| Literature DB >> 30496158 |
C Ben Beard, James Occi, Denise L Bonilla, Andrea M Egizi, Dina M Fonseca, James W Mertins, Bryon P Backenson, Waheed I Bajwa, Alexis M Barbarin, Matthew A Bertone, Justin Brown, Neeta P Connally, Nancy D Connell, Rebecca J Eisen, Richard C Falco, Angela M James, Rayda K Krell, Kevin Lahmers, Nicole Lewis, Susan E Little, Michael Neault, Adalberto A Pérez de León, Adam R Randall, Mark G Ruder, Meriam N Saleh, Brittany L Schappach, Betsy A Schroeder, Leslie L Seraphin, Morgan Wehtje, Gary P Wormser, Michael J Yabsley, William Halperin.
Abstract
Haemaphysalis longicornis is a tick indigenous to eastern Asia and an important vector of human and animal disease agents, resulting in such outcomes as human hemorrhagic fever and reduction of production in dairy cattle by 25%. H. longicornis was discovered on a sheep in New Jersey in August 2017 (1). This was the first detection in the United States outside of quarantine. In the spring of 2018, the tick was again detected at the index site, and later, in other counties in New Jersey, in seven other states in the eastern United States, and in Arkansas. The hosts included six species of domestic animals, six species of wildlife, and humans. To forestall adverse consequences in humans, pets, livestock, and wildlife, several critical actions are indicated, including expanded surveillance to determine the evolving distribution of H. longicornis, detection of pathogens that H. longicornis currently harbors, determination of the capacity of H. longicornis to serve as a vector for a range of potential pathogens, and evaluation of effective agents and methods for the control of H. longicornis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30496158 PMCID: PMC6276380 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6747a3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURECounties and county equivalents* where Haemaphysalis longicornis has been reported (N = 45) — United States, August 2017–September 2018
* Benton County, Arkansas; Fairfield County, Connecticut; Washington County, Maryland; Bergen, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset, and Union Counties, New Jersey; Davidson, Polk, and Rutherford Counties, North Carolina; Richmond, Rockland, and Westchester Counties, New York; Bucks and Centre Counties, Pennsylvania; Albemarle, Augusta, Carroll, Fairfax, Giles, Grayson, Louisa, Page, Pulaski, Rockbridge, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Staunton City, Warren, and Wythe Counties, Virginia; Cabell, Hardy, Lincoln, Mason, Marion, Monroe, Putnam, Ritchie, Taylor, Tyler, Upshur Counties, West Virginia.
Percentage of Haemaphysalis longicornis–infested counties or county equivalents in infested states — nine states, August 2017–September 2018
| State | No. of counties* per state | No. (%) of counties* with |
|---|---|---|
| Arkansas | 75 | 1 (1) |
| Connecticut | 8 | 1 (13) |
| Maryland | 24 | 1 (4) |
| New Jersey | 21 | 7 (33) |
| New York | 62 | 3 (5) |
| North Carolina | 100 | 3 (3) |
| Pennsylvania | 67 | 2 (3) |
| Virginia | 134 | 16 (12) |
| West Virginia | 55 | 11 (20) |
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* Counties or county equivalents
Distribution of Haemaphysalis longicornis, by host and species — nine states, August 2017–September 2018
| Host category, no. (% of total)/Species | No. (% of host category) |
|---|---|
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| Cat | 1 (4) |
| Cow | 4 (17) |
| Dog | 12 (52) |
| Goat | 2 (9) |
| Horse | 2 (9) |
| Sheep | 2 (9) |
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| Coyote | 1 (8) |
| White-tailed deer | 7 (54) |
| Gray fox | 1 (8) |
| Groundhog | 1 (8) |
| Virginia opossum | 2 (15) |
| Raccoon | 1 (8) |
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| 2 (100) |
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