May 19, 2015

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Tips to handle those rare Florida tick-borne diseases

Though uncommon, Floridians can get tick diseases.

"The biggest myth about tick-borne diseases is that every tick carries the Lyme disease pathogen, when in fact, only one tick species in the Eastern U.S. is capable of transmitting the pathogen, Ixodes scapularis, the black-legged or ," said Phil Kaufman, a University of Florida veterinary entomologist.

Kaufman, an associate professor at the UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, cited three tick-borne diseases we should know about. Those diseases are:

How can we prevent these tick-borne diseases?

The Florida Department of Health advises you to apply repellent that contains 20 to 30 percent of DEET to prevent from attaching to your skin. Other repellents registered by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency may be found at cfpub.epa.gov/oppref/insect/. Other tips:

Dr. Shehla Islam, a board-certified infectious disease physician at UF Health, said symptoms of a tick-borne vary, depending on the illness. They frequently show up as fever, headache and joint pain and a rash.

Upper respiratory symptoms are not common with these illnesses, so if a patient has a history of exposure to ticks, and he or she exhibits symptoms for several days with no clear cause, people should see their , Islam said.

"They should go to the emergency room if they're severely ill," she said. "These are not contagious diseases, for the most part."

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