Co-feeding ticks: Epidemiological significance for tick-borne pathogen transmission
- PMID: 15275266
- DOI: 10.1016/s0169-4758(96)10072-7
Co-feeding ticks: Epidemiological significance for tick-borne pathogen transmission
Abstract
Until recently, the transmission of tick-borne pathogens via vertebrates was thought to depend on the development of a systemic infection in the vertebrate hosts. Pathogen transmission has now been shown to occur between infected and uninfected ticks co-feeding in time or space in the absence of a systemic infection, originally for viruses, but now also for bacteria. The epidemiological consequences of this new non-systemic transmission pathway necessitate a major reassessment of the components and dynamics of tick-borne pathogen enzootic cycles. Here Sarah Randolph, Lise Gern and Pat Nuttall show that a much wider range of natural hosts than was previously recognized may contribute significantly to the transmission of tick-borne diseases, and compare quantitatively the relative contributions made by the systemic and non-systemic transmission pathways.
Comment in
-
Non-systemic infection in Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks.Parasitol Today. 1997 May;13(5):201; author reply 201. doi: 10.1016/s0169-4758(97)84913-7. Parasitol Today. 1997. PMID: 15275093 No abstract available.
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
