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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 47(1), 1992, pp. 55-60
Copyright © 1992 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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Clustering of Host-Seeking Nymphal Deer Ticks (Ixodes Dammini) Infected by Lyme Disease Spirochetes (Borrelia Burgdorferi)

Sam R. Telford, III, Sandy S. Urioste AND Andrew Spielman
Department of Tropical Public Health, School of Public Health, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts

In areas where the agent of Lyme disease is intensely enzootic, the mouse reservoirs may be universally infected. Because a large proportion of the vector tick population appears to feed upon these hosts, the prevalence of infection in the vectors should approach 100%. However, infection in host-seeking nymphal ticks in nature rarely exceeds 40%. To help reconcile this apparent paradox, we examined whether estimates of prevalence might differ if we did not assume that infected ticks are randomly or uniformly distributed within a site. Nymphal Ixodes dammini were collected by dragging a series of 10-meter replicates within an intensely enzootic site. Estimates of the prevalence of spirochetal infection, based upon the monthly means of individual 10-meter collections, were then compared with estimates derived by pooling all samples. Host-seeking ticks tended to cluster. The Lyme disease spirochete was present in 15.6% of 469 pooled ticks. When the prevalence estimate was based solely on ticks in clusters that contained one or more infected ticks, however, at least 50% of the ticks were infected. We conclude that nymphal deer ticks infected by Lyme disease spirochetes tend to aggregate spatially in nature, and that prevalence estimates based upon a mean value for pools may be misleading.







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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.