Lyme and Anaplasmosis, Be Careful Out There...

Roccus7

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The Duo of Deer Tick spread diseases, Lyme and Anaplasmosis, continue to increase in Maine,, the reason I've started chemical warfare on multiple fronts. At Chez Roccus, all lawn and paths under chemical warfare treatments and when I venture out in untreated areas, it's permethrin-treated clothes, Malathion lotion around wrists, ankles, waist and neck, pants in socks and an extra spritz of Deep Woods Off on boots and lower pants. Before this regime, I would be constantly be finding dog ticks on me...

Tick-borne illnesses Lyme and anaplasmosis increased in Maine in 2019
pressherald.com/2020/01/03/tick-borne-illnesses-lyme-anaplasmosis-increased-in-maine-in-2019/

By Joe Lawlor Staff WriterJanuary 3, 2020

Anaplasmosis diagnoses in Maine reached a record high in 2019 with at least 685 confirmed cases of the tick-borne illness, while the number of Lyme disease cases also were up, rebounding following a decline in 2018.

“Ticks were abundant and highly active in 2019,” said Griffin Dill, integrated pest management specialist at the University of Maine Cooperative Extension. The university operates a “tick lab” and studies tick-borne illnesses.

Researchers studying the rise in tick-borne illnesses – anaplasmosis cases in Maine have climbed more than tenfold since 2012 – are looking at factors that include increased testing and climate change.

While both Lyme and anaplasmosis are transmitted by the deer tick and have the same symptoms – fever, joint pain, swelling, fatigue, headaches and neurological problems like Bell’s palsy – anaplasmosis is typically more severe. About 25 percent of anaplasmosis patients are hospitalized, compared to about 5 percent of Lyme patients. The diseases require similar treatment – a course of antibiotics for a bacterial infection.

There were 1,461 cases of Lyme disease in 2019, according to preliminary data from the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s a 7 percent increase over the 1,370 cases in 2018, but well below the record 1,852 reported in 2017.
Anaplasmosis showed the biggest increase in 2019, rising 44 percent from the 476 cases in 2018. The number of anaplasmosis cases peaked at 663 in 2017 and has risen dramatically since 2012, when there were 52 confirmed diagnoses.

The CDC also reported 138 cases of babesiosis in 2019, another tick-borne illness.

The final numbers for 2019 will be slightly higher for tick-borne diseases, as there’s a lag in reporting some cases. For instance, if a patient tested positive for Lyme in November, but the patient’s doctor did not report the case to the Maine CDC until January 2020, that case would be added to the 2019 report.

Dill said researchers still are gathering information about 2019, and there are many unknowns about why anaplasmosis cases surged. Of the ticks that were submitted to the Maine tick lab in 2019, 8 percent tested positive for anaplasmosis, compared to 38 percent of ticks that tested positive for Lyme, Dill said.

“It might be that there’s hot spots in certain geographical areas for ticks infected with anaplasmosis, and that those ticks may be more likely to be in areas with more human activity,” he said.

Also, Dill said doctors may be more likely to order tests for anaplasmosis now compared to five years ago, so cases that were not diagnosed years ago are more likely to be reported now. Maine is following a pattern seen in other states where Lyme disease becomes rampant, followed a few years later by increased prevalence of anaplasmosis and babesiosis.

Meanwhile, researchers are studying how climate change is affecting tick range and habitat, and how seasonal weather patterns may play a role. For instance, the hot and dry summer of 2018 may have contributed to reduced Lyme disease cases, while Maine experienced a wetter and more humid summer in 2019, Dill said. Ticks thrive in damp and humid conditions.

Dill said an early November snow in 2018 may have reduced tick activity, while there wasn’t as much snow through late fall of 2019.

“The ticks are unlikely to crawl through several inches of snow,” Dill said. “They are more likely to hide under the leaf litter under the snow, and wait until the snow melts before questing for a host.”

Dill said a new law passed by Congress, the TICK Act, co-sponsored by Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, will be a great help in the future for researchers to do more comprehensive field surveillance of ticks in Maine, and to improve diagnostics so that more people are tested for the disease. Dill expects some of the TICK Act funding to be distributed in Maine.

The TICK Act includes $100 million in federal spending, doled out in $20 million increments over the next five years. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would award grants to state health departments to “improve data collection and analysis, support early detection and diagnosis, improve treatment and raise awareness,” Collins’ office said in a December news release.

The prevalence of tick-borne diseases is much higher than the reported number, by about 10 times, according to the U.S. CDC, because of misdiagnoses or cases that are not diagnosed. Nationally, there were 42,743 reported cases of Lyme in 2017, the most recent year available, and 5,762 anaplasmosis cases.

Paula Jackson Jones, president and co-founder of Maine’s Midcoast Lyme Disease Support and Education, who lobbied for the TICK Act, said it should provide better collaboration between the states.

“Hopefully, this will result in some really good answers, finding some really good solutions to this,” Jackson Jones said.
 
U r not a bit concerned about malathion? I use permethrin on my hunting clothes but readily admit that except for Late October through March when I deer hunt on a nuisance permit, I am nowhere near ticks, living on the south shore of Nassau county where no deer have lived for a century and few whitefooted mice exist either. Our properties are postage stamp size and largely unwooded except for the state and town parks around. Of course as deer generally are heading west from Suffolk county the hilly and forested area of northern Nassau are seeing deer now.
 
Gotchya. Mid 2000s we just sprayed on DEET. No effect. Either lucky so far or the permethrin works. Even when I see ticks while field dressing I fortunately have not brought any home. When in doubt I leave my clothes out on the deck overnight, then into the dryer they go.
 
I once picked up a lone star tick in Montauk rail yard, despite it being recently weed-sprayed and just dousing my boots with pants with DEET a few years back. After work I tagged the old sand mine dock and had on me the tick trifecta, a lone star, a dog and a bunch of deer ticks. One was a nymph that was on my door handle inside my car. And this was after sticking to the path and gravel lot.

I went out and tried Permethrin, and treated a bunch of clothes/boots for "out East". Never had a problem then, and I do a lot of stomping around the point, Hero, Shadmoor, etc. Only thing I have not treated was waders or things like that, not sure of it's effect on gaskets, etc. I'm sold on it, although I know folks who don't trust it in terms of side effects, but to me the risk of getting Alpha Gal/Anaplasmosis, etc is much worse.

One of the last times I was at Hero I dozed off in the lot behind the mess hall while in a lawn chair, and I woke up to find a turkey a few feet away that was eyeing my Goldberg's breakfast on my lap. It's neck was LOADED with blood engorged ticks, and it took off down the path to the housing area when I reached for my cell phone. But between the birds and the deer (I switched on a bright LED headlamp walking up from Turtle Cove one night to find the path and was amazed to see so many sets of eyes peeking out of the darkness in the brush) the tick situation isn't getting any better.
 
Yes I too swear by Permetherin the Sawyers spray.DEET dose not do a damb thing to ticks of any kind not even the 100% stuff witch is getting tough to find.And 4 years ago i was lucky enough to score a long island fall season huge tom turkey and the poor thing was LOADED with ticks swollen and still crawling so bad that i skinned the damb thing insted of plucking it .Every exposed part of it was crammed with swolled ticks under its wings its neck under every scale on its legs.Starting to think the turkeys dont eat ticks its the other way around.
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Premethrin-treated clothing - don't leave home without it!!!

Lyme disease cases in Maine hit a record high last year


Lyme disease skyrocketed in Maine in 2019, reaching a record of at least 2,079 cases that eclipsed the previous high of 1,852 cases in 2017.

“The number may continue to rise as providers make additional case reports,” the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention said in a news release Thursday.

Griffin Dill, integrated pest management specialist at the University of Maine Cooperative Extension, said ticks were “very active” in 2019. The extension runs a laboratory that studies ticks and tick-borne diseases.

Scientists are studying how weather and climate play a role in the range and activity of deer ticks. In general, ticks are more active in humid conditions and are less active in hot and dry conditions. Researchers said the spring and summer of 2019 featured near-ideal conditions for ticks, and a later onset of heavy snow in Maine also may have exposed more people to tick bites.

“The fall was also ideal for ticks, and the fall was extended,” Dill said. “Tick season never really ended.”
The operations center would be located near the grandstand and the racetrack at the Scarborough Downs, at the heart of the village center that’s planned as part of a $621 million mixed-use redevelopment of the harness-racing property.



Lyme disease is caused by a bacterial infection transmitted by the bite of a deer tick. If caught early, the infection can be treated with antibiotics. Symptoms include a bulls-eye rash – which occurs in about 50 percent of patients – fever, chills, headache, muscle and joint aches, and neurological problems, such as Bell’s palsy.

“While we can’t yet speculate about the reason for this increase, these new numbers emphasize the importance of preventing tick bites,” Dr. Nirav Shah, Maine CDC director, said in a statement. “Lyme disease and other tick-borne diseases are on the rise, so Mainers need to proactively protect themselves.”

Lyme cases fell to 1,370 in 2018 before rebounding last year. There was a late surge in reporting 2019 cases, with more than 500 confirmed in January.

“Cumulative reporting of Lyme disease cases takes more time because the process of confirming a Lyme disease diagnosis often takes longer than for anaplasmosis or babesiosis,” the Maine CDC said of two other tick-borne diseases.

There were 685 cases of anaplasmosis in 2019 – also a new record – and 138 cases of babesiosis.

Scientists still have much to learn about tickborne diseases, and a new federal law sponsored by Sen. Susan Collins of Maine – the TICK Act – includes $100 million in federal spending. The money will be doled out in $20 million annual increments over five years, and will award grants to state health departments to “improve data collection and analysis, support early detection and diagnosis, improve treatment and raise awareness.”

Nationally, there were 42,743 reported cases of Lyme disease in 2017 – the most recent year national statistics were available. The actual number of Lyme cases is much higher than the reported cases – by as much as 10 times – because many people are not tested or recover at home, the U.S. CDC said.

For more information on Lyme disease, go to www.maine.gov/lyme
 
Just resprayed my pants, vest, gloves and coat with permethrin as it was at least 7 weeks old. I only wash my hunting clothes in late March or if they get all bloody so my permethrin unfortunately often ages out lol.
 

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