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tbran | 2 years ago
- Deer populations are increasing.
- There are no winter killoffs due to warming temperatures.
- Invasive plants like Japanese barberry are becoming extremely common and create microclimates that support mice that ticks live on before attaching to deer.
I believe some tick-borne diseases are becoming more common - I know two people that have had babesiosis, and one person and one dog with anaplasmosis. One of the babesiosis cases was not caught by the hospital in the first go-around and required a blood exchange and almost 2 months in the hospital and rehab.
There is a new invasive insect called the deer ked [0] that crawls like the girl from The Ring and may be a new vector for tick diseases (and they fly!).
Highly recommend checking out the CDC on tick-borne diseases [1], using DEET/permethrin [2] (no permethrin with cats, though), and doing tick checks if you spend time outside.
[0]: https://www.cdc.gov/ticks/tickbornediseases/index.html
IG_Semmelweiss|2 years ago
Babeosis is stil rare in the northern US.
When you go to a hospital due to a suspected tick bite, keep in mind the standard tick panel does NOT include babeosis screening
You must do a full panel (some 26 tests) in order to detect it. These are often not available in most vet offices.
Babeosis is extremely common in the tropical climate of LATAM. If you take your dog there, and he comes back to the US sick , Consider that your US hospital may be dealing with an exotic disease (unlike LATAM, where this would be a dime a dozen)