What is ehrlichiosis?
Ehrlichiosis is a bacterial infection that infects animals, such
as dogs, deer, coyotes, and mice. Sometimes the disease spreads to
humans.
How does it occur?
People can become infected when they are bitten by a tick. If a
tick bites an animal infected with ehrlichiosis and then bites
you, you may become infected. The infection does not spread from
person to person. In the US, the disease occurs mainly in the
southeastern and south central regions of the country.
What are the symptoms?
The symptoms of ehrlichiosis vary. They may appear within several
days to 3 weeks of a tick bite. In most cases the symptoms are
mild flulike or coldlike symptoms, such as:
- muscle aches
- tiredness
- headache
- fever
- chills.
Sometimes the symptoms include:
- nausea
- vomiting
- cough
- joint pain
- confusion.
Unlike some other infections spread by ticks, the infection does
not usually cause a rash.
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will ask about your symptoms and your
history of exposure to ticks. He or she will examine you. You may
have some blood tests.
How is it treated?
Ehrlichiosis can be treated with antibiotics. If the infection is
severe, you may be treated in the hospital.
How long will the effects last?
Without treatment, the symptoms of ehrlichiosis may last for up to
2 months. Once you start taking antibiotics, you will usually
start feeling better in a couple of days.
Rarely, the infection can become severe and life threatening,
causing serious complications such as infection in the brain,
seizures, or heart failure.
How can I take care of myself?
Take your medicines just as prescribed by your healthcare provider
and get plenty of rest.
How can I help prevent ehrlichiosis?
Because ehrlichiosis is spread by ticks, the best way to avoid
getting it is to avoid getting bitten by ticks. If you are bitten,
remove the tick as soon as possible.
- Be aware of the areas where ticks live. Do not walk, camp, or
hunt in the woods of tick-infested areas without precautions.
In areas of thick underbrush, try to stay near the center of
trails.
- When you are outdoors, wear long-sleeved shirts tucked into
your pants. Wear long pants tucked into your socks or boot
tops if possible. A hat may help, too. Wearing light-colored
clothing may make it easier to spot the small tick before it
reaches your skin and bites.
- Use approved tick repellents on exposed skin and clothing.
Follow the directions on the package. Don't put repellent on
open wounds or rashes. Wash the spray off your hands. Be
careful with children because the repellents can make them
ill.
DEET is a very effective repellent, but adults should use
preparations with no more than 35% DEET, and children should
use repellents with no more than 10% DEET. DEET should be
washed off your body when you go back indoors.
Picaridin is another repellent recently made available in the
US. It can be less irritating to the skin than DEET.
Some products containing permethrin are recommended for use on
clothing, shoes, bed nets, and camping gear. Do not put
permethrin on your skin.
- Treat household pets for ticks and fleas. Check pets after
they've been outdoors.
- Brush off clothing and pets before entering the house.
- After you have been outdoors, undress and check your body for
ticks. They usually crawl around for several hours before
biting. Check your clothes, too. Wash them right away to
remove any ticks.
- Shower and shampoo after your outing.
- Inspect any gear you have carried outdoors.
- Remove an attached tick with tweezers by gripping the tick as
close to your skin as possible and gently pulling it straight
away from you until it releases its hold. Don't twist the tick
as you pull, and don't squeeze its body. Thoroughly wash your
hands and the bite area and apply an antiseptic such as
rubbing alcohol.
- If you spend much time hiking, you may want to include a pair
of tick tweezers in your first-aid kit. The tweezers are
available at many sporting goods stores.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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