This is an article about a man who has the same tick disease that PineyWarden has. You may have to use a phone or iPad to view as I was not able to but Jessica could on her iPad.
So does everyone here have a solid program that they use to help prevent tick bites and insect bites in general?
I'll bet that itches like hell because the skin is stretched. Did you see someone about it?My right after being bitten by an ant near Tucson, AZ a few weeks ago. The exact same thing happened to me two months before. Very dangerous planet. Stay away. If one thing doesn't get u another thing will.
I'll bet that itches like hell because the skin is stretched. Did you see someone about it?
Addressing this year and a half too late. Alpha gal is not an infectious disease, it's an allergy, so there is no organism to transmit. As far as I know, it's like many other allergies, in that the more exposure you get, the more sensitive you get, kind of like poison ivy. (Although much less common). If the tick bites you and gets some of its saliva into you, you're exposed. The longer it's attached, the more saliva you are exposed to. A person also apparently has to have some genetic susceptibility to develop this syndrome.Two questions I have: how long does the tick need to be attached to transmit alpha-gal? Also, can larval stage lone star ticks transmit it?
With deer ticks, they say that the tick has to pick Lyme up from a host (they're not born with it), and the tick has to be attached long enough to engorge fully and then regurgitate back into the wound (some say 24 or more hours). How does this compare with lone star ticks and alpha gal?
Addressing this year and a half too late. Alpha gal is not an infectious disease, it's an allergy, so there is no organism to transmit. As far as I know, it's like many other allergies, in that the more exposure you get, the more sensitive you get, kind of like poison ivy. (Although much less common). If the tick bites you and gets some of its saliva into you, you're exposed. The longer it's attached, the more saliva you are exposed to. A person also apparently has to have some genetic susceptibility to develop this syndrome.
I'm not a doctor, so... Yeah, that happens with a lot of allergens."...more exposure you get, the more sensitive you get"
Might that be something related to what's been happening to me with insect - mostly ant - bites (that I wrote about in my self-deleted thread) because i never used to have a bad reaction to them?
Oh, never mind...If u say "yes" or "no" they might charge u with practicing medicine without a license and sentence u to 20 years (but u might get out early with good time. 15 years. U can do that standing on yr head! U might even get paroled after 12 years.).
I'm not a doctor, so... Yeah, that happens with a lot of allergens.
What kind of snake got you?I loved the NJPB - except for one thing, the ticks. I've had so many on and in me! I've been in other bad tick places, but the PB was the worst. I rarely if ever felt them on me. People with more sensitive skin may have.
My brother had Lyme disease.
I used to extract them with a bit of gasolene from a rag dipped in my car's gas tank. It worked good, but then they said "Oh no don't do that anymore!", plus you can't dip rags in modern car's gas tanks so easily.
They say they're out here in the Arizona desert too, but - knock on wood head - I've never got one here, that i know of anyway. I got snake bit in the desert, though, and NJ never did that to me.
What kind of snake got you?
I"ve pulled literally thousands of ticks out of all parts of my body since a kid.Mom often helped picking over eighty ticks off me in one session.I never used anything till in my thirties when my second and present wife got tired of getting bitten by ticks she picked up in the vehicle or crawled out of the laundry hamper.I now use peremethrin at least on the shoes and socks and pants to the thighs.I never wear shorts in the woods because I"m most often off trail and the south jersey woods will make hamburger out of your legs if your crazy enough to go off trail in shorts.
I"ve never had Lymes disease but would be willing to bet they could make a vaccine for it out of my blood.
just pulled them straight out.Often ripped their heads off in me and had to get that with tweezers.If you get heads in you you cant get out black drawing salve with a band aid on top of it and the head will fall out by next dayWhat was your technique for pulling ticks out? The best way I found to do it in the old days was to put a little gasoline on them and then they started wiggling and could be easily pulled out. I did that a lot back then. But then I read that that is a bad way to do it because it makes them disgorge their poisons into your body, and instead u r supposed to grab them with tweezers and gently twist them clockwise or counterclockwise or something, but whenever I've tried that their heads just broke off in my body. I don't have to worry about that anymore because I now live in the desert, though they say there's ticks out here I never got one. Ants are after me now. If it's not one thing it's another, ticks, snakes, ants!