Umm, isn't "tularemia" another name for Rabbit Fever?
To: LurkedLongEnough
Yup, it is...
2 posted on
07/01/2003 5:21:46 AM PDT by
jacquej
To: LurkedLongEnough
This is kind of scary, we went camping this weekend and found a tick on my 4 year old boy when we got home. Luckily I haven't seen or heard any warnings about disease bearing ticks out here in South Dakota.
3 posted on
07/01/2003 5:47:55 AM PDT by
ThinkingMan
(How's my posting? Call 1-800-UR-RIGHT)
To: LurkedLongEnough
Good hospitals on the Eastern Shore...but a very bad year for ticks in my neck of the woods, Appalachia. Have shaved my dog and pull a dozen off him a day. Must be all the rain. Even the chickens can't keep them down.
4 posted on
07/01/2003 5:51:14 AM PDT by
Mamzelle
To: LurkedLongEnough; Prof Engineer
ping
5 posted on
07/01/2003 5:57:40 AM PDT by
msdrby
(I do believe the cheese slid off his cracker! - The Green Mile)
To: LurkedLongEnough
There was an outbreak of tularemia on Martha's Vineyard some years back. Sounds like a nasty disease.
Having lost the tick lottery and contracted Lyme Disease I'm pretty paranoid about the little buggers. I'm fortunate the only symptom I have had was the spinal menningitis it gave me about a month after the bite.
6 posted on
07/01/2003 6:14:51 AM PDT by
Clintons Are White Trash
(Helen Thomas, Molly Ivins, Maureen Dowd - The Axis of Ugly)
To: LurkedLongEnough
from the CDC
Facts about Tularemia
Tularemia is an infectious disease caused by a hardy bacterium, Francisella tularensis, found in animals (especially rodents, rabbits, and hares).
People can get tularemia many different ways, such as through the bite of an infected insect or other arthropod (usually a tick or deerfly), handling infected animal carcasses, eating or drinking contaminated food or water, or breathing in F. tularensis.
Symptoms of tularemia could include sudden fever, chills, headaches, muscle aches, joint pain, dry cough, progressive weakness, and pneumonia. Persons with pneumonia can develop chest pain and bloody spit and can have trouble breathing or can sometimes stop breathing. Other symptoms of tularemia depend on how a person was exposed to the tularemia bacteria. These symptoms can include ulcers on the skin or mouth, swollen and painful lymph glands, swollen and painful eyes, and a sore throat. Symptoms usually appear 3 to 5 days after exposure to the bacteria, but can take as long as 14 days.
Tularemia is not known to be spread from person to person, so people who have tularemia do not need to be isolated. People who have been exposed to F. tularensis should be treated as soon as possible. The disease can be fatal if it is not treated with the appropriate antibiotics.
A vaccine for tularemia is under review by the Food and Drug Administration and is not currently available in the United States.
To: LurkedLongEnough
21 posted on
07/01/2003 6:10:03 PM PDT by
chance33_98
(http://home.frognet.net/~thowell/haunt/ ---->our ghosty page)
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