1.Tick killing in situ before removal to prevent allergic and anaphylactic reactions in humans: a cross-sectional study
Benjamin William Phillips TAYLOR ; Andrew RATCHFORD ; Sheryl VAN NUNEN ; Brian BURNS
Asia Pacific Allergy 2019;9(2):e15-
BACKGROUND: Tick anaphylaxis is a potentially fatal outcome of improper tick removal and management. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether killing ticks in-situ with ether-containing sprays or permethrin cream, before careful removal by the mouthparts could reduce this risk. METHODS: This was a prospective study at Mona Vale Hospital Emergency Department (ED) in Sydney, New South Wales, over a 6-month period during the peak tick season of 2016. Tick removal methods, allergic/anaphylactic reactions were recorded for patients presenting with ticks in situ or having already removed the ticks themselves. Primary endpoint was allergic/anaphylactic reaction after tick killing/removal. RESULTS: One hundred twenty-one patients met study inclusion criteria. Sixty-one patients (28 known tick-hypersensitive) had ticks killed with Wart-Off Freeze or Lyclear Scabies Cream (5% w/w permethrin) before removal with fine-tipped forceps or Tick Twister. Three patients (2 known tick-hypersensitive) had allergic reactions (5%), none anaphylactic. The 2 known hypersensitive patients suffered reactions during the killing process and the third patient had a particularly embedded tick meaning it could not be removed solely by mouthparts. Fifty patients presented to the ED posttick removal by various methods, none using either fine-tipped forceps or Tick Twister, of which 43 (86%) experienced allergic reactions – 2 anaphylactic. Five patients suffered allergic reactions before presentation despite no attempt at kill or removal, but ticks had likely been disturbed by some other method. Five patients had live ticks removed in ED – 3 refused killing and had no reaction despite 1 having known hypersensitivity; 2 had ticks on eyelids contraindicating killing, 1 with known hypersensitivity but both had allergic reactions post removal. CONCLUSION: Results support killing ticks in-situ before careful removal by mouthparts to reduce allergic/anaphylactic reactions although further research is still required.
Anaphylaxis
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Eyelids
;
Fatal Outcome
;
Homicide
;
Humans
;
Hypersensitivity
;
Methods
;
New South Wales
;
Permethrin
;
Prospective Studies
;
Scabies
;
Seasons
;
Surgical Instruments
;
Tick Bites
;
Tick Toxicoses
;
Ticks
2.The Most Common Mite- and Tick-borne Infectious Diseases in Korea: Scrub Typhus and Severe Fever Thrombocytopenia Syndrome.
Korean Journal of Medicine 2018;93(5):416-423
The incidence of mite- and tick-borne infectious disease is increasing with climate change and the development of diagnostic tools. Tick-borne infectious diseases include Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis, severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS), and Japanese spotted fever. Rickettsial pox and scrub typhus are mite-borne infectious diseases. Scrub typhus and SFTS are the most common mite- and tick-borne infectious diseases in Korea, respectively. They are often difficult to diagnose at an early stage of disease. To make a definite diagnosis of mite- and tick-borne infectious disease, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests or serologic testing for antibodies during the acute and convalescent periods are necessary. If patients with nonspecific symptoms, such as fever, headache, nausea, and vomiting, have a history of outdoor activity or a tick bite, it is reasonable to consider the possibility of mite- or tick-borne infectious diseases clinically. There are no vaccinations against mite- and tick-borne infectious diseases. Therefore, preventing mite or tick bites is the best way to prevent the diseases.
Anaplasmosis
;
Animals
;
Antibodies
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Climate Change
;
Communicable Diseases*
;
Diagnosis
;
Ehrlichiosis
;
Fever*
;
Headache
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Korea*
;
Lyme Disease
;
Mites
;
Nausea
;
Phlebovirus
;
Polymerase Chain Reaction
;
Scrub Typhus*
;
Serologic Tests
;
Thrombocytopenia*
;
Tick Bites
;
Tick-Borne Diseases
;
Vaccination
;
Vomiting
3.An Uncommon Presentation of Human Otoacariasis by Haemaphysalis longicornis.
Jin Young CHOI ; Baik Kee CHO ; Young Bok LEE ; Dong Soo YU ; Beom Cho JUN ; In Yong LEE ; Jin Wou KIM
Annals of Dermatology 2018;30(3):348-350
Ticks are obligate parasites on animals and sometimes humans. They usually suck the blood of the hosts and can carry various infectious diseases as a vector. Otoacariasis is the presence of ticks and mites within the ear canal and relatively common in domestic and wild animals. However, tick infestations of human ear canals are rarely reported in the scientific literature and hardly occur in developed countries. Herein, we report a rare case of otoaracariasis involving Haemaphysalis longicornis . A 9-year-old girl living in a suburb presented with otalgia of left ear for 1 day. Otoscopic examination revealed a huge insect occluding the tympanic membrane. Tick removal and washing of external auditory canal was done successfully. The causative tick was identified as the H. longicornis. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of human otoacariasis by a H. longicornis in Korea.
Animals
;
Animals, Wild
;
Child
;
Communicable Diseases
;
Developed Countries
;
Ear
;
Ear Canal
;
Earache
;
Female
;
Humans*
;
Insects
;
Ixodidae
;
Korea
;
Mites
;
Parasites
;
Tick Bites
;
Tick Infestations
;
Ticks
;
Tympanic Membrane
4.A novel Australian tick Ixodes (Endopalpiger) australiensis inducing mammalian meat allergy after tick bite
Mackenzie KWAK ; Colin SOMERVILLE ; Sheryl VAN NUNEN
Asia Pacific Allergy 2018;8(3):e31-
Tick-induced mammalian meat allergy has become an emergent allergy world-wide after van Nunen et al. first described the association between tick bites and the development of mammalian meat allergy in 2007. Cases of mammalian meat allergy have now been reported on all 6 continents where humans are bitten by ticks, in 17 countries
Africa
;
Americas
;
Anaphylaxis
;
Asia
;
Australia
;
Belgium
;
Central America
;
Europe
;
Germany
;
Great Britain
;
Humans
;
Hypersensitivity
;
Italy
;
Ixodes
;
Meat
;
Public Health
;
South America
;
Spain
;
Sweden
;
Switzerland
;
Tick Bites
;
Ticks
;
United States
5.A Case of Contrast Enhanced Cystic Mass of External Ear Canal Diagnosed as Engorged Hard Tick
Journal of Audiology & Otology 2018;22(3):167-169
A 58-year-old female complained earfullness and otalgia and came to the clinic. Dark gray colored cystic mass obstructing the left ear canal was observed during the endoscopic exam. Contrast enhanced CT image showed an oval shape soft tissue lesion in the mid part of the external auditory canal with a homogenous increased contrast uptake. The mass was removed under microscopic view at outpatient clinic. While dissecting the mass in the ear canal, a pod like structure was visualized. The external organism was densely adherent to the skin and turned out to be an engorged hard tick. Considering the final diagnosis, contrast uptake observed in the CT scan implicates the patient communication of blood between host and parasite. This unique image finding differs from a benign mass lesion in the ear canal was one of the differential diagnosis points for the lesion. This article is reporting the case of tick bite in the ear canal with a rare CT scan finding.
Ambulatory Care Facilities
;
Diagnosis
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Ear Canal
;
Ear, External
;
Earache
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Ixodidae
;
Middle Aged
;
Parasites
;
Skin
;
Tick Bites
;
Ticks
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
6.A Case of Engorged Female Hard Tick in the External Auditory Canal of an Infant.
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2017;55(5):565-568
An oval-shaped mass with a smooth surface was found in the ear canal of a 22-month-old male infant. Although the mass appeared to be almost entirely blocking the ear canal, it was successfully removed under a surgical microscope without general anesthesia at the outpatient department. Under an optical microscope with hematoxylin and eosin staining, the specimen was observed to have a cuticle with a serrated surface and a pore canal, as well as parts of the capitulum, salivary glands, muscles, midgut, and the legs. The specimen was identified as a hard tick of the family Ixodidae, based on gross and histological findings. This paper is the first report in Korea on the diagnosis and treatment of a tick bite in the ear canal.
Anesthesia, General
;
Diagnosis
;
Ear Canal*
;
Eosine Yellowish-(YS)
;
Female*
;
Hematoxylin
;
Humans
;
Infant*
;
Ixodidae*
;
Korea
;
Leg
;
Male
;
Muscles
;
Outpatients
;
Salivary Glands
;
Tick Bites
;
Ticks
7.Present state and future of tick-borne infectious diseases in Korea.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2017;60(6):475-483
The incidence of vector-borne infectious diseases is increasing due to developments in diagnostic techniques, as well as due to economic, environmental, and ecological factors such as global warming, increased rainfall, globalization, and urbanization. Tick-borne infectious diseases occurring in Korea include severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome, Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, and Japanese spotted fever. Various skin lesions, such as erythema migrans, tick bite sites, rash, and eschar, are associated with tick-borne infectious diseases. It is necessary to remove ticks immediately to prevent transmission of these tick-borne infectious diseases. Especially for conditions such as Lyme disease, at least 24 to 48 hours of tick attachment to the host is required for transmission of the causative pathogens to the host. Tick-borne diseases are acquired after outdoor activities and have nonspecific symptoms such as fever, headache, and chills, which make them difficult to identify without a diagnostic test. Rapid diagnosis and early treatment can reduce the otherwise significant morbidity and mortality associated with these conditions; therefore, therapy should not be delayed until laboratory confirmation is received.
Anaplasmosis
;
Animals
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
;
Chills
;
Communicable Diseases*
;
Diagnosis
;
Diagnostic Tests, Routine
;
Erythema
;
Exanthema
;
Fever
;
Global Warming
;
Headache
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Internationality
;
Korea*
;
Lyme Disease
;
Mortality
;
Rickettsia Infections
;
Scrub Typhus
;
Skin
;
Thrombocytopenia
;
Tick Bites
;
Tick-Borne Diseases
;
Ticks
;
Urbanization
8.Tick Bite by Nymphal Amblyomma testudinarium.
Yeong Ho KIM ; Ji Hyun LEE ; Young Min PARK ; Jun Young LEE
Annals of Dermatology 2016;28(6):762-764
Ticks are parasites that usually suck the blood of wild or domestic animals; rarely, they ingest human blood and spread various febrile infectious diseases along with skin problems. Out of 40 cases of tick bite reported in Korea, only 3 were caused by nymphal ticks, and tick bites by nymphal Amblyomma testudinarium have not been reported previously. Herein, we report a rare case of tick bite by nymphal A. testudinarium. A 57-year-old woman presented with an asymptomatic solitary erythematous nodule on the left thigh that had been present for 6 days. The tick, which the patient removed from the lesion and brought to the hospital, was identified as a nymphal A. testudinarium. Doxycycline (200 mg) was used as treatment, and after seven days of use, the patient improved and no other lesions were detected.
Animals, Domestic
;
Communicable Diseases
;
Doxycycline
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Middle Aged
;
Nymph
;
Parasites
;
Skin
;
Thigh
;
Tick Bites*
;
Ticks*
9.Tick Bite by Male Amblyomma testudinarium in a Korean Woman.
Hong Jin JOO ; Mi Ri KIM ; Baik Kee CHO ; Hyun Jeong PARK ; In Yong LEE ; Tae Heung KIM
Korean Journal of Dermatology 2016;54(2):125-128
A 53-year-old woman presented with asymptomatic pedunculated mass on her buttock. She was attacked by the tick while climbing the Jungbyung mountain located in Changwon City, the southern coastal area of the Korean Peninsula. It was identified as male Amblyomma testudinarium according to its morphological characteristics. Histological examination showed dense inflammatory infiltration of neutrophils and eosinophils, and dilated vessels on the dermis beneath the biting site of the tick. There have been only few reports of the tick bite by A. testudinarium in the Korean literature. To the best of our knowledge, our patient is the second case of tick bite from this species and the first tick bite from the male tick recorded in Korea. Here, we report a case of tick bite by male A. testudinarium in a woman, including a review of relevant literature.
Buttocks
;
Dermis
;
Eosinophils
;
Female
;
Gyeongsangnam-do
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Male*
;
Middle Aged
;
Neutrophils
;
Tick Bites*
;
Ticks*
10.Delayed Anaphylaxis to Red Meat Associated With Specific IgE Antibodies to Galactose.
Liping WEN ; Junxiong ZHOU ; Jia YIN ; Jin lu SUN ; Yi SUN ; Kai WU ; Rohit KATIAL
Allergy, Asthma & Immunology Research 2015;7(1):92-94
A novel delayed anaphylactic reaction to red meat, associated with tick bites and IgE antibodies against galactose-alpha-1, 3-galactose (alpha-gal), was reported in 2009 in the US, Australia and Europe. In this case, serum specific IgE to galactose-alpha-1, 3-galactose (>100 kU/L) and IgE to multiple non-primate mammalian proteins were positive. However, the pathogenesis of this disease remains unclear. We report the first case in Asia of delayed anaphylactic reaction to red meat, which was induced by bites from the hard tick, Hematophagous ixodidae. We confirmed the increased concentration of IgE reactive epitopes in non-primate mammalian organs, which may be rich in alpha-gal proteins in lymphatic and endothelial tissues. All confirmed ticks associated with this disorder in the literature and in our case belonged to the hard tick family. We hypothesize that hard tick saliva is enriched with blood-type substances, such as oligosaccharides, from the non-primate mammal victim's blood after days to weeks of blood sucking, which sensitizes humans through the injection route while blood sucking.
Anaphylaxis*
;
Antibodies*
;
Asia
;
Australia
;
Epitopes
;
Europe
;
Food Hypersensitivity
;
Galactose*
;
Humans
;
Immunoglobulin E*
;
Ixodidae
;
Mammals
;
Meat*
;
Oligosaccharides
;
Saliva
;
Tick Bites
;
Ticks

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