Tick and Lyme Disease Awareness

I now have three friends with Lyme.
One from the Minden Ontario area, one from the Ottawa area, one from the Belleville area.

NONE of these people saw the famous bullseye rash.

One of them is having a really rough go with it. He's not even working right now. The other two are retired, but they are not at all well.

This hunting season, (and always) WATCH FOR TICKS!
 
The university of Guelph has a foundation working on the issues of testing and treatment. Might be worth looking into by those afflicted.
 
Thanks for posting links mad dog, more than a few coworkers f’d from this at work. One guy used to do a presentation (around 8-9years ago)for co-workers about his ordeal. He worked in Perth ON lyme has been issue for many years. management shut him down. In NWO ticks are bad, most of them are wood ticks but positive Lyme ones are starting to show up.
 
There are also Facebook groups devoted to this subject as mentioned previously. Many of these groups have a regional or local focus and are a source of current information of interest to those affected.
 
https://www.iflscience.com/health-a...273064456&mc_cid=9e726b779d&mc_eid=dcbdbbe7e1

[h=1]New Compound Selectively Kills Lyme Disease Bacteria, Eradication Could Be Possible[/h]

[h=5]By Jack Dunhill[/h] 12 Oct 2021, 10:51

A new drug discovered by scientists from Northeastern University could finally be a viable method of eradicating Lyme disease, a chronic bacterial disease that affects almost half a million people in the US each year. Carried by mice and transmitted by infected ticks, the disease can have devastating consequences for people unfortunate enough to get bitten, but it has remained a difficult disease to treat. Now, a new compound could prevent the bacterium from progressing the disease from acute to long-term Lyme, halting the disease in its tracks. While the drug is certainly in its early days, the researchers have huge hopes for it.
“Our educated guess is that it will prevent chronic Lyme,” researcher Kim Lewis says, in a statement.
They describe their discovery in the journal Cell.
The bacterium in question is Borreliella burgdorferi, which is transmitted through the bite of a black-legged tick. Once infected, humans often get an angry red rash surrounding the bite that may expand as the disease progresses, before more serious symptoms appear over the next weeks. Neurological symptoms of headache, facial palsy, brain inflammation, and nerve pain can follow, and in some cases, the disease can be life-threatening.
Current treatments involve broad-spectrum antibiotics, which kill the bacteria but also damages the gut microbiome – an area that is becoming increasingly studied for its role in a host of neurological conditions – and does not always solve the complications resulting from the disease.
To find a more reliable solution, the researchers screened for compounds that could selectively kill B. burgdorferiand leave animals and other bacteria unharmed, and they stumbled across Hygromycin A. Hygromycin A is a known antimicrobial compound produced by another bacteria, and is potent against B. burgdorferispecifically.
When the researchers applied the compound to mice infected with Lyme disease, it cleared the infection whilst leaving the microbiome in a healthier state than current antibiotics. They found similar efficacy in mice that took the compound orally, in contrast to those that had it injected.
With the rise of antibiotic resistance, identifying new compounds that fend off infection is vital. Hygromycin A is selective against this bacterium and may prove a valuable asset in eradicating Lyme disease should it prove successful in humans. It is also possible that the compound will be successful at destroying the bacterium behind syphilis, owing to its similar morphology, but many further tests are required to discover whether this is true.
“I hope that it will continue moving forward in development and will become the first therapeutic to treat Lyme disease,” Lewis says.
“It will be very important to see whether treating with Hygromycin A will diminish the probability of developing chronic Lyme.”
 
Yesterday my daughter found a tick in the tv room, I assume it came in on the dog or maybe my boots?

Then this morning I took 7 ticks off the dog after the morning run.

Our dog is vaccinated for Lyme & on the tick/heartworm/antiparasitic NexGard Spectra...

Crazy!

The ticks are now resting comfortably in 70% Isopropyl alcohol & will be sent in to be part of a study.
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No acorn drop this year, so no deer, so no ticks. Imo, it's almost worth it to get skunked this year, to not have to be worried about ticks as much.
 
Used to be the long grass was the areas of concern. Now they're everywhere, get onto your shoes and walk up your body until they bite. I've had them from just getting out of the truck to open the gate. Hopeless to avoid them at this point. Eastern Ontario is infested with them.
 
I found another tick on my dog.

The only reason I noticed it was because it was crawling on his forehead. If it was in his fur, I'd have never seen it...

If anyone is wondering how they could miss finding a tick on themselves here is a pic.

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Its something that every outdoors person should read and be aware of.....wTc

That’s for sure and as can be seen in Jay’s pic on post #152, they are very small nowadays. A few years ago in Eastern Ontario, they were quite a bit larger and pretty easy to remove even if they were dug in but these little guys are a different story.

I’m a Lyme disease survivor and although mine was nothing compared to the link Jay posted, it was nasty enough to cause me 5 years of agony.

I spray my hunting clothes with Permethrin a week or so before the season and won’t go into the bush without sprayed clothes. It works great and although I thoroughly enjoy hunting, I’d give it up if I couldn’t keep the ticks off.

Once bitten……..
 
I made it a sticky once, but Jay unstuck it. He felt it would get more views in the open part of the forum. It will be stuck if it wanders down the pages some, but that will be Jay's decision.

I think ticks will become more and more of a problem with each passing year, and Lyme unfortunately will mirror that progress.
 
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