Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Voor informatie die te maken heeft met Lyme-Borreliose en/of co-infecties in artikelen en linkjes. Zoals youtube-video’s, websites, medische artikelen, blogs, artikelen over lyme en politiek, verouderd lyme-nieuws, etc.
Sproetje
Berichten: 3407
Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Za 16 Jan 2016, 15:45

Global ecology and epidemiology of Borrelia garinii spirochetes

http://www.infectionecologyandepidemiol ... /view/9545

Abstract

Lyme borreliosis (LB) is a tick-transmitted infectious disease caused by Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (s. l.). In Europe, three different Borrelia species are the main causative agents of LB: B. burgdorferi sensu stricto (s.s.), Borrelia afzelii, and Borrelia garinii. The latter depends heavily on birds as its main reservoir hosts. In fact, birds can act both as biological carriers of Borrelia and transporters of infected ticks. The seasonal migration of many bird species not only aid in the spread of B. garinii to new foci but also influence the high level of diversity found within this species. B. garinii have been isolated not only from terrestrial birds in Europe, but also from seabirds worldwide, and homology between isolates in these two different infection cycles suggests an overlap and exchange of strains. In addition, it has been shown that birds can maintain and spread B. garinii genotypes associated with LB in humans. This review article discusses the importance of birds in the ecology and epidemiology of B. garinii spirochetes.
........
Borrelia and birds

Anderson and Magnarelli (33) isolated B. burgdorferi (s.s.) from Ixodes scapularis collected from different species of birds. Later, they also isolated spirochetes from the livers of passerine birds, finally corroborating that birds are indeed important reservoir host for LB and as such important for the ecology and epidemiology of B. burgdorferi (s.s.) (34). Since then, a number of studies focusing on wild birds have expanded the knowledge regarding birds as reservoirs for Borrelia (4, 6, 35, 36) .
........
Today we know that birds spread and maintain Borrelia spirochetes very similar to clinical isolates and therefore, we believe that the role of birds in the ecology and epidemiology of LB is greater than previously understood (4, 8). For a long time, birds were ruled out as potential hosts for B. burgdorferi (s. l.) spirochetes, mainly because of their high body temperature. As the optimal growth temperature for many LB-causing strains had been determined to 34–37�C and since birds have an elevated body temperature compared to many mammals, they were not considered to be likely reservoir hosts (37, 38). However, unlike other species, some B. garinii isolates are reported to grow at temperatures of up to 41�C; this has also been suggested to be an adaptation to the avian host (39). Possibly, this is one reason why B. garinii is the species most frequently infecting birds in Europe and Asia (4, 6, 40).
........

Sproetje
Berichten: 3407
Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Vr 22 Jan 2016, 19:47

http://lymestats.org/assets/31_birds.pdf


"In a 2015 study of birds in Northern California, 57 of the 100 birds that carried ticks had Lyme disease. Borrelia bissettii, of European origin, was the most common of the Borrelia species found in these birds."

Sproetje
Berichten: 3407
Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Di 20 Dec 2016, 16:29

Molecular evidence of the dispersal of Lyme disease Borrelia from the Asian Continent to Japan via migratory birds.

Door: Ishiguro F1, Takada N, Masuzawa T.

2005

Abstract

Based on specific sequencing, we found that a Borrelia garinii strain from a rodent in Fukui Prefecture, Japan was highly similar to the unique Borrelia strains (pattern R'/R) isolated in northeastern China and Korea, and to strains from ticks feeding on migratory birds in Fukui Prefecture. These findings indicate that the Borrelia with this unique pattern may be locally naturalized to the epizootic transmission cycle in Japan, and that Borrelia is dispersed from the Asian Continent to Japan via migratory birds.



Dit onderzoek beschrijft het transport van Borrelia garinii via migrerende vogels van het vaste land van Azie naar Japan.

Ik denk dat besmette teken ook kunnen meekomen dmv zeevogels.

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VerlorengezondheidM
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Lid geworden op: Za 19 Sep 2015, 23:59
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Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Di 20 Dec 2016, 17:23

Lyme Test Negative?
It Still May Be Lyme Disease!

Na 19 jaar onbehandeld rondlopen met een klinisch ziektebeeld: Chronische Lyme, Q-koorts, Bartonella, Babesia, Anaplasma, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Rickettsia, Yersinia, Coxsackie A16+ B, HHV-6.

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VerlorengezondheidM
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Lid geworden op: Za 19 Sep 2015, 23:59
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Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Vr 20 Jan 2017, 18:44

Birds and Borrelia.

After several years of controversy, the contribution of birds in the ecology of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato (sl) has become more and more obvious on the three continents where the pathogens are distributed. Evidence of the reservoir competence of particular bird species has been obtained using tick xenodiagnosis. B. burgdorferi sl circulates not only in terrestrial environment involving Ixodes ricinus and undergrowth-frequenting birds but also in marine environment involving I. uriae and seabirds. Migrating birds contribute to the spread of B. burgdorferi sl and of infected tick vectors along migration routes.


Bron: NCBI
Lyme Test Negative?
It Still May Be Lyme Disease!

Na 19 jaar onbehandeld rondlopen met een klinisch ziektebeeld: Chronische Lyme, Q-koorts, Bartonella, Babesia, Anaplasma, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Rickettsia, Yersinia, Coxsackie A16+ B, HHV-6.

Sproetje
Berichten: 3407
Lid geworden op: Di 28 Okt 2014, 20:33

Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor Sproetje » Vr 20 Jan 2017, 19:18

Ik blijf het interessant vinden hoe dat nu gaat met die vogels, vooral de trekvogels en de zeevogels ook, die broeden toch op de kust?

Er zijn vogels die duizenden kilometers over de Atlantische oceaan vliegen
Wiki:
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vogeltrek

........
Vóór de trek verzamelen de vogels energiereserves in de vorm van vetafzettingen onder de huid. Er zijn soorten, die daardoor minstens dertig uren in de lucht kunnen blijven. Men kent kleine vogels die in staat zijn duizenden kilometers over de Atlantische Oceaan tot de dichtstbijzijnde kust door te vliegen........


A Lyme borreliosis cycle in seabirds and Ixodes uriae ticks
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v3 ... 340a0.html

Dat gaat over zeevogels op de Oostzee

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VerlorengezondheidM
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Lid geworden op: Za 19 Sep 2015, 23:59
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Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Vr 03 Feb 2017, 04:03

NEWS: Birds are important hosts of Lyme disease in California

“In the same way that airplanes can help spread disease across nations, birds do the same thing for our ecosystems.”

image_print
Press release from the University of California, Berkeley, Feb. 25, 2015:

BERKELEY–Birds are more important than previously recognized as hosts for Lyme disease-causing bacteria in California, according to a new study led by UC Berkeley researchers.

The findings, published Feb. 25 in the journal PLOS ONE, shine a light on an important new reservoir in the western United States for the corkscrew-shaped bacterium, Borrelia burgdorferi, responsible for Lyme disease. Wood rats, western gray squirrels and other small mammals have been identified in previous studies as wildlife hosts of the Lyme disease spirochete bacterium in California, but fewer studies have looked at the role of birds as reservoirs.

“The role of birds in the maintenance of Lyme disease bacteria in California is poorly understood,” said study lead author Erica Newman, a UC Berkeley Ph.D. student in the Energy and Resources Group and the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management. “This is the most extensive study of the role of birds in Lyme disease ecology in the western United States, and the first to consider the diversity of bird species, their behaviors and their habitats in identifying which birds are truly the most important as carriers.”

Moreover, the birds in the study that were found to be important hosts of Lyme disease bacteria, such as American robins, dark-eyed juncos and golden-crowned sparrows, are coincidentally ones that are commonly found in suburban environments.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Lyme disease is the most commonly reported tick-borne illness in the United States. There are approximately 30,000 cases reported each year, with the large majority occurring in the eastern United States. However, because actual cases are often underreported to the CDC, the agency notes that the number of people in this country diagnosed with the disease every year may be 10 times higher.

Mobile birds could spread disease

Morgan Tingley, an ornithologist who was not part of this UC Berkeley-led study, underscored the significance of discovering which birds are carriers of Lyme disease bacteria. Tingley, now an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Connecticut, conducted studies on range shifts in birds in response to climate change while he was a graduate student at UC Berkeley.

“Birds are much more capable of carrying diseases long distances than the small-mammal hosts typical of Lyme disease, and so may constitute an underappreciated component of Lyme disease ecology,” said Tingley. “Particularly as we look to the future, birds may end up playing a larger role in disease ecology than other animals because of their ability to quickly and easily move long distances and to new habitats. In the same way that airplanes can help spread disease across nations, birds do the same thing for our ecosystems.”

Lyme disease is spread to humans through the bite of infected ticks. The black-legged deer tick (Ixodes scapularis) transmits B. burgdorferi in the eastern and north-central regions of the United States, while the western black-legged tick (Ixodes pacificus) spreads the bacteria in the West.

The bird and tick samples in this new study came from 14 sites within the UC Hopland Research and Extension Center in northwestern California. The study included multiple natural habitats, ranging from savannas and grasslands to chaparral and dense woodlands.

Co-authors Lars Eisen and Rebecca Eisen, both UC Berkeley postdoctoral researchers at the time, took blood samples from 623 birds representing 53 species. The Eisens, both now at CDC’s Division of Vector-Borne Diseases in Fort Collins, Colorado, also carefully removed and identified any ticks they found on the birds. They collected a total of 284 juvenile ticks – more than 99 percent were western black-legged ticks – consisting of 192 larvae and 92 nymphs.

Birds as Lyme disease reservoirs

Lyme disease spirochetes were detected in 57 of the 100 birds that carried ticks. Among the ticks themselves, 13 percent of the larvae and nearly 25 percent of the nymphs were infected with B. burgdorferi or related spirochetes.

Among the 23 species of birds that were infected, the study authors highlighted the lesser goldfinch, oak titmouse and dark-eyed junco as birds that harbored more subtypes of Lyme disease bacteria than others. In addition, the golden-crowned sparrow was infected more frequently than other species.

Previous studies that tested birds have identified the dark-eyed junco as a likely source of Lyme disease bacteria for ticks that feed on them.

Perhaps one of the most surprising results of this study is that “another species of Lyme disease spirochete closely related to, but distinct from, Borrelia burgdorferi was detected in birds for the first time anywhere in the world,” said study co-author Robert Lane, a medical entomologist and UC Berkeley Professor of the Graduate School, and a leading expert on ticks and Lyme disease.

That spirochete, named Borrelia bissettii, has been known to cause a Lyme disease-like illness in people in central and southern Europe. Furthermore, this bacterium was the most common of the Borrelia species found in birds.

“The fact that we found this particular bacterium for the first time in birds in California is notable because of the ease with which birds can distribute spirochetes to different regions,” said Lane. “It is worth watching to see if this spirochete expands in this state.”

Tick-infested birds were found in all types of habitat studied, but the researchers unexpectedly found that chaparral correlated with the lowest counts of larvae and nymphs on birds among the ecosystems studies.

“Other studies have shown that there are plenty of ticks in chaparral, but that was not translating to transmission of Lyme disease bacteria in birds,” said Newman. “This is important because part of the fire management strategy in this state is to remove fire-prone chaparral. What this means for birds is that many species that only live in chaparral are then replaced by species from other habitats, some of which we also now know are more important carriers of Lyme disease bacteria. Our study suggests that by removing chaparral, we may be increasing the spread of Lyme disease in California.”

RELATED INFORMATION

Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato spirochetes in wild birds in northwestern California (Link to PLOS ONE study)




Bron: https://www.lymedisease.org/birds-lyme-calif/
Lyme Test Negative?
It Still May Be Lyme Disease!

Na 19 jaar onbehandeld rondlopen met een klinisch ziektebeeld: Chronische Lyme, Q-koorts, Bartonella, Babesia, Anaplasma, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Rickettsia, Yersinia, Coxsackie A16+ B, HHV-6.

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VerlorengezondheidM
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Lid geworden op: Za 19 Sep 2015, 23:59
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Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Ma 22 Mei 2017, 00:07

Rickettsiae of spotted fever group, Borrelia valaisiana, and Coxiella burnetii in ticks on passerine birds and mammals from the Camargue in the south of France

Abstract
Ticks are obligate hematophagous arthropods that have a limited mobility, but can be transported over large geographical distances by wild and domestic mammals and birds. In this study, we analyze the presence of emerging zoonotic bacteria in ticks collected from passerine birds and mammals present in the Camargue, in the south of France, which is a major rallying point for birds migrating from Eurasia and Africa.

The presence of Coxiella burnetii, Rickettsia, Borrelia, and Bartonella was examined by real-time PCR on DNA samples extracted from 118 ticks. Rickettsia massiliae was detected in ticks from Passer domesticus, Ri. aeschlimannii in ticks from Acrocephalus scirpaceus and Luscinia megarhynchos, and Borrelia valaisiana in one tick from Turdus merula. In addition, Ri. massiliae, Ri. slovaca, Candidatus Ri. barbariae, and C. burnetii were detected in ticks from dogs, horses, cats, and humans. No Bartonella DNA was detected in these samples.

The migratory birds may play a role in the transmission of infectious diseases and contribute to the geographic distribution of Ri. aeschlimannii, Bo. valaisiana, and C. burnetii. The role of birds in spreading Rh. sanguineus ticks infected with Ri. massiliae needs to be clarified by complementary studies. This is the first detection of Candidatus Ri. barbariae in Rh. sanguineus from the south of France.


Bron: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 9X12001045
Lyme Test Negative?
It Still May Be Lyme Disease!

Na 19 jaar onbehandeld rondlopen met een klinisch ziektebeeld: Chronische Lyme, Q-koorts, Bartonella, Babesia, Anaplasma, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Rickettsia, Yersinia, Coxsackie A16+ B, HHV-6.

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VerlorengezondheidM
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Lid geworden op: Za 19 Sep 2015, 23:59
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Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Wo 07 Jun 2017, 19:03

Songbirds Disperse Lyme Disease Ticks Across Canada

When I was diagnosed with Lyme disease in 1990, I wondered where I contracted this mysterious infection. I had not been to an endemic area. Since I was raised on a dairy farm where hard work and problem-solving never ended, I was determined to find some answers. With encouragement of the late Dr. P.T. Williams, Ajax, Ontario, my wife and I co-founded the Lyme Disease Association of Ontario in 1990. He also encouraged us to get ticks. In 1991, I collected my first tick in a local farmer's meadow. As well, I started reading the literature, sought research help, used my university science background, and dusted off my stereoscopic microscope.

From there, I started a 10-year, tick study getting specimens from veterinarians across Ontario and, then, identified each tick to species and life stage. Even though I was often herxing from Lyme disease treatment, I was able, on good days, to study several tick populations along Lake Erie. Since I was constantly reading information on the epidemiology and ecology of Lyme disease, I had a brain-wave to get ticks from songbirds. In 1996, I phoned bird banders and wildlife rehabilitators nationwide, and got their cooperation. To date, I have received 18 different bird-feeding tick species, of which 6 species have tested positive for the Lyme disease spirochete, Borrelia burgdorferi. Explicitly, songbirds widely disperse Lyme-carrying ticks countrywide, especially during spring migration. Ultimately, I have solved my mystery: because songbirds release millions of Lyme disease vector ticks across Canada, people do not have to visit an endemic area to contract Lyme disease. Overall, I have written and, with co-authors, published 14 peer-reviewed scientific articles on ticks and Lyme disease.


Bron: ILADS
Lyme Test Negative?
It Still May Be Lyme Disease!

Na 19 jaar onbehandeld rondlopen met een klinisch ziektebeeld: Chronische Lyme, Q-koorts, Bartonella, Babesia, Anaplasma, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Rickettsia, Yersinia, Coxsackie A16+ B, HHV-6.

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VerlorengezondheidM
Berichten: 2569
Lid geworden op: Za 19 Sep 2015, 23:59
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Re: Migratory Songbirds Transport New Ticks & Pathogens Across the Gulf

Berichtdoor VerlorengezondheidM » Di 20 Jun 2017, 13:59

Sproetje schreef:Ik denk dat besmette teken ook kunnen meekomen dmv zeevogels.


Dat denk ik persoonlijk ook, waarom niet?

Dan is mijn vraag hierover: kunnen die teken tijdens de uitgevoerde vluchten van de (zee)vogels er her en der afvallen of moet een vogel per definitie stil zitten zodat de teek eraf kruipt / valt, iemand?

De Lyme besmettingskaart van de USA geeft naar mijn mening ook een bepaald beeld weer :idea:

Bron: CDC
Lyme Test Negative?
It Still May Be Lyme Disease!

Na 19 jaar onbehandeld rondlopen met een klinisch ziektebeeld: Chronische Lyme, Q-koorts, Bartonella, Babesia, Anaplasma, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Rickettsia, Yersinia, Coxsackie A16+ B, HHV-6.


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