TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

Lyme Disease Is on the Rise Again

193 点作者 toymachine大约 7 年前

23 条评论

mmjaa大约 7 年前
I have been suffering with this for the last year. I have to say, its really a heinous condition.<p>First, I didn&#x27;t think much of ticks - I thought they were a nuisance, but nothing serious. So, after I got particularly attacked one warm summer evening, I didn&#x27;t really care much for it. 3 ticks in one day - okay, not ideal, but I wasn&#x27;t going to freak (I&#x27;ve been stung by jellyfish, bitten by snakes, hundreds of spider bites, the odd encounter with a wasp or two .. Australian problems...)<p>But, a few days after I brushed it all off, I noticed the tell-tale signs of the red bullseye targets .. and I did nothing. I simply was ignorant that it could get so bad.<p>Three weeks later, I was feeling awful - just totally shit. I happened to mention that I was in an area known for ticks, and my friend said &quot;well, have you been bitten recently?&quot; .. I recalled the event, and they promptly sent me straight to hospital for a blood test.<p>Yup, I came back positive for Borellia. 6 weeks of antibiotics, and real hellish symptoms - lethargy like no other I&#x27;ve ever experienced, headaches, lack of attention and sometimes real cognitive problems. Aches in every bone in my body.<p>Take this one serious, folks. Get yourself tested within days of a tick bite. Its really not something you want to go through, believe me ...
评论 #17016144 未加载
marmottus大约 7 年前
Got bitten in 2010 while camping in Czechia, we failed to remove the tick properly and the head stayed in my skin so we had to butcher me a bit more and it left a tiny wound. Two days later I got the famous painful rash that I had no clue about, red circle, swollen and painful. I went to the doctor who immediately told me &quot;you might have Lyme disease&quot;, I had never heard of this before but I understood that it required 3 weeks amoxicillin. I did several blood tests and got positive once to the borreliosis then negative after the treatment. So I thought everything was over but a month later I was feeling extremely tired, body and brain wise, I started to freak out that the disease was still there but blood tests were negative. This was during my exams period and as a student I was under high stress and the spot where I got bitten was still a bit swollen. The doctor told me that it was normal but the only way to be sure that the disease is completely gone at this stage (around 2 months after being bitten) is to do a lumbar puncture which I did (kudos to pregnant women who go through this ! I&#x27;ll never do it again). The test showed negative, there was no way that I could still have the disease so it calmed me down and I accepted that it was just due to stress and hypochondria. Today I&#x27;m totally fine, this was my first bite and I hope the last one. This little bug is a pure nightmare.
评论 #17015516 未加载
stevehawk大约 7 年前
Just FYI - when I lived in Northern Virginia I discovered that in my area the main transmission method of Lyme disease was actually mice. So make sure if you find them in your house that you do something about it.<p>Also be careful when you remove via tweezers. If you squeeze their body you&#x27;re likely to cause them to regurgitate into you which almost guarantees an infection.<p>I use a tick removal tool (actually used it yesterday while building a fence on the wooded side of my yard) that uses a tear drop shape to try and pinch the tick at the neck minimize regurgitation.
评论 #17013928 未加载
评论 #17014499 未加载
评论 #17014155 未加载
评论 #17014079 未加载
rb808大约 7 年前
I&#x27;ve stopped hiking and camping largely because of this. Its just not worth it any more.<p>This page has an uncommon photo of just how small the nymph deer ticks are. <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;sectionhiker.com&#x2F;backpacking-lyme-disease-prevention&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;sectionhiker.com&#x2F;backpacking-lyme-disease-prevention...</a>
评论 #17014288 未加载
评论 #17013988 未加载
评论 #17014133 未加载
评论 #17014215 未加载
评论 #17015056 未加载
评论 #17015700 未加载
评论 #17016185 未加载
评论 #17013872 未加载
js2大约 7 年前
In my neck of the woods you&#x27;re more likely to be bitten by the lone star tick, which seems not to be able to communicate Lyme disease, but sometimes its bite can leave you with an allergy to red meat:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Alpha-gal_allergy" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Alpha-gal_allergy</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Amblyomma_americanum" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;en.wikipedia.org&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Amblyomma_americanum</a><p>Parasites suck.
评论 #17015003 未加载
评论 #17014006 未加载
Tharkun大约 7 年前
I got lyme disease after my first and only (as far as I know) tick bite. A round of antibiotics seems to have killed it, though I am still noticeably more tired than before the infection (anacdata, could just be because I&#x27;m getting older and under a lot of stress).<p>I reported where and when the infection took place on a local website which tracks these things. I informed the city council (considering this happened in a very busy public park) and I was pretty much told that nothing would be done. More green spaces would help. Keeping certain animals (like chickens) might also help. Killing the fuckers outright is another possibility, but I have to admit to being relucant about spraying toxic crap in public parks.
评论 #17014521 未加载
评论 #17013462 未加载
评论 #17013722 未加载
评论 #17014154 未加载
overcast大约 7 年前
If you&#x27;re a hiker, permethrin. Spray down your socks, pants, shirts. Let it dry. You&#x27;re good to go for a dozen outings. Non toxic to humans, and orderless.
评论 #17013523 未加载
评论 #17013677 未加载
评论 #17013360 未加载
评论 #17014225 未加载
评论 #17014422 未加载
4restm大约 7 年前
Once a tick has been removed, be sure to place it in a ziplock baggie and store it in the freezer. This way if anything crops up you&#x27;d be able to bring the tick in with ya to the doc
评论 #17013541 未加载
评论 #17014505 未加载
simonsarris大约 7 年前
Ticks were bad last year in NH, but not 5 ticks on a stick bad: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;imgur.com&#x2F;a&#x2F;bGdAvLD" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;imgur.com&#x2F;a&#x2F;bGdAvLD</a><p>Photo taken yesterday. I bought some old farmland and it has been a completely insane year so far for ticks. I wish I could do a prescribed burn of the field but it&#x27;s not well set up for that.
评论 #17014628 未加载
loeg大约 7 年前
It&#x27;s a good idea to check your groin and armpits after walking through high grass or other vegetation in a tick area.
notadoc大约 7 年前
This article and many others focuses on Lyme in the northeastern US, but Lyme has spread to the interior and the west coast. It&#x27;s in up to 25% of ticks in many western states and around the west coast.<p>I find ticks constantly on dogs after taking walks&#x2F;hikes in California&#x2F;Oregon&#x2F;Washington, even if they have tick&#x2F;flea treatment. I&#x27;ve had one embedded in me that was so small and flush it looked just like a new tiny mole had appeared, it wasn&#x27;t until it squirmed around after being brushed over a few times that I realized it was a tick. They can be quite a challenge to remove properly even with tweezers.<p>The tick population has surged dramatically in the western states and east coast, largely from an overpopulation of deer, mice, and other rodents, and an increasing lack of predators to those common tick carriers. Ultimately we to allow predators to return to the natural landscape and in abundance, with birds of prey, foxes, coyote, etc to take out the mice and smaller carriers, and we many more large predators, bear, wolf, mountain lion, human hunters included, to reduce the dramatic deer overpopulation.<p>And yes, thinning of known tick carriers like mice and deer is demonstrably proven to work.<p><a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ct.gov&#x2F;caes&#x2F;lib&#x2F;caes&#x2F;documents&#x2F;publications&#x2F;fact_sheets&#x2F;entomology&#x2F;deer_&amp;_ticks_fact_sheet.pdf" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.ct.gov&#x2F;caes&#x2F;lib&#x2F;caes&#x2F;documents&#x2F;publications&#x2F;fact_...</a>
IpV8大约 7 年前
I grew up in Connecticut, not far from the town of Old Lyme where the disease gets its name from! Most people who spend any amount of time outside there know the symptoms well and doctors give away doxycycline prescriptions like their going out of style. I&#x27;ve gone through it three separate times. If you catch it quick, the antibiotics crush it and you&#x27;re on your merry way. Ignore it and you&#x27;ll suffer for life.
EODjugornot大约 7 年前
People around here (Niagara Falls area, NY) get it all the time too. Last year was horrible for ticks. I have 3 German Shepherds and some days i was pulling 10 or more ticks off them of multiple species. Reading this post makes me feel more confident for this year because i just got myself more than 30 chickens, but already this year my oldest brought home a tick. Hopefully they aren&#x27;t as bad this summer.
aethertap大约 7 年前
I live in tick central, and for anyone else in that situation who doesn&#x27;t already have a tick mitigation strategy, here&#x27;s what I do (and I&#x27;d love to hear other things that work that aren&#x27;t on the list):<p>1. Clear all debris (wood chips, leaves, etc) from places people frequent, and keep the grass cut short<p>2. Permethrin-laced cotton balls inside PVC tubes scattered liberally around the area. Small animals pick these up and make nests out of them, which kills the ticks while they&#x27;re on the rodent hosts.<p>3. Permethrin on footwear, and safe insect repellent (DEET or picaridin, also geranium oil seems to help) on skin and lower-half clothing<p>4. Chickens in the yard seem to eat more than they host<p>5. Daily checks for everybody in the house
cody8295大约 7 年前
I live in Connecticut, where Lyme disease was discovered. I go hiking a lot and it&#x27;s a big concern for many including me. I don&#x27;t use sprays or anything I just wear light colored clothing and when possible (spring and fall) long pants. Wearing lighter colored clothing allows you to notice ticks before they get to your skin. And post hike, full body tick checks are mandatory. it&#x27;s a good thing most don&#x27;t bite until you&#x27;ve stopped moving and stay still for a while. I&#x27;ve pulled dozens of ticks off of my body, luckily only a few that dug in
评论 #17017968 未加载
cjslep大约 7 年前
As an American that moved to Europe, I was already aware of the Lyme disease risks of ticks here. What I didn&#x27;t realize - and am in the 1 year process of getting vaccinated against - is that ticks here carry a virus that induces encephalitis. Tick borne encephalitis is not in the Western Hemisphere as far as I am aware, so it wasn&#x27;t until this spring that I found out about it. The vaccine is not available in the USA and requires a year to complete, which makes me wonder how hikers or visitors spending only a few months in Europe fare.
评论 #17013552 未加载
dbbolton大约 7 年前
Here are some links to the CDC&#x27;s statistics and maps on Lyme disease for those interested:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;lyme&#x2F;stats&#x2F;graphs.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;lyme&#x2F;stats&#x2F;graphs.html</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;lyme&#x2F;stats&#x2F;maps.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;lyme&#x2F;stats&#x2F;maps.html</a><p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;lyme&#x2F;stats&#x2F;tables.html" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.cdc.gov&#x2F;lyme&#x2F;stats&#x2F;tables.html</a><p>As an aside, it&#x27;s tricky interpreting certain stats regarding epidemiology. The incidence is the number of new cases in the population in a given time frame, and prevalence is the total number of people known to have the disease in the population. Sometime a disease can appear to be &quot;on the rise&quot; because there is increased surveillance and screening for the disease, or because diagnostic methods have improved, which naturally lead to an increased incidence and prevalence.<p>Disclaimer: I&#x27;m not arguing that Lyme Disease isn&#x27;t real, isn&#x27;t serious, or anything along those lines. But from a medical perspective, we deal with <i>fear</i> of Lyme way more often than the actual disease. Some parents will bring their child into the clinic every time they think they may have seen a tick within arm&#x27;s reach of them. And when someone presents with an attached tick, it&#x27;s more often than not an adult wood tick (which can transmit RMSF and tularemia but are not B. Burgdorfi vectors).<p>When you are bitten by a tick, or any insect, some inflammatory response is expected, i.e. your skin will probably turn red. It doesn&#x27;t automatically mean it&#x27;s erythema migrans (bull&#x27;s eye rash). But to muddy the waters even further, as little as 50-80% of confirmed LD cases had the EM sign, and many don&#x27;t recall a tick bite whatsoever.<p>But if you are in an endemic area, clinical suspicion for LD is high, we should be able to prove you have the disease with lab tests, right? Well, unfortunately Borrelia are notoriously difficult to culture, so that&#x27;s out. The CDC recommends a two-step testing process.<p>Step 1 is the Enzyme Immunoassay (EIA). If your EIA is negative, LD is ruled out. If it is positive or &quot;indeterminate&quot; (2nd most common outcome after negative in my experience), you move on to the Western blot which looks for antigenic proteins associated with the disease. It is considered positive if 2 specific bands are visualized or if at least 5 of a list of 10 other bands are seen. The problem is that these bands can take up to 6 weeks after exposure to become detectable. If you have no idea when&#x2F;if you were actually exposed, this test is a shot in the dark. To top it all off, it can also come back &quot;mildly&quot; to &quot;moderately&quot; positive for LD.<p>So if your EIA is negative, or if your WB is 2&#x2F;2 or 5+&#x2F;10 positive, we can give you a definitive answer. Otherwise, it comes down to clinical judgment and weighing the risks and benefits of treatment. If you were bitten by a tick, got a rash, had no drug allergies, the safer play is to assume LD, give antibiotics, and forgo the serologic testing that may or may not give an answer.<p>TLDR - Lyme Disease is complicated.
评论 #17015041 未加载
评论 #17015260 未加载
fletchowns大约 7 年前
There was an interesting segment about Lyme Disease on KQED&#x27;s Forum the other day: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.kqed.org&#x2F;forum&#x2F;2010101865065&#x2F;lyme-disease-on-the-rise-in-northern-california" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.kqed.org&#x2F;forum&#x2F;2010101865065&#x2F;lyme-disease-on-the...</a>
评论 #17016052 未加载
sydd大约 7 年前
the sad thing about lyme disease is that we dont have a vaccine due to anti vaxxers: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.vox.com&#x2F;science-and-health&#x2F;2018&#x2F;5&#x2F;7&#x2F;17314716&#x2F;lyme-disease-vaccine-history-effectiveness" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.vox.com&#x2F;science-and-health&#x2F;2018&#x2F;5&#x2F;7&#x2F;17314716&#x2F;lym...</a>
评论 #17015148 未加载
评论 #17015032 未加载
评论 #17015283 未加载
Glyptodon大约 7 年前
Fingers crossed there will be a vaccine back in production within a couple years.
评论 #17013371 未加载
rectang大约 7 年前
I wonder how widespread Lyme Disease has to get before the economic incentives to develop a new vaccine reach a tipping point.<p>There used to be a vaccine but it was discontinued because of insufficient demand.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.niaid.nih.gov&#x2F;diseases-conditions&#x2F;lyme-disease-vaccines" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.niaid.nih.gov&#x2F;diseases-conditions&#x2F;lyme-disease-v...</a><p><i>&quot;In April 2002, GSK announced that even with the incidence of Lyme disease continuing to rise, sales for LYMErix declined from about 1.5 million doses in 1999 to a projected 10,000 doses in 2002.&quot;</i><p>How do we square this with the number of cases rising so much over the last few years?
评论 #17013395 未加载
评论 #17013370 未加载
评论 #17013368 未加载
评论 #17013346 未加载
评论 #17014236 未加载
jaequery大约 7 年前
Anyone that have Lyme, please look into PEMF solutions such as Ampcoil or Ryfe. It seems to be highly effective in treating Lyme disease.
评论 #17015654 未加载
jamisteven大约 7 年前
I have this and was un-diagnosed for years, ended up doing all the research and ordering the lab tests myself as western medicine doctors were proving useless. For anyone struggling I would highly recommend this protocol from Dr. Buhner. <a href="http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tiredoflyme.com&#x2F;the-buhner-protocol-for-lyme-disease.html" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.tiredoflyme.com&#x2F;the-buhner-protocol-for-lyme-dise...</a>