleeve shirts and light clothing, and checking to see if there are any ticks crawling on me.




Then the question rises… do chickens get Lyme Disease? Well, I found even less information about chickens than about dogs, but from the scanty info I found it sounds like they can, but they are more likely to be infectious when young.


This page from the US National Library Of Medicine is the closest I could get to some information about chickens and Lyme Disease.


But mostly chickens are sited as good to have free ranging on your property because they eat deer ticks. 


Then there is the neat info that aside from not jumping the boy deer ticks don’t take a blood meal, so they don’t transmit the disease even though they will attach. And that not all deer ticks have bitten an infected animal so they don’t all have Lyme disease (unless they got it from their mom.)



There are a lot of interesting articles on the Internet about deer ticks and Lyme disease.

TheAmerican Lyme Disease Foundation page has lots of good information with great photos of deer ticks.


For me… The UCDavis Veterinary Medicine page from 1998 has the most easily read and understood explanation of anaplasmosis and its effect on cattle.


 Photo by Scott Bauer. (USDA ARS) 

This page Lyme Disease In Dogs has some video on how to remove a tick from your dog… and information on


*how to recognize Lyme Disease in dogs.*


I do remember a time when Morgan had a hurt paw, but we thought she hurt it running around outside.


As for vaccines? It seems there was one but it was withdrawn… and there is supposed to be one for cattle? I haven’t been able to find a definitive answer because it depends on what page I get on my searches… there is a lot of contradictory information out there.


My best thought is if there is any question about ticks and possible sickness… see a vet or doctor, depending on the patient of course.


I’ve been doing these searches when I come in the house to cool off after raking for a while. I have most of the driveway rock cover surfaces raked and I’m working on clearing the dirt area behind the house of leaves and branches. (Kristine just came home and I haven’t started dinner… oops… )


Now I’m worried about deer ticks… but the chickens are out there following me around scratching up the leaves and … looking for deer ticks. Good little hens!


Lyme Disease | CAPC Vet


Species


Canine
Borrelia burgdorferi


Feline*
Borrelia burgdorferi


*Despite the common finding of antibodies reactive to B. burgdorferi in cats in endemic areas, natural disease caused by infection in cats—if it occurs at all—is poorly understood. Accordingly, little is known about the prevalence of infection, disease manifestations, and treatment recommendations for feline infections with this agent.




Public Health Considerations



  • Lyme borreliosis caused by B. burgdorferi is the most common vector-borne disease of people in the United States. Symptoms of human Lyme disease include erythema migrans (an ‘bull’s-eye-shaped’ rash expanding from the site of the tick bite), fever, myalgia, arthralgia, and headache. Persistent Lyme disease in people may be manifested by recurrent arthritis, neurologic disease, and myocarditis.

  • People contract B. burgdorferi infection the same way that pets do: via the bite of an infected tick from a tick-infested environment. Pets are not an immediate source of infection to people, but the use of acaricides is nonetheless recommended to prevent tick feeding on both exposed and unexposed pets.


Epidemiologists at the CDC reported a positive correlation between canine seroprevalence levels reported on the CAPC website to the incidence of human Lyme disease reported to the CDC. In this study, these investigators also reported that >5% canine seroprevalence at the county level was associated with emergence of human Lyme disease, while <1% canine seroprevalence was associated with little to no risk for emergence of human Lyme disease at the county level. Importantly, these results corroborated the feasibility of canine sentinels for risk of human exposure to B. burgdorferi. This study was not designed to test for a canine source of human infection. A subsequent report from the same group underscored the importance of maximal participation of veterinarians and veterinary clinics in these surveys to ensure sufficient amounts of data and to follow-up with travel histories of seropositive canine patients, in order to mitigate artifact associated with seroconverted dogs that have traveled to endemic areas. 



  • Prevention of human infection with B. burgdorferi relies on preventing tick bites in people through many of the same measures that prevent tick bites on animals. In addition to stringent adherence to the routine use of acaricides on pets to limit infestations, people should take basic precautions when in tick-infested areas. Such precautions include wearing light-colored, protective clothing; performing frequent tick checks and promptly removing any ticks found; and using repellent products specifically labeled as effective at preventing tick attachment.


Dogs, Cats and Lymes Disease Symptoms and Discourse

Lymes disease is capable to concern idiosyncratic pets differently. Reliable pets take lymes disease symptoms symptoms, piece several others display symptom, excruciating joints, ejection, tiredness, and exit of appetite. The spirochete may hurt unquiet system, courage, eyes, and kidneys of pets, if their Lymes disease is not proofed in experience.


Cats:


Cats are apt to guide walking difficulties, sum of appetite, eye hurt, uncommon eupnoeic, and febrility. Various cats purulent with Lymes disease also simulation overt symptoms.


Dogs:


Dogs diagnosed with Lymes disease lymes disease symptoms be inactive, and can know feverishness ranging between 103°F – 105°F, along with inferior craving. They may also experience limping. Suspicion disorders, kidney loser, enmity, and fault are separate Lymes disease symptoms seen in dogs.


From my private pet’s participate, I can say that dogs are contaminating to Lymes microorganism, but they do not pretense telescopic Lymes disease symptoms. They also direct the identical locution for the disease as of humans.


Precautional Measures:


In kindness with my personal receive and explore, beneath mentioned are predestined deterrent measures that you can rely on to work your pets retard atrip from Lymes disease lymes disease symptoms


o Use tick-terminating chemicals on your pet’s part to protect them from Lymes disease travel communicable ticks. You can use dips and sprays containing pyrethrins and permethrins to veto ticks on horses, cats, and dogs. Carry the employment real carefully, as several pets are sensitised or are sore to these sprays and chemicals.


o You can use impermeable gloves during the exertion transmute. Tick collars present also aid to dismay ticks from offensive your pets. Secure that you never relate quadruple repellents on your pet, because a coalesce of varied chemicals could egest your pet real displeased.


o Ensure to passport your pet against ticks when admitting in a tick environs, such as beach weed, brambly, lymes disease symptoms, or grasslike areas. Adorn sedgy areas frequently to disparage tick habitation, which is the number grounds of Lymes disease.


o Aver mending of the habitat with insecticides planned specifically for ticks. One decisive entity that I would equivalent to add is to abstain infectious water, as experts hit advisable to spray insecticides at lowest 75 feet gone taxon a comfortably or any intake element embody.


o Piss uniform tick-checks and see your pets tight to soil any embedded ticks, which can seriously modify your pet with Lymes disease infection.


Finally, my efflorescence tip for you is to ask your veterinary to obtain an appropriate handling for your lymes disease symptoms Lymes disease


April is Prevent Lyme Disease in Dogs Month

Lyme disease, a bacterial infection spread by deer ticks, is becoming a major threat to dogs, during the warmer months. It’s very important to vaccinate dogs for Lyme disease. It’s easier to prevent Lyme disease than to treat it. Have you gotten your pets vaccinated for Lyme disease?



2013年9月26日星期四

Canine Lyme Disease - ticks

What Is the Lyme Disease


Since Lyme disease was discovered in humans in 1975 and in dogs in 1984, the disease in both humans and dogs has been spreading geographically. Lyme disease is the most commonly reported vector-borne zoonosis in the northern temperate zone, up to 23,000 cases being recorded annually in the United States (US)1. Most of these cases occur in the north-eastern and north-central states, many of which border Canada.


Human data on Lyme disease applies to dogs


There is no system that keeps track of the number of dogs in each province that get Lyme disease every year. However, beginning in 2010, Lyme disease became nationally reportable to the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).


Since ticks don’t seem to care if they land on humans or dogs, the data on geographic spread of human Lyme disease seems to apply to dogs, as well. You can view the geographic distribution of endemic human Lyme disease areas in Canada (past, present and future), at www.phac-aspc.gc.ca.


Most likely greater threat in dogs than humans


Three-quarters of human cases are contracted during activities around the home.3 Just imagine how much greater the threat is to your dog that typically spends much more time outside in the backyard than you do.





Check the map for a quick overview


Do you live in a human Lyme disease endemic, expansion or isolated area?
Where you live can help you determine the level of risk for your dog.


map















































Geographic area Disease threat Level of risk Your action
Endemic Infected tick population well established, putting most dogs at constant risk Nearly 75 percent of unvaccinated dogs in this area will eventually test positive for infection with the bacteria that causes Lyme disease, and each year some will develop Lyme disease3
Talk to your veterinarian about a comprehensive tick-borne disease prevention program, including Lyme disease vaccination
Expansion Infected ticks increasing, putting dogs at risk based on lifestyle and geography Increasing trends in the number of human cases reported Talk to your veterinarian about your dogs risk level and if you need a comprehensive tick-borne disease prevention program, including Lyme disease vaccination
Isolated Infected ticks have been introduced to the area (likely by migratory birds) but populations are not established Talk to your veterinarian about a comprehensive tick-borne disease prevention program, including Lyme disease vaccination Ask your veterinarian about human and canine cases in your area. If you plan to travel with your dog to endemic or expansion areas, please talk to your vet prior to your trip.


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Dog Health - Lyme Disease in Dogs

Dog Health


Of all of the dog diseases, lyme disease in dogs is perhaps one of the most common. It is usually the result of ticks on dogs. Ticks can be found in tall grasses during the warmer months, which is why many owners come home from a nice long hike or camping trip only to discover a little unwelcome passenger clinging to their dog’s skin: a tick.


Lyme disease in dogs can be hard for some dog owners to detect right away, but chances are that one of the following symptoms will soon follow within 24 to 72 hours after a tick has attached itself to your dog’s skin:


- Fever
- Lack of appetite
- Dehydration
- Swollen lymph nodes
- Laziness/fatigue


If lyme disease is left untreated for a substantial amount of time, dogs can even fall prey to horrible infections that can cause kidney failure and even death.


The fortunate thing is that most dog owners are familiar with how their dog normally behaves, and so they will notice a change in their dog’s behaviors and dogs health before this disease becomes fatal.


Diagnosing lyme disease in dogs usually begins with the veterinarian asking for some additional background information about where you life, where the dog has been recently, and if the dog has been on any tick prevention medications. If you happened to find the tick on your dog and remove it from its skin, make sure that you do bring the tick along to your veterinarian so that your veterinarian can see if it is a tick that can cause the disease (there are only four types of ticks that are known to transmit the disease).


TIP: When you remove the tick from your dog, place it in alcohol until you see your veterinarian.


If the vet suspects that your dog may have lyme disease, then he or she will order blood tests that will help determine whether or not your pet has the disease.


NOTE: If you have just recently noticed a change in your dog’s behavior and have removed the tick within the past 24 hours, it may be too soon for a blood test to accurately detect lyme disease in dogs.


If your dog has been diagnosed with lyme disease, then a round of antibiotics is often prescribed. The symptoms of lyme disease in dogs tend to dissipate quickly once medication is started, but you need to make sure that you continue to administer the antibiotics for as long as the vet prescribes, no matter how well your dog seems to be doing. Within a week or two, any and all traces of the disease should be gone.


Nil Danieli

Map of ticks and diseases — dogs and ticks

Find out now


Use the tool below to generate a map of your home area to see the number of reported positive cases of ehrlichiosis, Lyme disease, anaplasmosis and heartworm disease in dogs. Maps are available for all regions of the United States and Canada. Because so many dogs go untested for tick-borne diseases, the actual number of dogs infected by ticks is likely many times higher than reported figures.

Mosquito Squad of the North Shore protects your dogs, cats and horses from Lyme Disease and other tick borne illnesses

Category Archives: Preventing Lyme Disease in your pet






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Lyme Disease

Lyme Disease which is transfered by ticks (if the tick has been on your dog for a day or two) can be tested for with a blood test at the vet’s.

If your dog tests postitive, it can be treatable with drugs for a few weeks.
If your dog needs other shots — they will be given to your dog AFTER the drug treatment is completed.


There is also a vaccine to prevent Lyme disease. If your dog has not had it, and if you live in an area where there is a chance of getting it, then get the vaccine as a precaution.


Dogs that are kept outside or spend lots of time outside, and if you live near woods, then it may be a strong consideration to get the vaccine.


Discuss this health issue with your vet.


Symptoms and Treatments ArticleSix Symptoms (easy read article)Detailed Article with photos


Lyme Disease Symptoms in Dogs

Lyme Disease Symptoms in Dogs: How to Spot, Diagnose and Treat it


Of all of the dog diseases, lyme disease in dogs is perhaps one of the most common.  Lyme disease symptoms in dogs is usually the result of ticks on dogs.  Ticks can be found in tall grasses during the warmer months, which is why many owners come home from a nice long hike or camping trip only to discover a little unwelcome passenger clinging to their dog’s skin: a tick.


Lyme disease in dogs can be hard for some dog owners to detect right away, but chances are that one of the following symptoms will soon follow within 24 to 72 hours after a tick has attached itself to your dog’s skin:

-        Fever
-        Lack of appetite
-        Dehydration
-        Swollen lymph nodes
-        Laziness/fatigue


If lyme disease is left untreated for a substantial amount of time, dogs can even fall prey to horrible infections that can cause kidney failure and even death.


The fortunate thing is that most dog owners are familiar with how their dog normally behaves, and so they will notice a change in their dog’s behaviors and dogs health before lyme disease becomes fatal.


Diagnosing Lyme Disease Symptoms in Dogs


Diagnosing lyme disease symptoms in dogs usually begins with the veterinarian asking for some additional background information about where you life, where the dog has been recently, and if the dog has been on any tick prevention medications.  If you happened to find the tick on your dog and remove it from its skin, make sure that you do bring the tick along to your veterinarian so that your veterinarian can see if it is a tick that can cause lyme disease (there are only four types of ticks that are known to transmit the disease).


TIP: When you remove the tick from your dog, place it in alcohol until you see your veterinarian.


If the vet suspects that your dog may have lyme disease, then he or she will order blood tests that will help determine whether or not your pet has the disease.


NOTE:  If you have just recently noticed a change in your dog’s behavior and have removed the tick within the past 24 hours, it may be too soon for a blood test to accurately detect lyme disease in dogs.


If Your Dog Has Been Diagnosed with Lyme Disease Symptoms


If your dog has been diagnosed with lyme disease, then a round of antibiotics is often prescribed.  The symptoms of lyme disease in dogs tend to dissipate quickly once medication is started, but you need to make sure that you continue to administer the antibiotics for as long as the vet prescribes, no matter how well your dog seems to be doing.  Within a week or two, any and all traces of lyme disease symptoms in dogs should be gone. This article about Lyme Disease Symptoms in Dogs was part of an article retrieved from “http://www.articlesbase.com/pets-articles/lyme-disease-in-dogs-how-to-spot-diagnose-and-treat-it-3789356.html”

Lyme disease can afflict dogs as well as humans


A few weeks after a short stay at a dog kennel more than two years ago, Kathleen Drew’s 6-year-old golden retriever Cody stopped eating. The dog’s veterinarian suggested changing her diet and adding hamburgers into the mix to entice her.




As the dog started to lose weight, the vet suspected a urinary tract infection, treating that with an antibiotic. Vets at a local animal hospital who were consulted suggested problems with Cody’s kidneys. But tests and ultrasounds weren’t conclusive.




When Cody suddenly became very ill two months later, the family rushed the dog to the animal hospital, where vets hooked her up to IVs, ran more tests and injected her with antibiotics. None of it helped. The dog had developed severe kidney failure and soon died.




Only after an autopsy did the vets identify the culprit: Lyme disease, which can be particularly deadly to some dogs.




“The vets were as surprised as can be,” Drew said in a recent interview. “At the time, Lyme disease was just not something people thought about.”

Most recover, but some don’t





With its bull’s-eye rash, achy joints and flulike symptoms, Lyme is a concern for humans. Most dogs exposed to the disease show no signs of infection and recover on their own. But a small percentage run fevers, become lame, lose their appetite or, in rare instances, die. And some of America’s favorite breeds — golden retrievers and Labrador retrievers — seem to be particularly at risk.




“Lyme disease can be a terrible disease” in dogs, said Richard Goldstein, chief of medicine for the Animal Medical Center in New York, who has studied the disease in dogs for more than 10 years. “Sick dogs can look like they are in a lot of pain. It comes on suddenly. It is the most common infectious tick-borne disease in dogs and humans in the mid-Atlantic.” The illness is treated in dogs, as in humans, with the antibiotic doxycycline. (Cats do not get Lyme.)




The disease was first detected in humans in Lyme, Conn., in the 1970s, but the bacterium that causes it, Borrelia burgdorferi, was not identified until 1981. Three years later, it was diagnosed in dogs. Two species of ticks transmit Lyme: the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis) on the East Coast and the Western blacklegged tick (Ixodes pacificus) on the West Coast. These insects are often called deer ticks, but they are happy to live on a variety of mammals, including birds, mice and raccoons.




Scientists believe birds carried the deer tick from New England into Washington’s lush suburbs, which are perfect breeding grounds for ticks, according to Ed Breitschwerdt, a professor of internal medicine at the College of Veterinary Medicine at North Carolina State University.






According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Lyme is now found in 12 states, including an area from southern Maine to Northern Virginia. The number of cases nationally among humans has dramatically increased since 1990, with more than 22,000 cases reported in 2010.




“In the Washington area, there are plenty of cases” of infected dogs, Goldstein said. As a result, vets who may have not recognized it as a common threat are now both testing for it and recommending year-round prevention in the form of anti-tick collars and skin drops.




A long wait





Ticks do not hop, jump, scurry or fly; they rely on their host to cart them around. To attach themselves to a host, they lie in wait on a blade of grass or a leaf, gripping with their third and fourth set of legs and waving around their first and second pairs until they grab onto a passing animal.




They have a two-year life cycle. In the fall, an adult tick lays eggs, sometimes 2,000 at a time. When the larva emerges in the summer, it attaches itself to a host, usually a small mammal such as a mouse or a ground-feeding bird.




The larva, which can pick up Lyme bacteria when it feeds on an infected host, eventually drops off the host and spends the winter molting until spring, when it becomes a nymph. It is then able to transmit the disease.




Ticks present the most trouble in the fall as these nymphs grow into adult ticks. At this point, they occupy higher points such as shrubs and small trees, perfect spots to latch onto a dog sniffing in the greenery. Once attached to a dog, they will insert their feeding tubes into the skin to sip blood. After two days of feeding, the Lyme pathogens from an infected tick are transmitted to the host animal. Once a tick has had its fill, it often drops off and lives for months before attaching to other hosts for the second and third meals it will get in its lifetime.

2013年9月25日星期三

Protect your pet from Lyme Disease


Did you know that your pet can get Lyme Disease? What symptoms would you look out for? How can it be prevented?




Lyme Disease is primarily spread in Europe by the sheep or castor bean tick (official name ixodes ricinus). Your dog is at risk as ticks prefer to hide in areas such as tall grasses, the shady cover of trees, under fallen leaves & in heath land where dogs may like to run & explore.


Ticks will be ready & waiting in the grass by assuming a questing position where they hold their front legs out ready to attach on with hooks on the end of their legs. As soon as they sense carbon dioxide from a passing host they will be ready & waiting. Dog fur can easily hide a tick as they are incredibly small. A nymph tick is only about 1.5 mm in size & an adult can be 2-3 mm or the size of a sesame seed. Generally a tick will crawl around in the fur trying to find a safe & comfy spot to feed such as under the ear or chin, or tucked away on the soft belly of the dog. An owner may dismiss the black speck as a bit of dirt & not realise it was a tick until it begins to expand days later. Unfortunately, an expanded (engorged) tick will be full of the dog’s blood & will be getting ready to drop off, so it can moult & prepare itself for the next stage in its life.

What is the life cycle?



The adult female lays many eggs, often reaching the thousands. The eggs hatch into 6 legged larvae which are tiny, the size of a small stop at the end of this sentence. At this stage they will look out for small hosts such as mice. They need a blood meal before they can develop into a nymph, however ticks may last for months between snacks! It is crucial that they do not dehydrate, so ticks favour damp or well shaded areas. After the 1st feed they will drop off & crawl off in a safe area to moult & take the shape of an 8 legged nymph tick. Nymph ticks will be questing higher in the tall grasses which enables them to target larger hosts. Any host passing by such as mice, ground feeding birds, hedgehogs, squirrels, even dogs & humans can be prey to the waiting tick.


After a nymph tick has fed for several days they will plump up several times their own size & drop off again, ready to moult into their next life stage. An adult tick will be on the search for even larger hosts such as deer, sheep & cattle. An engorged female tick can expand to many times her size. At this stage after she has been feeding, a male will mate her where she will crawl off to lay her eggs & die. Some animals will carry a variety of different sized ticks & not all ticks will be infected with Lyme. However, the longer a tick has been allowed to feed, the higher the chance that infection could take place, so it essential to look out for any hitch hikers on your pets, children & even yourself after time spent outdoors.



Tick Talk Ireland has just released a vets study. More details below:



We are presently undertaking a project looking at the number of ticks found on companion & farm animals here in Ireland. This was influenced by a similar study in the UK, whereby 15% of dogs brought into vets were harbouring ticks. http://bristol.ac.uk/news/2011/7541.html This has the potential to cause health problems for the dog as well as the owner.


We are therefore looking for vets willing to help us gain an idea of the spread of ticks on companion & farm animals throughout Ireland.


* Do you frequently see ticks being brought in on animals?
* Is there are a concern that tick-borne infections may be rising?
* Are owners aware of the dangers of ticks on their pets / farm animals, not only to the animal but also to their own health?


Included in the survey are 10 questions.


Some (with *) require an answer before continuing – others will only need completing where applicable.


The time for completion should only take a couple of minutes.


If you would like to help us please click here to continue with the survey.


You are welcome to forward onto any vets in your area who may be interested!


If you spot any ticks when out walking or being brought into the house on humans or pets, please notify us in our survey ‘Tick Talking while you’re Walking‘!


For all our other surveys check out: http://ticktalkireland.org/surveys.html



Below are some useful studies & resources about tick-borne infections in pets.


Pets And Owners At Risk From Lyme Disease in The New Forest


Posted by: Richard L on: 10 August 2009


http://www.thebestof.co.uk/local/the-new-forest/blog/pets-and-owners-at-risk-from-lyme-disease-in-the-new-forest/article009927.htm


As the PDSA warns us that the 150% increase in suspected cases of Lyme Disease could be the tip of the iceberg, we remind you how to avoid Lyme Disease and what symptoms to look out for.


Lyme disease is transmitted by a tick bite that carries the bacterium Borrelia burgdorfei. It transmits the bacterium to you as it feeds on your blood. It can spread to humans, dogs and cats, plus some other species. Symptoms include a rash, fever, lameness and fatigue as well swollen lymph glands and nerve damage.


Ticks are very small (about the size of a poppy seed) and can easily be overlooked. Most ticks are not infected with the bacteria that cause Lyme disease. Even if a tick is infected, it does not spread the bacteria in the first few hours of its feed, so there is a very low risk of infection to both pets and humans if a tick is removed quickly.


A tick bite usually looks like a lump with a small scab on the skin surface at the site of the bite. Most people with Lyme disease then develop a reddish skin rash in a ring shape, and this may be the only sign of infection. The rash spreads out from the site of a bite after three to 30 days. Other common symptoms of early Lyme disease include tiredness, headache, joint pains and flu-like symptoms.


Early detection and treatment of the disease helps to relieve the symptoms and shorten the illness. For this reason, it is important to be aware of the symptoms, particularly the rash, so that treatment can be given early.


Pet owners are advised to prevent themselves being bitten by covering up when in woods or long grass – and to check their pets after walks for signs of ticks.


Some areas are more prone to infected ticks. In the UK, Lyme disease occurs mainly in the New Forest, Salisbury Plain, Exmoor, the South Downs, parts of Wiltshire and Berkshire and Thetford Forest. It’s also found in the Lake District, the Yorkshire Moors and the Scottish Highlands and Islands. Elsewhere, areas of high incidence are the United States, France, Germany, Austria, Sweden, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria and the Baltic republics. Peak times of the year for tick bites are late spring, early summer and autumn.


Unfortunately, some of the symptoms of Lyme Disease are similar to those of Swine Flu, but the characteristic rash should help to confirm a diagnosis. Symptoms can vary from patient to patient and sometimes there are no symptoms at all.


In around 70-80% of cases, the first sign of infection is usually a rash known as erythema migrans. The rash appears between one and four weeks after the bite. It spreads gradually from the site of the tick bite and can cover much of the trunk of the body. Other symptoms include:


* fatigue
* chills
* fever
* headache, and
* aching muscles and joint,
* stiff neck, and
* swollen glands.


If you suspect that you have been bitten by a tick and you have the symptoms described above, see your GP or call NHS Direct.


What About Your Pet?


Senior Veterinary Surgeon Elaine Pendlebury said, “The number of suspected cases of Lyme disease in dogs and cats is just the tip of the iceberg, in my opinion. Pet owners may not consult their vet as they are often unaware of the dangers of tick bites and that an infected pet may need early antibiotic treatment.


“It is essential that owners are aware of the dangers of ticks, particularly during the summer months, because both you and your pet could be affected. Tick bites can be difficult to detect as they are relatively painless but symptoms of the infection can develop months, even years, after the tick bite.


“One way for owners to reduce the risk of Lyme disease in pets is to use tick control products as recommended or prescribed by their vet. They should also check their dogs for ticks regularly after a walk, and immediately consult their vet if their dog shows any of the signs of Lyme disease.


“When a pet has been in woods or long grass, owners should check the fur, using rubber gloves, as an infected tick can bite both the pet and the human. If an owner does find ticks on their pet then their vet can safely remove it and also give advice on how an owner could effectively do this in the future.”


PDSA vets also advise dog owners to cover up when walking their pets, particularly in the countryside or park. Owners should wear long-sleeved tops and full-length trousers and after a walk a person should check their armpits, groin, belly button, neck and head for ticks. The number of people being diagnosed with Lyme disease in the UK has also steadily risen over the past 10 years.
___________________________


Ticks are on the march in Britain


Press release issued 23 March 2011
http://bristol.ac.uk/news/2011/7541.html


The prevalence of ticks attaching to dogs in Great Britain has been mapped by scientists as part of a national tick survey. The findings reveal that the number of dogs infested with the blood-sucking parasites was much higher than expected. The study also confirms that a European tick species now exists in Great Britain.


The research, carried out by academics from the University of Bristol’s Veterinary Parasitology Group and published in the journal Medical and Veterinary Entomology, found that at any one time 14.9 per cent of dogs were infested with ticks.


More than 3,500 dogs were examined for ticks at 173 vet practices across Great Britain between March and October 2009. The researchers found that gundog, terrier and pastoral breed groups were more susceptible to getting ticks than others, and that longer-haired dogs were more susceptible to ticks than short-haired dogs.


Samples of a tick species only found previously in continental Europe were also found in locations in west Wales and south east England, adding to growing evidence that this tick, deemed as ‘exotic’, is now a permanent resident in Great Britain.


Professor Richard Wall, head of the Veterinary Parasitology Group at the University, said: “This is an important study because the results suggest that the risk of tick infestation is far higher in dogs than was previously thought. This has serious implications for the incidence of tick-borne disease. The study also confirms that a non-native species of tick, which is also a major disease vector in Europe, is now established in southern England. It will be of considerable interest to monitor its spread.”


Dogs can be infected with a number of tick-borne diseases, including Lyme disease. A non-native species of tick could help spread new diseases from Europe in the UK.


Current concerns over the potential impacts of changing climate and increased global movement of people and companion animals on the distribution of ectoparasites highlight the need for an accurate understanding of existing prevalence patterns, without which future changes cannot be detected.


Faith Smith, lead author on the study from the University’s School of Biological Sciences, added: “The study represents a major large-scale analysis of ticks in Britain – and the data could aid work to help predict the effects of climate change on tick distributions and disease spread.”


The study entitled ‘Prevalence, distribution and risk associated with ticks infesting dogs in Great Britain’, was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council [NERC] and Merial Animal Health Ltd.


Please contact Faith.Smith@bristol.ac.uk for further information.


Pics on site:
A map illustrating the prevalence of ticks attaching to dogs in Great Britain



This is an important study because the results suggest that the risk of tick infestation is far higher in dogs than was previously thought. This has serious implications for the incidence of tick-borne disease. The study also confirms that a non-native species of tick, which is also a major disease vector in Europe, is now established in southern England. It will be of considerable interest to monitor its spread.


Professor Richard Wall, head of the Veterinary Parasitology Group
___________________________


Lyme Disease and Pets


http://www.lyme.org/ld_pets.html


Lyme disease can affect individual pets differently. Some animals may display no symptoms. Other animals may develop fever, loss of appetite, painful joints, lethargy, and vomiting. If left untreated, the spirochete may damage the eyes, heart, kidneys, and nervous system. Lyme disease has been diagnosed in humans, dogs, cats, horses, goats, and cattle. Other species may also be at risk.


Cats may show lameness, fever, loss of appetite, fatigue, eye damage, unusual breathing, or heart involvement. Many cats do not show noticeable symptoms, despite being infected.


Infected dogs may be lethargic, have a poor/loss of appetite, or a fever (103° – 105 ° F). Dogs may also experience lameness shifting from one joint to another, fatigue, kidney damage or failure, heart disorders, or neurologic involvement (e.g. aggression, confusion, overeating, seizures). Dogs can be infected with the Lyme bacterium but not exhibit any noticeable symptoms. Dogs appear to have the same expression of disease as humans, therefore, humans have been considered an animal model for dogs. Transplacental transmission has occurred in dogs.


Many cattle do not display signs of Lyme disease; those that do may have lameness, painful or swollen joints, fever, laminitis, or weight loss. A skin rash may be present on the udder of infected cows. Bb has been found to exist in urine and colostrum of infected cattle; therefore, the possibility of transmission between cows should be considered. The Lyme bacterium has also been found in blood, milk, synovial fluid, and spontaneously aborted fetal tissue. Bb can survive in frozen milk, but is killed during pasteurization.


Infected horses generally do not have a fever, but may have lame or stiff joints, laminitis, depression, or refuse to eat. This bacterial infection may be a cause of moon blindness or loss of vision. There have been reports of spontaneous abortion and encephalitis in horses infected with Bb. Neurologic signs include head tilt, difficulty swallowing, or aimless wandering. Transplacental transmission occurs. Colts born to infected mares have displayed birth defects. Many horses may be infected with the spirochete, but display no symptoms.


PROTECTING YOUR PET


1. Apply tick-killing chemicals to your animals in order to protect them from disease spreading ticks. Sprays and dips containing permethrins and pyrethrins kill ticks on dogs, cats, and horses. Precautions should be taken when applying insecticides as some animals may be sensitive to the chemicals. Follow the manufacturer’s instructions.


It is a good idea to wear rubber gloves during application. Tick collars will help discourage ticks from attaching to your pet(s). Never apply multiple repellents on your pet. A mixture of different chemicals on your pet could make the animal very sick.
2. Take precautions to guard against ticks when entering tick habitat, such as grassy, shrubby, wooded, or beach grass areas. Cut/mow grassy areas regularly to reduce tick habitation.
3. Treat the environment with insecticides designed specifically for ticks. To avoid contaminating water, experts recommend spraying at least 75 feet away from a well.
4. Conduct frequent Tick-Checks! Examine animals closely in order to detect embedded ticks.
5. Remove attached ticks properly and promptly to reduce the chance of transmission of the LD bacterium. Place fine point tweezers around the tick’s mouthparts (the place where the tick is attached) and gently pull upwards until the tick detaches. Do not use your bare fingers!


Disinfect the bite site and tweezers after removal. Wash your hands. Place the tick, along with several blades of grass, into a small container (e.g. a clean screw-cap pill bottle or a zip-lock bag) for later examination. Call your veterinarian to determine if there is a local place where the tick can be tested. Label the container with: the date, name of pet, type of animal, owner’s name, address and phone number.
6. Have your animal(s) examined as soon as possible if you notice any symptoms of disease; the sooner a disease is diagnosed, the easier it is to treat.
7. Vaccines are available for dogs (in North America)
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Lyme Disease Treatment in Pets


Lyme disease can be treated with antibiotics, because the disease is caused by a bacterium that is introduced to your pet through a bite from a tick carrying the disease.


Antibiotics will be taken for a long period of time and some times and may not be very effective if your pet has had the disease for a long period of time. Sometimes, your veterinarian can switch the antibiotics so see if that may cure the disease. But, if your pet does get bitten again, the disease can reoccur.


So, the best treatment for lyme disease is in the prevention. Ticks can be found in many different areas and are just waiting for the next warm body. Keeping your pets out of thick brush and high grass will help them from getting ticks, but there are many products on the market today that can in fact keep ticks off of your pets or kill these pests if your pet already has ticks.


Bathing your pet or grooming your pet can also help in Preventing ticks on the time you connect to your pet. After your pet has been outside in, comb him completely and check the skin. This can be a lengthy process when you dog or cat has long hair. But it is well worth the time.


If you have a tick on your pet better and is a movement, then you will be able to remove easily. Make sure you kill the tick. If the tick has attached it is very important to remove it properly. You can use tweezers or your fingernails [Tick Talk note - it is advisable not to use finegrnail - if they tick bursts then infection could be spread through the skin or eyes if you were t rub your eyes closely after - tweezers or tick tiwsters would be best!]. Grab the tick close to your pet‘s skin and pull straight out very firmly. Do not allow any of the contents from the tick on your skin or your pet‘s skin.


http://allaboutpet.wordpress.com/2010/05/04/lyme-disease-treatment-in-pets/
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Effects of tick-borne disease on the canine immune system


http://www.vintagegoldens.com/tick.html


The tick-borne diseases are caused by intracellular organisms, that is organisms that reside inside of cells in the animals they infect. Most are hemoparasites, inhabiting blood cells. Several can inhabit several different kinds of cells including those other than blood cells.


For whatever reason, perhaps their ability hide within the hosts cells, these organisms have profound effects on the immune systems of their host. They seem to cause immune system dysfunction, and often appear to suppress the hosts immune system at the same time they are triggering autoimmune reactions. Immune system depression manifests as lack of antibodies and vulnerability of the infected animal to secondary infections.


Autoimmune reactions are the hallmark of tick-borne disease. There may be autoimmune destruction of blood cells or blood cell progenitors in the bone marrow. Joints are inflamed and swollen and fluid tapped from affected joints has all the characteristics of autoimmune poly arthritis. Affected dogs may suffer from autoimmune disorders such as inflammatory bowel syndrome, myositis, and uveitis. Many affected dogs are reported to suffer from skin “allergies”, another indication of immune system dysfunction.


Indirect Testing Methods


Indirect antibody tests are most commonly used as they are more easily available from commercial testing laboratories and are less expensive. These tests analyze for the presence of antibodies against specific organisms. High levels of antibodies are believed to indicate active infection. The problem is how to interpret negative or low level positive results. A negative result is generally interpreted to mean the dog is not infected, although it could also mean the dog’s body simply has mounted no immune defense against the infecting organism. Low levels of antibodies may indicate a poor immune response against an active infection, or past exposure to the organism but no active infection.


Since antibodies may persist in the bloodstream for months or years following an infection, the presence of antibodies is not unequivocal evidence of active infection. The tick-borne organisms are notorious for causing immunosuppression and there is anecdotal evidence that infected dogs may have low or zero antibody levels. Low antibody levels or negative antibody test results are not conclusive evidence for lack of infection.


One probable reason for negative test results for dogs whose symptoms strongly suggest tick-borne disease is that the dog was not tested for the right species. Antibody tests are very specific for the exact species of tick-borne organism. Only a few species create “cross-over” problems, where antibodies from one species cause a false positive reading when testing for a different species. Typical test “panels” only test for a few species of the many tick-borne organisms that may infect dogs.
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ARTHROPOD-BORNE INFECTIOUS DISEASES (by Acarus Labs, Bristol)


http://www.bristol.ac.uk/acarus/casual.htm


The diseases we work on are caused by bacteria (similar to E. coli) or much larger, more advanced organisms called protozoa (like amoeba or the agent that causes malaria). They are all transmitted by biting arthropods (ticks, fleas or flies).

Babesiosis:

Babesiosis is a tick-borne disease of companion animals, humans and food animals of worldwide significance. The disease is caused by protozoan organisms of the genus Babesia (sometimes called “piroplasms” due to their pear-like shape when seen within red blood cells). Of particular significance to us are the species B. canis and B.gibsoni, which can infect dogs, and B. felis, B. cati and B. pantherae which are found in cats.


The Babesias are protozoans, somewhat similar to those causing malaria and sleeping sickness. They have a complex two-host life cycle whereby they reproduce sexually in their tick host and asexually in mammals. The organisms replicate inside host red blood cells and cause a spectrum of disease ranging from no symptoms to a fulminant, acute disease, which may be fatal. Disease symptoms are usually due to the widespread destruction of red-blood cells with the concomitant release of haemoglobin and organisms into the blood stream. The major symptoms are fever, anaemia, haemoglobinuria (dark red, haemoglobin-containing urine), jaundice, lethargy and, in severe cases, acute collapse with multiple organ failure.


Bartonellosis:
Bacteria of the genus Bartonella are found in the blood of many wild rodents and larger mammals, such as deer, throughout the world. In these natural hosts, infection with the bacteria does not appear to influence fitness. However, the transfer of these bacteria to domestic animals and humans can result in disease.


Bartonella appear to be transmitted from one animal to another by a range of biting insects, particularly fleas, although ticks have also been implicated. The disease can also pass, to humans at least, by direct inoculation e.g. by scratching or biting by heavily infected animals (thus giving rise to “cat scratch disease” a problem in immuno-compromised humans).


Bartonellosis (infection with Bartonella) is largely an infection of cats where it causes a wide spectrum of problems dependent on the underlying health of the animal, although current work is investigating its association with disease in other companion animal species. It appears that many animals carry Bartonella but remain symptomless. When stressed or immuno-compromised cats may develop fever, anaemia, heart and liver problems and neurological signs.


Borreliosis:
Borreliosis (sometimes known as Lyme disease) is caused by bacteria called Borrelia. Several species of this organism exist in Europe and all cause disease when transmitted to dogs and humans (and, less commonly, to cats, and horses). These organisms are adapted to live in rodent and wildlife reservoirs in which they cause no apparent problems. When ticks which harbour the organisms bite an animal, the bacteria are transmitted into the host with tick saliva and multiply in the bloodstream.


It appears that only certain types of ticks (known as Ixodes) can transmit Borrelia. Unfortunately the most common UK tick, the sheep tick (Ixodes ricinus), is one of these.


In humans the typical disease progression is a red rash around the tick bite which resolves and is followed by flu-like symptoms and arthritis. In animals the rash is not usually observed and the first signs of illness are that the animal appears “off-colour”; this lethargy and anorexia is often accompanied by lameness due to arthritic changes in the joints.


The infection is managed with antibiotic therapy but prevention is better than cure – evidence suggests that the ticks do not infect their host for 24 to 72 hours post-attachment. Removal of the ticks in this time frame should forestall the disease as would use of an effective acaricide (i.e. tick-killing preparation).


Ehrlichiosis:
Ehrlichiosis is caused by a small bacterium (a rickettsia) from the genus Ehrlichia. These bacteria are predominantly passed from animal to animal by ticks in a similar manner to the transmission of Lyme disease. Once in the bloodstream the bacteria invade white blood cells (or platelets) where they multiply.


The clinical manifestations of ehrlichiosis are very varied, ranging from general loss of condition with intermittent fever to more organ specific pathology such as arthritis or eye problems. There are two major types of Ehrlichia which differ in the type of white blood cells they infect. The monocytic Ehrlichia (generally E. canis) tends to give rise to a chronic disease, whereas the granulocytic Ehrlichia (E. phagocytophila) causes a much more acute disease with high temperatures, anorexia and reluctance to move in infected animals. Both types cause depletion of clotting factors in the blood resulting in severe haemorrhage in some cases.


Leishmaniasis:
Leishmaniasis is a disease caused by protozoans of the genus Leishmania, and is transmitted by biting sandflies. Once in the body the organism lives inside macrophages, cells of the immune system. The disease is a major human health problem in parts of Africa, The Middle-East, South America and is widespread in the Mediterranean basin. The disease is a bigger problem in dogs than cats and a lot of work is being carried out to see if dogs are a natural reservoir of the disease in some areas.


Dogs infected with Leishmania tend to develop a chronic, systemic disease with a variable course of development. The commonest symptoms are weight loss and lack of endurance, lymphadenomegaly (“swollen glands”) and skin disease, particularly around the eyes. If caught in the early stages the disease can be successfully controlled by chemotherapy, but the organism is good at hiding and so repeated courses of therapy may be necessary throughout the animal’s life.
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PCR-BASED SURVEY OF TICK-BORNE DISEASES IN THE UK/IRELAND


European Society for Veterinary Internal Medicine, 2001


Department of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, UK


http://www.bris.ac.uk/acarus/esvimabst.htm


Extracts of report below:


A PCR-based survey of UK/Irish dogs and cats was undertaken to obtain a preliminary picture of the distribution and presence/prevalence of tick-borne infections. Blood samples from 180 systemically ill animals (120 dogs and 60 cats) from 41 practices distributed throughout UK and Ireland were collected during September-October, 2000. The study was stratified according to clinical signs and each sample was tested by PCR for Ehrlichia, E. phagocytophila, Borrelia and Bartonella DNA.


Simple PCR targeting of genus- or species-specific regions of rRNA genes (Ehrlichia), housekeeping genes (citrate synthetase and gltA in Bartonella), virulence factors (ospA in Borrelia) or multicopy sequences (epank1 in E. phagocytophila) was used.


DNA of endemic tick-borne pathogens was detected in 6.6% of sick dogs and 5% of sick cats. Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato was detected in 5 % and E. phagocytophila in 0.8 % of canine samples. In sick cats, 3.3% were infected with B. burgdorferi sensu lato and 1.6% were infected with E. phagocytophila. No samples were positive for Bartonella DNA using PCR. However, in a larger separate survey of cats studied here, 11% were positive for Bartonella henselae using culture.


Retrospective study of UK samples submitted for PCR diagnosis


A rapid PCR-based diagnostic service for arthropod-borne diseases in companion animals has been developed at the University of Bristol. PCR methodology used is as described for the PCR-based survey. Between January 2000 and May 2001, 100 blood samples from ill non-travelled UK dogs and cats were PCR tested. Of 89 samples tested, 6 dogs were positive for E. phagocytophila (6.7%). Of 68 tested for Borrelia, 2 dogs (3%) were positive and of the 66 samples tested for Bartonella, 2 dogs (3%) were positive.


Conclusions


These preliminary data suggest significant exposure of UK/Irish companion animal populations and possibly their owners, to infected arthropod vectors. Ehrlichia phagocytophila, Borrelia and Bartonella spp are human pathogens and companion animals may act as sentinels for human infection (10). In addition, the presence of E. phagocytophila infection in dogs and cats in UK and Ireland has been confirmed.


Molecular evidence of Borrelia infection in dogs is confirmed and is reported for the first time to our knowledge, in cats. The Borrelia genospecies involved in infection will be further characterised using restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. Canine Bartonella infection is reported for the first time in Europe and the canine
Bartonella DNA will be sequenced.


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Prevalence of selected infectious agents in cats in Ireland
Journal of Feline Medicine & Surgery
Volume 12, Issue 6, June 2010


1 University Veterinary Hospital School of Agriculture, Food Science & Veterinary Medicine, University College Dublin, Ireland


2 College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO., Ireland


Vector-borne bacterial and rickettsial agents and Toxoplasma gondii, are common organisms in cats. Some are potentially zoonotic or may be transmitted via blood transfusion. The current study investigated the prevalence of these agents in cats from Dublin, Ireland, for which no published data exists. Whole blood (n = 116) and sera (n = 83) samples were obtained from 121 cats. DNA was extracted from blood and assayed using polymerase chain reaction techniques for Anaplasma species, Bartonella species, Ehrlichia species, Mycoplasma haemofelis, ‘Candidatus Mycoplasma haemominutum’, ‘Candidatus Mycoplasma turicensis’ and Rickettsia species. IgG and T gondii IgG and IgM serum antibodies were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. DNA consistent with B henselae (3.4%), B clarridgeiae (0.8%), both Bartonella species (0.8%), C M haemominutum (12.9%), or M haemofelis (2.5%) was amplified from 24/116 blood samples (20.6%). Antibodies to T gondii and Bartonella species were detected in 28 (33.7%) and 22 (26.5%) of 83 sera, respectively.


http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6WJC-50338Y2-1&_user=10&_coverDate=06%2F30%2F2010&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=241ce18ab3708d350bf49b1773736ac6
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Tick-borne disease on Irish farms – 23-04-2011
By Micheal Casey


Mícheál Casey from the Department of Agriculture’s Regional Veterinary Laboratory service, outlines the common tick-borne diseases affecting Irish livestock


Ticks are blood-sucking parasitic members of the Arachnidae – the same class of eight-legged arthropods as spiders. Diseases transmitted by ticks are a major cause of economic loss, disease and deaths in farmed animals worldwide.


Although there is only one species of tick that affects Irish livestock – the ‘castor bean tick’, Ixodes ricinus – it can act as a vector for a range of diseases. All references to ticks in this article refer to this tick.


Ticks have some fairly precise environmental requirements, especially when they leave the relative shelter of the base of the vegetation. They find a new host by ‘questing’, where they climb to the tips of the vegetation and grab onto any animal (or person) that passes.


They need mild and moist conditions for questing, which are provided in late spring and in autumn in a typical Irish year, resulting in clearly defined spring and autumn peaks in tick-borne diseases.


On some farms the ticks have become adapted to one or the other season, while on other farms both peaks are seen.


Tick-borne fever
This disease is caused by a bacterium (Ehrlichia phagocytophila) and is normally mild and transient. Although this is not commonly diagnosed, it is probably the most important tick-borne disease in Ireland.


Firstly, it is very common; so common, in fact, that most herds have a high level of resistance and most infection occurs in young and bought-in animals. As the name suggests, animals run a temperature for a couple of days, lose their appetite, they may cough a little and milk yield of cows drops significantly.


The reason for the significance of tick-borne fever is the brief but severe immunosuppression that accompanies infection with the organism. Affected animals are very susceptible to other infections at the time of infection, and vaccines for other diseases that are administered at the time of tick-borne fever infection will not take effect.


Furthermore, if the tick that infects the animal is also carrying one of the other tick-borne diseases, then infection is more likely and the ensuing disease may be more severe.


Tick-borne fever is a hidden but important factor in every other tick-borne disease.


Babesiosis -’Redwater’
This parasite, Babesia divergens, is carried by ticks and is capable of being transmitted from one generation of tick to the next, so a reservoir of infection can be maintained on pasture even when no livestock have grazed that pasture for several years.


Once inoculated into the bloodstream, the organism replicates rapidly in red blood cells, which are ruptured as each generation of the parasite emerges. Animals run a high temperature which then falls rapidly, often below normal, as the disease progresses. Affected animals become dull, lose their appetite, become slow and may have difficulty standing or walking as the disease progresses. The oxygen-carrying haemoglobin is released from the ruptured red blood cells and passes through the kidneys and out in the urine, giving it a characteristic reddish brown colour and giving the disease its common name – ‘redwater’. The heart races as the body tries to compensate for the loss of circulating blood cells.


Deaths can occur due to heart failure, kidney failure or anaemia, and blood transfusions may be required in the treatment of the most severely affected cases.


Drugs that prevent multiplication of the parasite are administered, but it is the effects of disease that are the most difficult to treat – anaemia, dehydration (and associated constipation).


One unique feature of redwater is the ‘reverse age immunity’ phenomenon. Calves are resistant to the disease until they are about six months of age. After that, the resistance an animal has to redwater in later life will depend on whether they were exposed to the disease as calves. Animals that have no resistance tend to develop a very severe form of the disease, and many farms routinely protect bought-in animals with a drug that gives protection for about four weeks. If this is given just before peak tick activity, there is a good chance that the animal will be bitten, infected and develop resistance without getting the disease, while protected by the drug.


Redwater seems to be decreasing in incidence and in severity in recent years. Partly, this is due to improved pasture management, which eliminates tick habitat. It also seems likely that the widespread use of Ivermectin-type products may have had an impact on tick productivity.


Tick pyaemia
This is a disease of young lambs, which is caused by a common skin bacterium, Staphylococcus aureus. These bacteria are inoculated from the skin surface by the tick as it bites and get into the bloodstream causing septicaemia (blood poisoning). While the lamb’s blood carries the bacteria around the body, the tick will frequently be infecting the animal with tick-borne fever, which results in the bacteria ‘seeding’ the internal organs and tissues, especially the liver and the joints. A second septicaemia, often fatal, may occur at this stage. Affected lambs become slow and stiff and will die if untreated.


Q fever
Q fever is caused by bacterium, Coxiella burnetti, and is very similar to tick-borne fever. Little is known about Q fever in Irish farm animals, largely because of the unavailability of diagnostic tests. It is known to occur here, and is tick-transmitted. It is likely to be behind some abortion outbreaks in sheep and cattle and may have an immunosuppressive role in a wide range of diseases


Lyme disease
This bacterial tick-borne disease caused by Borrelia burgdorferi is strongly associated with deer, and the infection risk for humans and animals is highest in woodland and nearby pasture.


It is ‘one to watch’ as our wild and farmed deer population grows. It causes a fever and rash and can progress to cause central nervous system disease, arthritis and blood vessel damage in humans.


Again, little is known about the disease in Ireland, as it is rarely diagnosed, although blood testing shows that exposure to infection is common.


This is a serious and potentially fatal disease in humans, so it is very important to seek medical attention if any relevant symptoms are seen after a tick bite.


Louping Ill
This virus causes encephalitis (brain inflammation) in sheep and is often fatal. It tends to occur in ticks in well-defined areas and is best controlled on affected farms by sourcing replacements from home-bred animals, or at least from within those areas.


Control
A common feature of many tick-borne diseases is the strong, often life-long, immunity that results from infection. As a result, strong herd immunity develops, and very little disease tends to occur in stable, closed herds, even in heavily infested areas.


The exception here would be tick pyemia in lambs, where certain farms have a problem year after year unless they control the ticks.


Control of ticks requires the recognition and elimination of ideal tick habitat. Because ticks require mild, moist conditions, they are usually found at the base of dense vegetation. Ideal conditions for ticks occur where grass is growing through one or two years of dead previous growth (areas ungrazed for several years), and there is a moist decaying mat of old vegetation at the base of the sward. This is something to watch for when renting grazing land that may have been fallow for some time.


Control is achieved by minimising this phenomenon and by keeping animals fenced out of likely areas. Good pasture management and the rotation (where possible) of forage and grazing areas should minimise the amount of tick habitat.


The use of acaricides (chemicals that kill ticks) with residual effect will give protection against ticks for several weeks, and is a common practice, as a way to protect cattle or lambs during periods of peak risk.
However, preventing tick bites will also prevent the acquisition of immunity, so these animals will continue to be vulnerable once the protection offered by the acaricide wears off.


Another useful control measure is to source replacements within the herd, or at least locally, so that they will have been exposed to the range of tick-borne diseases that occur in that area.


Great care is needed when introducing animals from tick-free farms to areas where they will face a significant challenge, as these animals will have no immunity to tick-borne disease.


http://www.farmersjournal.ie/site/farming-Tick-borne-disease-on-Irish-farms-12922.html
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Dr. Bettina Wagner developed new techniques for testing for Lyme Disease that are more accurate, specific, and sensitive than previous tests.


“The bacteria that cause Lyme disease are particularly difficult to detect,” explained Dr. Bettina Wagner, Harry M. Zweig Assistant Professor in Equine Health, who teaches in the Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences.


“After infection they tend to hide where they can’t be detected. They bury in the joints of dogs, causing arthritis or lameness. In humans and horses they also burrow into the nervous system, in the spine or even the brain, causing pain, paralysis, or behavioral alterations. By the time such clinical signs appear, the bacteria are usually not in circulation anymore.”


“We can now not only distinguish between infection and vaccination, but also between early and chronic infection stages,” Wagner noted. “That was not possible before. You were able to say whether an animal was infected, but not when it was infected, or how far the infection had developed.”


The test and information it provides can help veterinarians make advanced decisions about treatment. After the long treatment period ends, veterinarians usually conduct follow-up testing to see if it was successful. With the information the new multiplex test can give us about the stage of the disease in an animal, we know what to expect after treatment and can better measure its success.
http://ahdc.vet.cornell.edu/docs/Scopes_2011_02.pdf
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Map of canine vector-borne disease in Europe


http://www.cvbd.org/3838.0.html


Canine vector-borne disease (geographic & seasonal distribution)


http://www.cvbd.org/4055.0.html
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To buy a tick twister go to: http://ticktalkireland.org/ticktwister.html