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      Ticks and tickborne bacterial diseases in humans: an emerging infectious threat.

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          Abstract

          Ticks are currently considered to be second only to mosquitoes as vectors of human infectious diseases in the world. Each tick species has preferred environmental conditions and biotopes that determine the geographic distribution of the ticks and, consequently, the risk areas for tickborne diseases. This is particularly the case when ticks are vectors and reservoirs of the pathogens. Since the identification of Borrelia burgdorferi as the agent of Lyme disease in 1982, 15 ixodid-borne bacterial pathogens have been described throughout the world, including 8 rickettsiae, 3 ehrlichiae, and 4 species of the Borrelia burgdorferi complex. This article reviews and illustrate various aspects of the biology of ticks and the tickborne bacterial diseases (rickettsioses, ehrlichioses, Lyme disease, relapsing fever borrelioses, tularemia, Q fever), particularly those regarded as emerging diseases. Methods are described for the detection and isolation of bacteria from ticks and advice is given on how tick bites may be prevented and how clinicians should deal with patients who have been bitten by ticks.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Clin Infect Dis
          Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
          University of Chicago Press
          1058-4838
          1058-4838
          Mar 15 2001
          : 32
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Unité des Rickettsies, CNRS UMR 6020, Université de la Méditerranée, Faculté de Médecine, Marseille, France.
          Article
          CID000509
          10.1086/319347
          11247714
          b4e6cafb-70a2-4554-8347-189845872b41
          History

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