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Increases in tick-borne disease prevalence and transmission are important public health issues. Efforts to control these emerging diseases are frustrated by the struggle to control tick populations and to detect and treat infections caused by the pathogens that they transmit. This review covers tick-borne infectious diseases of nonrickettsial bacterial, parasitic, and viral origins. While tick surveillance and tracking inform our understanding of the importance of the spread and ecology of ticks and help identify areas of risk for disease transmission, the vectors are not the focus of this document. Here, we emphasize the most significant pathogens that infect humans as well as the epidemiology, clinical features, diagnosis, and treatment of diseases that they cause. Although detection via molecular or immunological methods has improved, tick-borne diseases continue to remain underdiagnosed, making the scope of the problem difficult to assess. Our current understanding of the incidence of tick-borne diseases is discussed in this review. An awareness of the diseases that can be transmitted by ticks in specific locations is key to detection and selection of appropriate treatment. As tick-transmitted pathogens are discovered and emerge in new geographic regions, our ability to detect, describe, and understand the growing public health threat must also grow to meet the challenge.
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Susan Madison‐Antenucci
New York State Department of Health
Laura D. Kramer
New York State Department of Health
Linda L. Gebhardt
New York State Department of Health
Clinical Microbiology Reviews
New York State Department of Health
Wadsworth Center
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Madison‐Antenucci et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d99ffb9a6164e50fa3d1c6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1128/cmr.00083-18
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