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Why you should be on the lookout for 'seed ticks' this summer

This toddler was covered with hundreds of tiny ticks after playing outside

Why you should be on the lookout for 'seed ticks' this summer

This toddler was covered with hundreds of tiny ticks after playing outside

WEBVTT RECLOSER TO NORMAL, AND WARMER BYWEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NEXTWEEK.ADAM: CAN'T WAIT FOR IT TO GETHERE.WINTER MAY FEEL LIKE IT JUSTENDED BUT TICKS ARE ALREADYMAKING AN APPEARANCE.HERE TO TELL US ABOUT TICKS, ANDHOW WE CAN PROTECT OURSELVES ISNEW HAMPSHIRE STATEEPIDEMIOLOGIST DR. BEN CHAN.WHAT ARE THE DISEASES TICKSCARRY?DR. CHAN: THE MAIN ONE IS THEBLACK LIKE IT TAKE, FORMERLYKNOWN AS THE DEER TICK.NEW HAMPSHIRE HAS ONE OF THEHIGHEST RATES OF LYME DISEASE INTHE NATION, BUT HIS CAN ALSOTRANSMIT OTHER INFECTIONS,INCLUDING AND A PLASMA FROMWHICH IS A BACTERIAL INFECTION,AND A BLOOD IT IS ON PARASITEINFECTED -- BLOOD PROTOZOANPARASITE INFECTION, AND NEW ONEVERYBODY'S RADAR IS A VIRALINFECTION DID TO GIVE YOU ANIDEA OF HOW COMMON THESE ARECOMMITTED 2015 WE HAD 1400 CASESOF LYME DISEASE REPORTED TO THEHEALTH DEPARTMENT JUSTOVER 100 CASES OF AND A PLASMA.WE HAVE ONLY HAD 2 CASESIDENTIFIED IN NEW HAMPSHIRE --THE FIRST IN 2013.MORE RECENTLY, 2016.ADAM: WHAT SORT OF SYMPTOMS AM IGOING TO SEE?DR. CHAN: WITH MANY TI-BORNEILLNESSES, THEY MAY NOT HAVE ANYSYMPTOMS AND THEY CLEAR THEINFECTION WITH NO PROBLEMS.FOR THOSE WHO DO HAVE SYMPTOMS,A FLULIKE ILLNESS -- NOT VERYSPECIFIC, BUT INCLUDING FEVERS,CHILLS, NOT FEELING WELL, MUSCLEAS, MUSCLE PAINS TO THEY ARE ALLTREATABLE WITH ANTIBIOTICS.FOR THOSE THAT ARE NOT TREATED,THEY CAN GET MORE COMPLICATIONS,BUT INFECTIONS, CENTRAL NERVOUSSYSTEM INFECTIONS.FOR THOSE WHOSE IMMUNE SYSTEM'SMAY NOT BE WORKING VERY WELL,THEY CAN DEVELOP MORE SERIOUSINFECTIONS AND LIFE-THREATENINGINFECTIONS.AND WHEN CAN CAUSE SERIOUSSYMPTOMS SUCH AS BRAIN SWELLING,CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM SWELLING,AND CAN LEAD TO PERMANENTNEUROLOGIC IMPAIRMENT AND DEATH.ADAM: TAKE US THROUGH THEIMPORTANT PRECAUTIONS SO WEDON'T GET BITTEN IN THE FIRSTPLACE.DR. CHAN: WE SEE TICKS EMERGE INAPRIL AND USUALLY MAY THEY ARETHERE.AVOID AREAS WHERE TICKS AND ITOR BEHEADING, SUCH AS LONG GRASSOR BRUSH.PEOPLE GO OUTSIDE, INSECTREPELLENTS CAN LAST FOR SEVERALHOURS.IT IS A GOOD IDEA WHEN PEOPLECOME INSIDE TO BE DOING TICKCHECKS ON THEMSELVES AND TAKE ASHOWER TO RINSE OFF LOOSE TICKS.WE RECOMMEND THAT PEOPLE THROWTHEIR CLOTHES IN THE DRYER FOR10 MINUTES ON HIGH HEAT.THAT WILL KILL TICKS.IF THE CLOTHES ARE WET, IT WILLTAKE LONGER.
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Why you should be on the lookout for 'seed ticks' this summer

This toddler was covered with hundreds of tiny ticks after playing outside

Research tells us that 2017 is going to be a bad year for ticks, Lyme disease, and the Powassan virus, a deadly disease spread by the parasites. If you live in an area where these are a concern, there's one more danger you need to be aware of this summer, unfortunately—especially if you have pets or kids at home. Beka Setzer, a mom of two young daughters from Ohio, shared some alarming photos of her daughter's run-in with "seed ticks" last summer on Facebook in an effort to warn other families. After spending just 30 minutes playing outside, her daughter Emmalee was covered in these small, hard-to-see larval ticks. Beka removed them right away, but Emmalee still became sick soon after. "I'm putting this out there, just a heads up for parents of kids who love to play outside," Beka wrote on Facebook. "Emmalee was playing outside yesterday rolling around on the ground while enjoying the sprinkler. After coming inside and laying down for a nap I just happened to notice tiny (and I mean tiny) little black dots all over her legs, abdomen, arms, and armpit area. Thinking they may have just been seeds I tried to wipe then scrape one off and it was a tick! She must've been playing in or near a nest of tick larvae and was covered." Beka proceeded to remove more than 100 ticks from her daughter's body. Within 90 minutes, she detached the ticks, but that didn't prevent Emmalee from waking up the next morning with spots covering her body and a swollen and hard lymph node. This mom took her daughter to see a doctor right away, and she was prescribed aggressive antibiotics and antihistamines. "I want to make every parent aware of what these look like so you can be on the lookout," Beka wrote. "They're not as easy to see as the ticks you're likely looking for on yourself or children." More recently, Beka shared a photo of another seed tick she found on her daughter, and placed it next to a penny to show its small size. The ticks can easily be mistaken for seeds, spots, freckles, or dirt, and they're even more difficult to spot on cats and dogs. While seed ticks are smaller than regular ticks, they cannot be simply wiped or flicked off the body. To properly remove the tick, it's best to use a pair of tweezers to detach both the body and head, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Place the removed tick in a container or baggie to be tested later and then disinfect the site of the bite. You can learn more about tick removal on the CDC's website. (h/t Pop Sugar)

Research tells us that , Lyme disease, and the , a deadly disease spread by the parasites. If you live in an area where these are a concern, there's one more danger you need to be aware of this summer, unfortunately—especially if you have pets or kids at home.

Beka Setzer, a mom of two young daughters from Ohio, shared some alarming photos of her daughter's run-in with "seed ticks" last summer on in an effort to warn other families. After spending just 30 minutes playing outside, her daughter Emmalee was covered in these small, hard-to-see larval ticks. Beka removed them right away, but Emmalee still became sick soon after.

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This content is imported from Facebook. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

"I'm putting this out there, just a heads up for parents of kids who love to play outside," Beka wrote on . "Emmalee was playing outside yesterday rolling around on the ground while enjoying the sprinkler. After coming inside and laying down for a nap I just happened to notice tiny (and I mean tiny) little black dots all over her legs, abdomen, arms, and armpit area. Thinking they may have just been seeds I tried to wipe then scrape one off and it was a tick! She must've been playing in or near a nest of tick larvae and was covered."

Beka proceeded to remove more than 100 ticks from her daughter's body. Within 90 minutes, she detached the ticks, but that didn't prevent Emmalee from waking up the next morning with spots covering her body and a swollen and hard lymph node. This mom took her daughter to see a doctor right away, and she was prescribed aggressive antibiotics and antihistamines. "I want to make every parent aware of what these look like so you can be on the lookout," Beka wrote. "They're not as easy to see as the ticks you're likely looking for on yourself or children."

More recently, Beka shared a photo of another seed tick she found on her daughter, and placed it next to a penny to show its small size. The ticks can easily be mistaken for seeds, spots, freckles, or dirt, and they're even more difficult to spot on cats and dogs.

This content is imported from Facebook. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

While seed ticks are smaller than regular ticks, they cannot be simply wiped or flicked off the body. To properly remove the tick, it's best to use a pair of tweezers to detach both the body and head, according to the (CDC). Place the removed tick in a container or baggie to be tested later and then disinfect the site of the bite. You can learn more about tick removal on the 's website.

(h/t )