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Tick-Borne Diseases

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 2023
Many tick-borne infections are increasing in geographic range as a result of activities such as reforestation and climate change. A history of outdoor activity in tick-endemic regions, together with consistent clinical signs (such as fever, splenomegaly, polyarthritis, thrombocytopenia), should raise suspicion for tick-borne infectious disease ...
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Tick-Borne Diseases [PDF]

open access: possible, 2000
Ticks are arachnids which are second only to mosquitoes as vectors of human disease agents. They are many tick-borne diseases worldwide such as Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis, babesiosis, relapsing fever, and tick-borne encephalitis.
Jerome Goddard, Jerome Goddard
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Treatment of Tick-Borne Diseases

The Annals of Pharmacotherapy, 2002
OBJECTIVE: To review the data regarding the pharmacotherapy of Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF), and the human ehrlichioses. DATA SOURCES: English-language literature was identified via MEDLINE (1966–January 2002) using the keywords Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and ehrlichiosis.
Ralph H. Raasch   +3 more
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Tick-Borne Diseases

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1991
Ticks may transmit a variety of human pathogens and are second in importance only to the mosquito as a vector of human disease. The majority of tick-borne diseases are nonspecific in their initial clinical and laboratory presentation and may be confused with a variety of more common illnesses.
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Tick-borne diseases

Seminars in Pediatric Neurology, 1999
Tick-transmitted infectious agents have assumed increased importance as causes of human disease in the United States. During the past two decades, Lyme borreliosis, ehrlichiosis, and babesiosis have emerged as newly described tick-borne infectious diseases of significance for pediatricians and pediatric neurologists.
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Tick-Borne Diseases

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America
Ticks are responsible for the vast majority of vector-borne illnesses in the United States. The number of reported tick-borne disease (TBD) cases has more than doubled in the past 20 years. The majority of TBD cases occur in warm weather months in individuals with recent outdoor activities in wooded areas.
Wesley, Eilbert, Andrew, Matella
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Tick-Borne Diseases

2018
This chapter provides a brief overview of the diseases and toxins transmitted by ticks in Southern Africa, and their modes of ...
Ivan Gerard Horak   +6 more
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Current Status of Tick-Borne Diseases in South Korea.

Vector Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, 2019
BACKGROUND Bites with tick-borne pathogens can cause various bacterial, viral, or parasitic diseases in humans. Tick-transmitted diseases are known as contributing factors to the increasing incidence and burden of diseases.
J. Im   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Prevention of Tick-Borne Diseases

Annual Review of Entomology, 2008
Tick-borne diseases are on the rise. Lyme borreliosis is prevalent throughout the Northern Hemisphere, and the same Ixodes tick species transmitting the etiologic agents of this disease also serve as vectors of pathogens causing human babesiosis, human granulocytic anaplasmosis, and tick-borne encephalitis.
Lars Eisen, Joseph Piesman
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Tick-Borne Diseases

1959
The importance of ticks as vectors of animal diseases of great economic significance has long been acknowledged. The role of ticks in veterinary medicine and the use of DDT in their control is discussed fully in Chapter VIII (Knipling). More recently, the role that ticks play in the transmission of human disease has been increasingly recognized.
W. J. HayesJr.   +2 more
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