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Lyme Disease and Other Tick-Carried
Diseases on the Rise in Ohio
By Sam Custer
OSU Extension, Darke County
COLUMBUS, Ohio — A steadily rising number of Lyme disease cases are
being reported in Ohio transmitted by a tick that can be as small as a
poppy seed.
Every year since 2010, when Ohio’s first population of blacklegged deer
ticks was discovered in Coshocton County, the number of people infected
with Lyme disease has increased. Last year’s statewide total of 160
human cases of the disease is more than three and a half times the 2010
total.
Besides the increase in Lyme disease, more Ohioans are also reporting
cases of other tick- related diseases, leading to concern about tick
populations that used to be rare in the state.
Blacklegged deer ticks, which can transmit Lyme disease, are spreading,
and one challenge in fending them off is that in their nymph stage,
they’re easily overlooked, said Glen Needham, associate professor
emeritus of entomology with the College of Food, Agricultural, and
Environmental Sciences at The Ohio State University.
The blacklegged deer tick has established populations in 30 to 40
counties in Ohio, primarily in the southern and eastern parts of the
state, Needham said. In the nymph stage, which can extend from spring
through fall, the tick can appear on skin to be a speck of dirt or a
freckle.
“It is so tiny and it feeds so quickly that sometimes people go to the
doctor with symptoms but don’t connect it to having been bitten,”
Needham said.
Lyme disease can cause a rash that looks like a bullseye and flu-like
symptoms including fever, headache and muscle and joint aches.
Antibiotics can cure most cases of Lyme disease.
If a blood sample is taken from a person too early in the disease, it
can come back as negative for Lyme disease, Needham pointed out.
“The doctor may then pass on giving you an antibiotic and then you end
up with the later stages of Lyme disease,” Needham said.
A warm winter such as this year’s can mean the blacklegged tick is
active all year as opposed to just in the spring and summer, said Tammi
Rogers, program assistant for agriculture and natural resources for the
Ohio State University Extension office in Coshocton County. OSU
Extension is the outreach arm of the college.
Rogers assisted Needham in 2010 with surveying the tick population in
the county.
“For years, we were told there aren’t any deer ticks in Ohio,” Rogers
said.
Blacklegged deer ticks most often are found in the woods, but that
hasn’t made people overly concerned about venturing into the forest,
Rogers said.
“I wouldn’t say they’re leery,” Rogers said. “People have just had to
kind of change their mindset and think: I need to be checking for ticks
year-round on me instead of just in the summer months.”
Another tick to be watchful of in Ohio is the American dog tick, which
can transmit Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
While reported cases of Ohio residents infected with Rocky Mountain
spotted fever have also risen in recent years, the annual totals are
significantly smaller than the number of Lyme disease cases. In 2016, a
total of 24 Ohioans reported they had Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
Early symptoms of the infection include severe headache and high fever,
then a few days later, a rash usually appears on wrists and ankles.
Caught early, the disease can be treated successfully with antibiotics.
Unlike the blacklegged deer tick, the American dog tick is much larger
and therefore easier to spot. It gravitates to the head.
“It may be that you’re in the shower shampooing your hair and you hit a
bump, then you find out it has eight legs,” Needham said.
In southern Ohio, the Lone Star tick, which was rare in the 1970s and
1980s, now is the most common tick that residents who are bitten bring
to the health departments in Jackson and Scioto counties, Needham said.
The Lone Star tick can transmit Ehrlichiosis. Typical symptoms of the
disease include fever, headache, fatigue and muscle aches, which often
occur one to two weeks after a tick bite.
“We are seeing more dogs and people infected with Ehrlichiosis in
southern Ohio,” Needham said.
Despite the rise in tick-transmitted diseases in Ohio, Needham said
covering up before going into the woods or wearing a repellent with
DEET or picaridin can go a long way toward keeping ticks from biting.
Pets should be protected all year with a veterinary-prescribed product,
as dogs are highly susceptible to many tick-borne diseases.
If a tick is found attached, Needham recommends that you immediately
remove it by using pointy tweezers, another tool, or your finger and
thumb, ideally protected by gloves to prevent disease transmission.
Save the tick in a plastic bag, pill bottle or travel-sized hand
sanitizer container. Showing the tick to a healthcare professional
could help the professional connect any symptoms to the type of tick
that bit you.
For more information about ticks in Ohio, visit go.osu.edu/tick.
For more information about OSU Extension, Darke County, visit the Darke
County OSU Extension web site at www.darke.osu.edu, the OSU Extension
Darke County Facebook page or contact Sam Custer, at 937.548.5215.
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