T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
951.1 | ticks at daycare | MOLAR::JACKIE | Jackie Ferguson | Tue May 02 1995 10:02 | 8 |
| My daughters' daycare in Merrimack is surrounded by a large field with
tall grass. They get ticks every year. They started showing up a
couple weeks ago, they say this is earlier than usual. They spray the
field a couple times in the season, and they check all the kids when
they come in from playing. I think the best thing is a hat to keep
them out of the hair as much as possible.
Jackie
|
951.2 | And, spray repellent on your legs/ankles | eiffel.zko.dec.com::MENARD | new kid on the COMMON block | Tue May 02 1995 14:55 | 22 |
| >I think the best thing is a hat to keep them out of the hair as much as
>possible.
Boy.. I'm pretty sure ticks don't fly, but rather "hitchhike"
from tall grass. They tend to travel *up* until they can't travel any
further (or until they get too hungry, I guess ;-) ).
You're best off wearing light-colored clothing, tucking your shirt in,
and wear long pants preferably tucked into your socks when walking out
in the fields/woods. That way if they *do* hitchhike, they can't really
get under your clothes, and the light color means that someone might
be able to pick them out easier.
This, of course, isn't practical for kids just playing out in the backyard,
so instead, after being outside, you should check yourself / your child
for ticks. We always tell our girls to check "where your body bends",
figuring that that's where the tick will stop climbing. This includes
armpits, groin, under their breasts, and just inside the hairline (where
I seem to get one every year ...). Bathtime is a good time for this
(for obvious reasons).
- Lorri
|
951.3 | Ticks, ticks, ticks, tsk, tsk, tsk. | NPSS::CREEGAN | | Tue May 02 1995 16:48 | 17 |
| Three extremely fat ones fell off my dog last night and I pulled
a third from her eye-lid. It was a very mild winter and I
suspected ticks would be bad this year.
I found one on my fore-arm, I thought it was a new freckle and
freaked when I inspected it closely. I don't like being that
type of host.
Last year I gave my 7 and 9 year old lectures on ticks.
I was mentioning things to look for. "Like this Mom?"
...and my son pulls one off him that is climbing up his neck
and puts it in the palm of my hand. I pulled the car over
SO FAST!
Only thing that really works is inspections. I hear if you
eat a lot of garlic you're not supposed to taste as good to
ticks, whether that is a wives-tale or not ???
|
951.4 | me too... | MPGS::HEALEY | Karen Healey, VIIS Group, SHR3 | Tue May 02 1995 17:23 | 4 |
|
Found one on my head just the other day...
|
951.5 | from up above | WEORG::DAY | | Tue May 02 1995 17:54 | 2 |
| They do drop off from trees and bushes.
|
951.6 | Nuke em all | ALFA2::PEASLEE | | Wed May 03 1995 09:27 | 6 |
| Uuurghhhh, I hate the buggers. Can they be found in grass in yards or
are they only in fields and wooded areas. Before I read these notes I
let Alyssa crawl around the lawn over the weekend, thinking it was too
early for ticks.
Nancy
|
951.7 | talk about bad dog breath | NETCAD::FLOWERS | Hub Products Engineering; Dan | Wed May 03 1995 09:52 | 9 |
| > Only thing that really works is inspections. I hear if you
> eat a lot of garlic you're not supposed to taste as good to
> ticks, whether that is a wives-tale or not ???
Hmmm, it may be... but it works for our dog :-) Our dog is daily given
tablets of brewer's yeast with garlic. While it doesn't eliminate the tick
problem, it certainly does seem to cut down on it.
Dan
|
951.8 | | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | Wubba...Wubba is a Monster Song | Wed May 03 1995 11:48 | 10 |
|
I heard that because of the mild winter, it will be a bad year for
mosquitos, black flys etc. Ahhh, the joys of summer.
I guess we all have to be extra careful with ticks, especially the deer
tick I believe as they are the carrier of lyme (lime?) disease.
|
951.9 | tick info from daycare | MOLAR::JACKIE | Jackie Ferguson | Wed May 03 1995 12:25 | 34 |
| The grass in the playground at daycare is kept really short, but they think
they come in from the tall grass outside the fenced area. I mentioned hats
before because I think they have found most of them in the hair of kids.
There are no trees in the area, so I don't know how they get there besides
crawling all the way up, or if the kids roll in the grass.
They handed out this flyer today at daycare:
----------------------------------------------
We have spoken with "Ask-A-Nurse" and NH Dept. of Health to get more info.
regarding the ticks. Here's what we came up with:
TICKS: Avoiding Them, Looking for them, Removing Them
Avoiding Them
>Dress your child in long sleeves and long panths tucked into socks.
>Use a children's bug repellant such as "Skidaddle". Be sure that it contains
an ingredient that is labeld as effective against ticks
Looking for Them
>Check your child daily for ticks. Pay special attention to warm areas
(behind/inside ears, in the hair, etc)
>Dog ticks are about this size: [dot about 1mm diameter], Deer ticks (carriers
of Lyme Disease) are about this size: [much smaller dot, like this .]
They are difficult to tell apart when engorged with blood.
Removing Them
>Do not use bare hands
>Use tweezers to remove tick. Grasp close to skin and pull straight back
(don't twist) Be sure to remove all parts
>Dispose of tick in alcohol or flush down toilet
>Clean area with warm soapy water
>Apply an antibiotic ointment
>Mark the date on your calendar and watch for flu symptoms just in case!
|
951.10 | Removing ticks | SAPPHO::DUBOIS | Bear takes over WDW in Pooh D'Etat! | Wed May 03 1995 12:34 | 13 |
| < Removing Them
<>Do not use bare hands
<>Use tweezers to remove tick. Grasp close to skin and pull straight back
<(don't twist) Be sure to remove all parts
I thought you were supposed to put alcohol on the tick first, to see if it
would let go of the skin. I remember doing this on a dog once, and seeing
the fully engorged ticks just dropping off.
Has the method changed? What if the tick won't let go?
Carol, who hasn't lived with ticks in YEARS
|
951.11 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Wed May 03 1995 13:22 | 7 |
| Carol,
We always used vaseline to smother them. According to my lst first Aid
course, this isn't effective if the tick is embedded deeply. They
recommend tweezers, but I still do you vaseline first.
meg
|
951.12 | Yes, the recommended method has changed | MOIRA::FAIMAN | Alternately stone in you and star | Wed May 03 1995 13:34 | 19 |
| .10:
> Has the method changed? What if the tick won't let go?
From what I've read in the last couple of years, the recommended method has
changed. It used to be that you tried to convince the tick to let go (vaseline,
alcohol, heat, etc.), and used tweezers as a last resort if it wouldn't go
voluntarily. They now seem to be saying to forget the irritants, and just to go
for the tick with tweezers, as close to the skin as possible. (The rationale,
as I recall, is (1) you want to get the tick off asap, not wait around for it to
get sick of being smothered; and (2) the various irritants increase the
likelihood that the tick will discharge some of its stomach contents back into
the bite, which is the whole thing you're trying to avoid.)
I'll confess that I still go for the Vaseline, though. I'm just too squeamish
to drag out an actively resisting tick. :-(
-Neil
|
951.13 | | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Wed May 03 1995 13:37 | 2 |
| But if you use tweezers, isn't it likely that you'll cut the thing in
half?
|
951.14 | Ways to remove ticks | MOIRA::FAIMAN | Alternately stone in you and star | Wed May 03 1995 13:41 | 21 |
| This is apparently from an article in the June 1988 issue of _Self_ magazine:
Ways to Remove Ticks:
Do NOT use the following: "suffocating" a tick in nail polish, petroleum jelly
or alcohol; heating it with a match; soaking it in nail-polish remover or
gasoline. None of these methods is wise, though, since they allow the tick to
remain on the skin and are all likely to force the tick's stomach contents
into your bloodstream. If the tick **is** infected, you magnify your chances
of picking up a disease.
Instead, most experts agree that the best way to safely remove a tick is to
use a fine-tipped tweezers to grab hold of the tick as close as possible to
its mouthparts -- the "feeders" actually stuck into your skin. Since a tick
usually hangs on stubbornly, you may have to dig a bit into your skin to get a
good grip. Then gently but firmly pull it **straight** out, without twisting,
to make sure you get the mouthparts. Left in, these may cause infection.
Wash the bite site and your hands thoroughly afterward. Keep an eye on the
bitten spot for any signs of infection or rash, and see your doctor if you
develop flulike symptoms within a few days or even weeks.
|
951.15 | Ticks like clothing | MOIRA::FAIMAN | Alternately stone in you and star | Wed May 03 1995 13:43 | 31 |
| (January, 1993)
CHICAGO (UPI) -- Deer ticks, which transmit Lyme disease, seem to
prefer biting people wearing clothes, a Connecticut doctor reported
Tuesday.
In a letter to the Journal of the American Medical Association, Dr.
Henry Feder Jr. of the University of Connecticut Health Center in
Farmington, Conn., said he found that among more than 300 people at a
nudist camp, the only deer tick bites were reported by persons who were
wearing clothes.
``What was surprising was that deer tick bites were very unusual
occurrences at the camp,'' Feder said. ``This was not because nudists
could not identify deer tick bites, as many of the nudists reported deer
tick bites that occurred at their permanent homes.''
Experts generally recommend that people wear long-sleeve shirts and
long pants in deer tick areas to deter bites. However, Feder said the
deer ticks actually apparently prefer to get underneath clothing, such
as under long pants not tucked into socks.
Only one case of Lyme disease-associated symptoms had been identified
by doctors treating the nudists, Feder said, even though the camp was in
the deer tick's ideal environment.
``One explanation is that although deer are present, deer ticks are
not yet established. A second explanation is that deer ticks do not like
nudists, as ticks prefer to do their biting under cover,'' he said.
A more formal study was being planned, he said.
Lyme disease is a tick-borne illness that initially often causes a
rash and flu-like symptoms such as fever, fatigue and aches. These
symptoms may be followed weeks or months later by neurologic, heart or
joint abnormalities. The disease was first recognized in 1975 in Lyme,
Conn., but has been identified in at least 43 states and in other
countries.
|
951.16 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Wed May 03 1995 18:01 | 5 |
|
Or maybe they're just more evident if you're nude, and don't have the
time/chance to bite before they're yanked off ??
|
951.17 | An intruder. | NPSS::CREEGAN | | Thu May 04 1995 11:38 | 11 |
| Or if you are nude and a tick is climbing on you.
SOME ONE ELSE notices it before it gets a chance to attach.
Who would that someone else be? :-}
Seriously
When they are crawling on you (I found one crawling on my
neck) they aren't lofty and hardly noticable. They are
like storm troopers, they are heavy footed :-)
I would imagine a nudist wouldn't poo-pah that sensation
off as their clothing rubbing against them. It would
definately have to be an "intruder".
|
951.18 | size and variety of tick (yuck) | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Thu May 04 1995 11:58 | 5 |
| Depends on the kind of tick you mean. The brown dog tick is quite
large. The deer tick (carrying Lyme disease) is about the size of the
head of a pin. They do indeed look like a speck of dirt or a freckle
that you don't remember having in that particular spot...
Sarah
|
951.19 | How long is the tick season? | DKAS::MALIN::GOODWIN | Malin Goodwin | Fri May 05 1995 09:34 | 25 |
|
From the base noter:
Thanks for all the replies and advice.
I found another tick yesterday, in my sons red hair
it was easy to spot, once you started looking.
The ones we've found are all of the larger size,
almost as big as the end (not the tip!) of a pencil.
People have mentioned in here that due to warm winter
etc, the season has started earlier. Does anyone know
when we can expect the season to end?
I know that in Sweden you can take a series of shots
in order to build up immunity against some of the
diseases that ticks carry. Has anyone heard of that
in the US?
Thanks
/Malin
|
951.20 | If there is a shot, we won't have it for a WHILE. | NPSS::CREEGAN | | Fri May 05 1995 09:59 | 4 |
| One barrier between preventative shots,
the Food and Drug Administrations testing procedure (time consuming).
Sweden, no doubt, does not have that bureaucracy.
I've never heard of the shot being available in the US.
|
951.21 | | USCTR1::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Fri May 05 1995 10:47 | 3 |
| ...and I doubt that there *is* a shot yet for Lyme Disease.
Leslie
|
951.22 | According to my cat... | OBSESS::COUGHLIN | Kathy Coughlin-Horvath | Fri May 05 1995 14:15 | 10 |
|
My cat had a tick attached to her end of March/early April. Not only
was I horrified because of how early this was, but because I don't ever
remember her having one. When I had a dog he would come home with several
but the cat had none. I had figured ticks don't like cats for some
reason so I've been fearing the ticks are plentiful this year and
perhaps are desperate in going for the cats. I am surrounded by woods
and tall grass so this is major bad news.
Kathy
|
951.23 | Check the Pets | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | Wubba...Wubba is a Monster Song | Fri May 05 1995 15:05 | 7 |
|
As well as checking the kids when they come in, its a good idea to
check the pets (your other kids) everytime they come in. I usually
rub my hand against the way the fur grows to feel for any lumps and for
some reason those little buggers love to attach themselves to the ears.
|
951.24 | Brrrrrrr! | HANNAH::BAY | Jim Bay | Mon May 08 1995 13:04 | 20 |
| If you happen to work at MRO, and like to walk during lunch, I'd
suggest you stay out of the grass. I walked this past Friday, and the
only significant grass I traversed was coming from MRO3 across the
helipad to MRO1. For the rest of the afternoon, I kept feeling
something, sort've like sweat trickling down my leg. Finally I pulled
up my trousers, and low and behold it was a tick! Fortunately, he
wasn't attached, and I just grabbed him with a tissue and crushed him.
But it wasn't over. I went home, showered, washed all my clothes, and
felt better. But this Monday morning, after I came to work, while
typing, I felt something on my wrist, turned it over and there was
another one!
As far as I can tell, I haven't actually been bitten. But they are all
over the place from one walk. I am planning on having facilities treat
this area, but I am really concerned with how very tenacious and
abundant these things are.
Jim (who's never had a tick on his body in his life!)
|
951.25 | | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Wed May 10 1995 11:07 | 13 |
| A couple of questions regarding ticks...
o When is tick season over? Is this an all-summer thing and the only
variable is how early it starts? Or does this have a relative
end-date? Maybe when it gets too hot outside?
o Will a tick survive the laundry cycle? What if one was stuck on the
kids' clothes and ended up in the laundry? Would it survive a
cold-water wash cycle and then a run through the dryer?
Thanks,
- Tom
|
951.26 | Bad year | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed May 10 1995 11:37 | 14 |
|
Found two ticks on one of my cats last night and one crawling
near the slider (where the cats come in). This is the first
incident in 11 years. The ticks were behind the cat's ears,
probably the only not-so-furry place the cat can't get to with
his sandpaper tongue. Had to shampoo all my cats, vacuum the
entire town and install the nuclear-strength cat collars from
the vet this morning.
When will the ticks go away? Too bad the birds don't eat them,
or do they?
Eva
|
951.27 | hard to kill | RDVAX::VONCAMPE | | Wed May 10 1995 11:56 | 21 |
| As a child, my sisters and I roamed in a field of tall grass next to
our house and also in the woods all summer long. Every evening my mother
would do a tick check. Before we put our pajamas on we would stand in her
bathroom in our underwear. She would put alcohol on our mosquito
bites and lotion on any sunburns. She would give us a once over for
ticks and then would check all our heads with her hands to make sure
none had taken up residence there.
Someone almost ALWAYS had a tick, usually on their head. These things
need to be taken off right away as they will firmly attach themselves
and start taking in blood. There is nothing more disgusting than a fat
tick!! I can remember pulling them off the dog.
Ticks come out in the spring and last all summer long. Some years
there are more than other years, and I guess this looks to be a bad
one. They are not easy to kill. Flushing them doesn't always work,
so I don't know if I would trust the washing machine. My mother used
to burn them in an ashtray.
Kristen
|
951.28 | Splat | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | Wubba...Wubba is a Monster Song | Wed May 10 1995 12:15 | 7 |
|
When we took them off our dog (they were usually full of blood), we
would take the tick(s) outside cover them with a paper towel and smack
them with the cast iron pan. You can just imagine what happened to
them. Things you do as a kid!
|
951.29 | The heebie-jeebie's | CSLALL::JACQUES_CA | Crazy ways are evident | Wed May 10 1995 12:23 | 3 |
| This string has been making me itchier and itchier every day!
cj *->
|
951.30 | | WRKSYS::MACKAY_E | | Wed May 10 1995 14:29 | 18 |
|
>This string has been making me itchier and itchier every day!
After I realized I had 2 ticks on my cat last night, I have been
feeling itchy. It was too late to scrub down my cat at 10 pm, I
sent all the cats down the basement. My husband was away on business
and I couldn't sleep, thinking about those critters most of the
night.
I thought the tick shampoo would kill the bugs on contact, but
it didn't. So, I had to pull them off with tweezers. To me, it
was as pleasant as getting a splinter out of my daughter hand.
Fortunately, my cat was very patient and was not struggling.
The vet recommended dumping the critters in a bottle of alcohol.
Eva
|
951.31 | lyme disease vaccine for dogs | MKOTS1::MCCABE | | Wed May 10 1995 14:42 | 2 |
| There is a lyme disease vaccine for dogs, my two labs got it.
But I have no idea if there is one for people!
|
951.32 | | NETCAD::FLOWERS | Hub Products Engineering; Dan | Wed May 10 1995 18:08 | 13 |
| re: pulling off ticks and killing them.
The best way I've found to do this is to use a small pair of needle-nose
pliers. It has a small tip so that you can grab them with accuracy, but then
once you have it pulled out, you can also *squeeze* the pliers tightly to
crush the tick... just make sure to put a paper towel or something around
the tick before crushing it.
Fwiw: ticks apply a little anesthetic (sp?) to numb the area where
they're going to bite. That's why you don't realize they're there, and why
it doesn't hurt to yank them out.
Dan
|
951.33 | More info please | BASEX::WERNETTE | | Thu May 11 1995 09:51 | 10 |
| Are ticks more prevalent in certain parts of the country?
I'm from Michigan and have never seen a tick, although I'm
sure we have them here in our state. I have heard of deer
ticks because MI has a large deer population.
Where do ticks habitate?
Thanks,
Terry
|
951.34 | Dust particle touches hair follicle = willies. | NPSS::CREEGAN | | Thu May 11 1995 10:27 | 12 |
| This is not based on fact, but a friend of mine was
chatting about ticks and he stated that they prefer
juniper/pine areas. They crawl out on the branches
and drop off.
In other countries (South America) they are heat-
sensative and drop off onto heated objects (mammals)
passing by below them. I don't think our North
American tick has that trait (dah!).
And since this note has started anytime a dust particle
brushes against a hair follicle I get the shivers.
|
951.35 | Not Lyme Ticks | SALEM::GILMAN | | Mon May 15 1995 10:04 | 6 |
| The Lyme Disease ticks are small. This size of this period .
The big fact ones are not Lyme Disease ticks. So disgusting as they
are you don't have to fear Lyme from the big ticks.
Jeff
|
951.36 | Lyme's Disease this early? | ECADSR::ARMSTRONG | | Mon May 15 1995 10:20 | 6 |
| Would it be possible for someone in NE to have contacted Lyme's
Disease already this season?
A friend sure has all the symptoms...aching joints, tired, etc.
but he thinks its impossible
bob
|
951.37 | | TUXEDO::COZZENS | | Thu May 25 1995 13:00 | 10 |
| Twice in the last week Lindsey has come home from day care with ticks
on her. One was in her hair and last one night I found one crawling on
her arm. Gives me the willies just thinking about them. The daycare
does not have any grass around it, mostly dirt. I'm going to question
the teachers as to where the kids go for walks though.
These, I would guess, are dog ticks, they are the larger size, about
the size of a pencil eraser. Not dangerous, just anoying right?
Lisa
|
951.38 | No danger, generally speaking | HOTLNE::CORMIER | | Thu May 25 1995 14:54 | 7 |
| Not generally dangerous, as long as you fully remove any imbedded
ticks and wash the area well. Ticks just crawling along are not a
problem, although definitely yucky! They do drop from trees, so if
the kids take walks near the woods or are in contact with any family
pets, they could crawl on over. They don't hop, by the way, just drop
or crawl (brush up against a blade of grass or a tree branch for contact).
Sarah
|
951.39 | Lyme | SAPPHO::DUBOIS | Bear takes over WDW in Pooh D'Etat! | Fri May 26 1995 12:40 | 6 |
| < A friend sure has all the symptoms...aching joints, tired, etc.
< but he thinks its impossible
Have him see a doctor, just in case. Better safe than sorry.
Carol
|
951.40 | yuck | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Mon Jun 05 1995 16:00 | 13 |
| I had to pull one of these things off my sons head this weekend. Yuck.
I could hear it's hold being broken.
As it happened, he mentioned a "scab" on his scalp when I was in the
middle of something, and I said I'd take a look later. It wasn't until
I was on my way to bed and he was sound asleep that I remembered. So,
knowing what a heavy sleeper he is, I went and looked right then. When
I saw what it was, I got the tweezers and rubbing alcohol and off it
came. I got it whole and it was still wiggling. He's shown no signs
of fever or any of the other symptoms I've read about, and there is no
sign of infection, so I think we're OK.
But this got me wondering - do these things ever let go on their own?
|
951.41 | deer ticks give Lyme, not the big ones | POWDML::DUNN | | Mon Jun 05 1995 16:37 | 9 |
| yes, when they are finished eating they let go on their own.
If it was big enough for him to think it was a scab, and you to see it
and work with it like that, chances are it was a dog tick. These are
not the ones that give you Lyme disease (the fever and stuff you
referred to). Deer tick do that, and they are the size of the period
at the end of this sentence .
|
951.42 | Lyme shots maybe in '97 | COOKIE::MARTIN | Life is tradeoffs | Tue Jun 06 1995 14:06 | 4 |
| I saw on CNN yesterday about them doing testing on people for the Lyme
shots. They said maybe avaiable by '97.
- Jim
|
951.43 | nervous tick :-) | CSLALL::JACQUES_CA | Crazy ways are evident | Tue Jun 20 1995 11:19 | 11 |
| I saw a few minutes of a news story on ticks this morning. Basically
everything in here was said except two things.
. It is a common mistake to believe that only the small ticks are
the lyme carrying ones. The ones that carry that disease have
black legs and can be big or small. They say the saying everyone
seems to be following "if you can see it, it's ok", is wrong.
. Vaseline has no effect, is of no use when removing the ticks.
cj *->
|
951.44 | | NETCAD::FLOWERS | Hub Products Engineering; Dan | Tue Jun 20 1995 12:27 | 4 |
| ...with the hot weather coming on fast, we should start seeing less and less
of these nasty little critters -- they don't thrive well in the heat.
Dan
|
951.45 | Ways to keep them away? | ALFA1::LIPSON | | Thu Jun 05 1997 09:38 | 14 |
| Hi,
I'm a former city-girl just learning about these creatures (Yech!)
-- thanks to my twin daughters!
Has anyone ever used a repellent spray on their children? I've also
heard that Avon's Skin So Soft may keep them away -- true?
Any information would be great!
Thanks.
Lisa
|