نتایج جستجو برای: babesia microti

تعداد نتایج: 2530  

Journal: :Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology 2020

2018
Igor Dumic Janki Patel Melissa Hart Eric R. Niendorf Scott Martin Poornima Ramanan

BACKGROUND Babesiosis is an emerging, tick-borne zoonosis caused by intraerythrocytic protozoa of the genus Babesia. Babesia microti is the main pathogen causing human disease and is endemic in the northeastern and upper midwestern parts of the USA. Severity of infection ranges from mild, self-limited, febrile viral-like illness accompanied by nonspecific symptoms to life-threatening infection ...

Journal: :Annals of internal medicine 2011
David A Leiby

H uman babesiosis in the United States is attributable almost exclusively to infection with the intraerythro-cytic protozoan parasite Babesia microti. The primary mechanism of parasite transmission to humans is by the bite of an infected deer/black-legged tick, Ixodes scapularis, the same tick that serves as the vector for Lyme borreliosis, human granulocytic anaplasmosis, and several other tic...

Journal: :Canada communicable disease report = Releve des maladies transmissibles au Canada 1998
C dos Santos K Kain

Human babesiosis (caused by Babesia microti) and Lyme disease (caused by Borrelia burgdorferi) are among the most common tick-transmitted zoonoses. Recent evidence indicates that both diseases are emerging in the northeastern and Great Lakes regions of the United States as the deer tick (Ixodes scapularis), which transmits both infections, increases in geographic distribution. Because B. microt...

Journal: :Vector borne and zoonotic diseases 2014
Eva R Kallio Michael Begon Richard J Birtles Kevin J Bown Esa Koskela Tapio Mappes Phillip C Watts

Tick-borne diseases pose an increasingly important public health problem in Europe. Rodents are the reservoir host for many tick-transmitted pathogens, including Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia microti, which can cause human granulocytic anaplasmosis and babesiosis, respectively. To estimate the presence of these pathogens in rodents in Finland, we examined blood samples from 151 bank vol...

Journal: :Mathematical biosciences and engineering : MBE 2017
Yijun Lou Li Liu Daozhou Gao

Ticks, including the Ixodes ricinus and Ixodes scapularis hard tick species, are regarded as the most common arthropod vectors of both human and animal diseases in Europe and the United States capable of transmitting a large number of bacteria, viruses and parasites. Since ticks in larval and nymphal stages share the same host community which can harbor multiple pathogens, they may be co-infect...

2014
Maria A. Diuk-Wasser Yuchen Liu Tanner K. Steeves Corrine Folsom-O’Keefe Kenneth R. Dardick Timothy Lepore Stephen J. Bent Sahar Usmani-Brown Sam R. Telford Durland Fish Peter J. Krause

Human babesiosis is an emerging tick-borne disease caused by the intraerythrocytic protozoan Babesia microti. Its geographic distribution is more limited than that of Lyme disease, despite sharing the same tick vector and reservoir hosts. The geographic range of babesiosis is expanding, but knowledge of its range is incomplete and relies exclusively on reports of human cases. We evaluated the u...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1996
P J Krause S Telford A Spielman R Ryan J Magera T V Rajan D Christianson T V Alberghini L Bow D Persing

The specific diagnosis of babesiosis, which is caused by the piroplasm Babesia microti, is made by microscopic identification of the organism in Giemsa-stained thin blood smears, detection of babesial antibody in acute-and convalescent-phase sera, or identification of the organism following the injection of patient blood into laboratory animals. Although rapid diagnosis can be made with thin bl...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1991
J F Anderson E D Mintz J J Gadbaw L A Magnarelli

Babesia microti was isolated from a white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) that was captured in southeastern Connecticut in 1988, when the first human case of babesiosis acquired in Connecticut was recognized. To date, 13 cases of babesiosis have been reported in Connecticut, the largest number of human cases reported on the mainland United States. Two of nine patients quiried remembered a pr...

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