监测阿拉巴马州中东部的蜱虫(Acari: Ixodidae)和蜱传病原体。

Xiaodi Wang, Derrick K Mathias
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摘要

与美国东南部的其他州类似,阿拉巴马州的人类蜱传疾病病例在过去 20 年中也在稳步上升。然而,自 20 世纪 90 年代以来,有关蜱虫或蜱虫病原体(TBP)分布的数据却非常有限。为了更好地了解阿拉巴马州中东部地区的蜱虫和 TBP 暴露风险,我们在 2015 年 5 月和 6 月期间在 8 个与娱乐活动相关的地点反复采集蜱虫样本,以确定蜱虫密度和多样性的特征。虽然各个地点的栖息地相似,但蜱虫密度却因地而异。采集到的蜱有 7 种,但在 1,310 份样本中,97.7% 是孤星蜱,即美洲蜱(Amblyomma americanum (L.)),它是埃希氏病原体的主要传播媒介,也是最常见的与α-gal 综合征和南方蜱相关皮疹疾病有关的蜱物种。为了调查不同地点的病原体流行情况,我们用多重 qPCR 法检测了美洲蜱的 5 种细菌,包括 3 种埃希氏菌属和 2 种立克次体属。不过,人类埃立克氏病的致病菌埃立克氏虫(Ehrlichia chaffeensis)和埃立克氏虫(Ehrlichia ewingii)出现在一半的地点,平均分别有 0.27% 和 0.45% 的美洲大蠊受到感染。与此相反,在检测的 1119 只 A. americanum 中,54.5% 的 A. americanum 发现了疑似非致病性的蜱内共生体 Rickettsia amblyommatis。尽管A. americanum的埃希氏菌感染率较低,但在休闲落叶林地中与该物种的接触率很高,这表明蜱虫叮咬的风险适中,在春末接触TBP的风险较低到适中。
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Surveillance of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) and tick-borne pathogens in Eastern Central Alabama.

Similar to other states in the southeastern United States, human cases of tick-borne diseases in Alabama have risen steadily over the last 2 decades. Nevertheless, limited data have been published on ticks or tick-borne pathogen (TBP) distributions since the 1990s. To better understand the risk of tick and TBP exposure in eastern central Alabama, ticks were sampled repeatedly across 8 sites associated with recreational use during May and June of 2015 to characterize tick density and diversity. Although habitats were similar across sites, tick density varied among locations. Seven species were collected, but 97.7% of 1,310 samples were the lone star tick, Amblyomma americanum (L.), the primary vector of ehrlichial agents and the tick species most commonly linked to alpha-gal syndrome and southern tick-associated rash illness. To investigate pathogen prevalence among sites, we tested A. americanum by a multiplex qPCR assay for 5 bacterial species, including 3 Ehrlichia spp. and 2 Rickettsia spp. None of the specimens tested positive for Panola Mountain Ehrlichia or Rickettsia parkeri. However, causative agents of human ehrlichiosis, Ehrlichia chaffeensis and Ehrlichia ewingii, occurred at half of the locations with, respectively, 0.27% and 0.45% of A. americanum infected on average. In contrast, Rickettsia amblyommatis, a tick endosymbiont suspected to be nonpathogenic, was found in 54.5% of the 1119 A. americanum tested. Despite low infection rates of Ehrlichia spp. in A. americanum, high encounter rates with this species in recreational deciduous woodlands suggest a moderate risk of tick bite and a low-to-moderate risk of TBP exposure in late spring.

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