CCPortal
Why tick-borne diseases have reached ‘epidemic proportions’  科技资讯
时间:2022-07-21   来源:[美国] Daily Climate

National Geographic Logo - HomeSkip to contentNewslettersSubscribeMenu

Picture of the head of a brown dog tick, as seen using a scanning electron microscope.This colorized scanning electron micrograph shows the mouth parts of a brown dog tick, one of the most important disease vectors in dogs worldwide. Ticks that carry human pathogens are spreading in the U.S., triggering an increase in tick-borne diseases, including some that are difficult to diagnose and treat.Photograph by STEVE GSCHMEISSNER, Science SourcePlease be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.ScienceWhy tick-borne diseases have reached ‘epidemic proportions’

Infections have more than doubled in the U.S. since 2004, afflicting many patients with long-term memory problems, overwhelming fatigue, and even red-meat allergies.

BySharon GuynupPublished July 21, 2022• 15 min readShareTweetEmail

Nicole Malachowski is a powerful woman. After graduating from the U.S Air Force Academy, she became an F-15E fighter pilot who flew missions in Iraq, commander of the 333rd Fighter Squadron, and the first female pilot in the elite Thunderbirds demonstration squadron. She is married and the mother of twins. In 2019 she was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame.

Malachowski was a highly decorated “full bird” colonel when she was forced to leave military service due to health issues. But it wasn’t a combat injury that cut short her career: It was a tick.

At 43 years old “I was declared ‘100 percent unfit for duty’ and was medically retired,” she says. She was utterly debilitated: bedridden, housebound, barely able to stand, walk, or speak. “I thought I was tough, but I was completely broken.”

It took four years and 24 doctors to finally diagnose what proved to be a trio of tick-borne bacterial diseases—Lyme,anaplasmosis, and tick-borne relapsing fever—as well as a tickborne parasite, babesia. Malachowski partially recovered after doctors pumped her with antibiotics and anti-parasitic drugs, some delivered directly into her heart, and she had a year’s physical therapy.

While her case is extreme, it illustrates a growing public health concern: “Every year we've seen more tick-borne diseases in the United States ... and more people exposed to ticks,” says Charles “Ben” Beard, deputy director of the Division of Vector-Borne Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

     原文来源:https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/article/why-tick-borne-diseases-have-reached-epidemic-proportions

除非特别说明,本系统中所有内容都受版权保护,并保留所有权利。