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How to Protect Yourself | Tick Removal
REMOVE TICKS PROMPTLY
Following removal of the tick, wash the wound (and your hands) with soap and water and apply an antiseptic. Save the tick in a jar, vial, small plastic bag, or other container for identification should you later develop disease symptoms. Preserve the ticks by either adding some alcohol to the jar, or by keeping it in the freezer. Storing a tick in water will not preserve it. Identification of the tick will help the physician's diagnosis and treatment, since many tick-borne diseases are transmitted only by certain species.
Discard the tick after one month; all known tick-borne diseases will generally display symptoms within this time period. A tick needs a blood meal from a host in order to molt (progress to the next stage of it's life cycle), and to reproduce (lay eggs). This feeding process continues for several days to a week until the tick is fully engorged with blood. It then releases its hold on the host, drops off, and subsequently molts or lays eggs. If the tick is infected with pathogenic organisms (for example, Borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of Lyme disease), it can transmit the infection to the host during the feeding process. As the tick feeds, the pathogens multiply, migrate to the tick's salivary glands, and are carried into the wound site along with the saliva. Successful transmission of pathogens requires the tick to be attached for at least several hours. Therefore, the sooner infective ticks are removed, the less likely they will be able to transmit infection. It is impossible to tell if a tick is infected by just looking at it. Only analysis in a laboratory can determine infection status.
How to Protect Yourself | Tick Removal
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