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© Newswise. |
Lyme Disease Ticks Follow Rivers in Midwest
CONTACT: Jim Sliwa EMBARGOED UNTIL: November 14, 2001, 2:30 p.m. EST LYME DISEASE TICKS FOLLOW RIVERS IN MIDWEST ATLANTA --Ticks capable of carrying the bacterium that causes Lyme disease have been slowly migrating along rivers in the Midwest, a trend that may help predict future areas at risk for the disease, say researchers from the University of Illinois, Urbana. They report their results today at 50th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in Atlanta. "The movement of the ticks along riverbeds in Illinois, combined with the existence of animals capable of serving as hosts to both and the bacteria can be seen as a harbinger of the migration of Lyme disease in the Midwest," says M. Roberto Cortinas, a research associate at the university's College of Veterinary Medicine and the presenting author on the study. Ixodes scapularis, the tick that carries Lyme disease was first seen in the Midwest in Wisconsin in the early 1970s. By the late 1980s researchers began to observe the tick moving south. By 1990, when the University began tracking its migration, I. scapularis had been found along the Northern Mississippi River. The researchers track the movement of the ticks through a number of methods. In the beginning, they focused on deer hunting season, collecting ticks from animals brought in by hunters and recording information on where the hunters found the deer. More recently they have employed other methods including dragging, in which a piece of cloth is dragged over vegetation to collect ticks, and trapping mice. "Unlike the heavily wooded northeast, the north-central United States is not generally a hospitable environment for ticks," says Cortinas. "These river corridors are like oases in the desert, where the ticks can survive and move along." While the movement of the ticks can predict the eventual arrival of the disease, they are not the only element of the equation, says Cortinas. Two other elements are necessary. First, small mammals, such as white-footed mice or chipmunks, which serve as a reservoir for the bacteria, must be present for the ticks to become infected. Deer, the preferred host for adult ticks must be present and are also important in the dispersal of ticks into new areas. While the researchers expect to see a continual migration of the ticks down the Mississippi, they do not expect to see Lyme disease follow them all the way to the Gulf of Mexico. As the ticks move south, the small mammals are often replaced by lizards as the blood source for the ticks. Unlike the small mammals, lizards are not effective reservoirs for the bacteria that cause Lyme disease. Without this reservoir the disease cannot exist in the area. "Is there a southern limit beyond which the disease will not follow? We don't entirely know where that will take place, but part of the reason for this study is to find out," says Cortinas. The study, led by Dr. Uriel Kitron, is funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is an outgrowth of a collaboration with Michigan State University, the University of Wisconsin and the NASA Center for Health Applications of Aerospace Related Technologies. # # #
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