Literature DB >> 26470937

Tick-Induced Facial Palsy.

Mustafa Uğuz1, Nejla Mendil Erdoğan, Emiş Eken.   

Abstract

Ticks are obligate blood-sucking arthropods that exist worldwide. Their targets include all vertebrates and humans. Ticks are harmful to people with regard to transmission in many viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections. In addition to these diseases and toxin-induced neurological complications, tick-induced paralysis is a syndrome related to neurotoxin production, and its mortality ratio in the literature is reported to be approximately 10%. Tick-induced isolated facial paralysis is a rare form of the disease developing because of attachment to the external auditory canal or attachment behind the ear. Our country and region are under risk in terms of included tick habitat for tick-induced paralysis that is responsible particularly for hard ticks. In our article, we aimed to present a case with isolated facial paralysis that occurred after the internal auditory canal was bitten by Hyalomma margintum species belonging to the hard ticks group and to probe the management of this disease.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26470937     DOI: 10.5152/tpd.2015.3683

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Turkiye Parazitol Derg        ISSN: 1300-6320


  2 in total

1.  Intra-aural tick bite causing unilateral facial nerve palsy in 29 cases over 16 years in Kandy, Sri Lanka: is rickettsial aetiology possible?

Authors:  Senanayake A M Kularatne; Ranjan Fernando; Sinnadurai Selvaratnam; Chandrasiri Narampanawa; Kosala Weerakoon; Sujanthe Wickramasinghe; Manoji Pathirage; Vajira Weerasinghe; Anura Bandara; Jayanthe Rajapakse
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2018-08-22       Impact factor: 3.090

2.  A Case of Tick-Borne Paralysis in a Traveling Patient.

Authors:  Kevin Ha; Kathryn Lewis; Vandan Patel; Jennifer Grinceri
Journal:  Case Rep Neurol Med       Date:  2019-06-27
  2 in total

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