Results 311 to 320 of about 474,242 (359)
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Tick removal

Journal of preventive medicine and hygiene, 2011
Ticks are blood feeding external parasites which can cause local and systemic complications to human body. A lot of tick-borne human diseases include Lyme disease and virus encephalitis, can be transmitted by a tick bite. Also secondary bacterial skin infection, reactive manifestations against tick allergens, and granuloma?s formation can be occurred ...
S, Roupakias, P, Mitsakou, A Al, Nimer
openaire   +2 more sources

Tick symbiosis

Current Opinion in Insect Science
As obligate blood-feeders, ticks serve as vectors for a variety of pathogens that pose threats on both human and livestock health. The microbiota that ticks harbor play important roles in influencing tick nutrition, development, reproduction, and vector.
Zhengwei, Zhong   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

‘Tick this, Tick that’

Journal of Learning Disabilities, 2000
Community care assessments and individual service reviews are intended to empower people with learning disabilities. The research study reported in this paper investigated the effects of the Carers Act on families that include people with a learning disability, and sought the views of 51 carers and the people they cared for.
Val Williams, Carol Robinson
openaire   +1 more source

Tick paralysis

Medical Clinics of North America, 2002
Tick paralysis is a preventable cause of morbidity and death that, when diagnosed promptly, requires a simple low-cost intervention. The key to success is to consider tick paralysis in the differential diagnosis of ascending weakness, particularly in children, in geographic areas where this disease predominates.
openaire   +2 more sources

Tick Paralysis

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2010
Tick paralysis is a toxin-mediated cause of acute flaccid paralysis. Most practitioners will go through their entire career without ever encountering a case. An important veterinary disease, tick paralysis is rare in humans. Although it has certain geographical proclivities, it exists worldwide.
openaire   +2 more sources

Tick Paralysis

Seminars in Neurology, 2013
Tick paralysis is a rare, but readily treatable condition that if missed can lead to significant morbidity and death. The classic clinical presentation of tick paralysis is the development of an unsteady, ataxic type gait followed by an acute symmetric ascending flaccid paralysis. Symptoms generally begin within 2 to 6 days of tick attachment.
openaire   +2 more sources

Tick Toxicosis

Pediatrics, 1972
In this article we report a case of tick toxicosis. It is hoped that this will serve to remind physicians to consider the possibility of tick toxicosis when confronted with a patient with acute ascending flaccid paralysis or acute ataxia. Tick paralysis, although widely known in many rural areas, is frequently not considered in the differential ...
F L, DeBusk, S, O'Connor
openaire   +2 more sources

The Impacts of Climate Change on Ticks and Tick-Borne Disease Risk

Annual Review of Entomology, 2021
Lucy Gilbert
exaly  

Mapping ticks and tick-borne pathogens in China

Nature Communications, 2021
Guo-Ping Zhao   +2 more
exaly  

A high-quality Ixodes scapularis genome advances tick science

Nature Genetics, 2023
Sarah B Kingan, Daniel M Portik
exaly  

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