Friday, April 2, 2010

TICK WARNING
ARGUABLY THE MOST DANGEROUS
THING IN THE PARK

SHENANDOAH NATIONAL PARK TICKS CAN POTENTIALLY TRANSMIT
  • LYME DISEASE
  • STARI
  • BABESIOSIS
  • ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPOTTED FEVER
  • EHRLCHIOSIS
  • ANAPLASMOSIS
  • OTHER DISEASES SOME THAT MAY NOT BE SCIENTIFICALLY RECOGNIZED YET
NOTE: There was a time when the above diseases where not recognized by the scientific or medical communities. Lymes was first recognized in 1975 and STARI was first recognized in the early 1990s.

I recommend that you use both Deet based insect repellent on your skin and permethrin treatments on your cloths and footware.

With the beginning of the spring season you need to start being extra cautious about ticks. If you have not gotten up to speed on ticks you should. There is lots of good information online including these sites:

http://www.tickencounter.org/


http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/idepc/diseases/lyme/basics.html


http://www.cdc.gov/ticks/diseases/

http://www.vdh.virginia.gov/epidemiology/DEE/vectorborne/documents/Tick%20Brochure.pdf

http://www.nps.gov/shen/naturescience/ticks.htm


Adult ticks which can carry disease are active during all months of the year. Of course it would be very rare to see one during winter but they can still be active.

It is the nymphs which will be emerging soon that are the most dangerous. They can be infectious and they are tiny and you may miss seeing one on your body during your tick check.

The larva are non-infectious because they have not had a chance to have a blood meal from an animal that is a carrier of the disease.

For obvious reasons the more blood meals a tick has had the higher the chance that it fed on an animal disease carrier.    While the adults are more likely to be infectious than the nymphs because they had to have at least two blood meals on their way to becoming adults.    The good news is that being much bigger than nymphs they are much easier to find during a tick check and if removed within 24 hours after attachment will not have transmitted any disease.

Infected persons will not always develop the classic bulls eye rash.  Sometimes it will be a more non-descript rash or no rash at all.  Be alert to the possibility that you contracted a tick borne illness anytime you become sick a few days after being out in the woods.

I repeat that I recommend that you use both Deet based insect repellent on your skin and permethrin treatments on your cloths and footware.

4 comments:

  1. I don't know where to post this, but:

    Please change the link on this page (and others) for
    "Guide to Shenandoah National Park and Skyline Drive" and associated favicon.ico from:

    http://www.ajheatwole.com/guide

    to

    http://www.guidetosnp.com/web

    Thanks!

    - Tony Heatwole

    ReplyDelete
  2. Tony,

    I was just updating something on this old page and noticed your comment. I could not remember if I had tried to fix this a long time ago or not but when I looked on a properties page I notice the old link. I am not an HTML geek and I use a high end user interface to edit my blog. I totally removed the old link and replaced it by cutting and pasting the address you provided. It appears to have worked but let me know if it is still a problem.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Lyme disease might be recognized, but only as a psychosomatic illness that "is cured after 2 weeks of antibiotics".
    You'll be spending a lot of $ from your own pocket and ruin your life if you get this disease.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Bob, your update on the ajheatwole.com guide and favicon works just fine. Thanks!

    Tony Heatwole

    ReplyDelete