Tick
Common Name of Organism | Latin Name | Body Parts Affected | Diagnosis Type | Where Found | Source of Parasite |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tick | Arachnida: Ixodidae and Argasidae | Skin | Visual | Globally | High grass, leaf litter, weeds |
Dormancy Period: Up to several years, depending on the vector.
Ticks are external parasites, living by feeding on the blood of mammals, birds, and sometimes reptiles and amphibians. Ticks have up to seven nymphal stages (instars), each one requiring blood ingestion, and as such, Ticks undergo a multihost life cycle. Because of their hematophagous (blood-ingesting) diets, ticks act as vectors of many serious diseases that affect humans and other animals.Â
Ticks are extremely resilient animals. They can survive in a near vacuum for as long as half an hour. Their slow metabolism during their dormant periods enables them to go prolonged durations between meals. Even after 18 weeks of starvation, they can endure repeated two-day bouts of dehydration followed by rehydration, but their survivability against dehydration drops rapidly after 36 weeks of starvation.
Species of the bacterial genus Rickettsia are responsible for typhus, rickettsialpox, boutonneuse fever, African tick bite fever, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Flinders Island spotted fever, and Queensland tick typhus (Australian tick typhus). Other tick-borne diseases include Lyme disease and Q fever, Colorado tick fever, Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever, tularemia, tick-borne relapsing fever, babesiosis, ehrlichiosis, Bourbon virus, and tick-borne meningoencephalitis, as well as bovine anaplasmosis and the Heartland virus. In the United States, Lyme disease is the most commonly reported vector-borne disease in the country.
Some species, notably the Australian paralysis tick, are also intrinsically venomous and can cause tick paralysis. Tropical bont ticks transmit the heartwater, which can be particularly devastating in cattle. The ticks carried by migratory birds act as reservoirs and vectors of foreign infectious diseases.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ixodidae
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argasidae
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22ticks%22&t=ftsa&iar=images&iax=images&ia=images
Therapure Remedies: For skin only: Neem Soap with scrub glove, Vita Bath with CP SO, CP BVC, CP C, CP PAR-D. CP PAR-M, CP PIN, CP PRS, CP SPQ, CP 1-5, Steamer Skin Therapy with CP B or R Tinctures. Bug Juice Natural Insect Repellent, Extractor tool.
Therapure Remedies for resultant vectored diseases:Â CP ABO, CP ANT, CP BCB, CP DNG, CP FNG, CP FVR, CP IFP, CP LAC, CP LIV, CP W.
Jamu Jo: JJ 5, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15.
IV Therapy: Glutathione, DMSO, CP ID, CP IN, CP IZ, CP IS, Lysine, Magnesium, NAC, Vitamin B Complex, Vitamin D, Zinc.
Conventional Therapies for vectored diseases:Â Varied depending on the disease.
Conventional Therapies for Skin: Lindane, benzyl benzoate, crotamiton, malathion, and sulfur preparations. Ivermectin, permethirin, crotamiton, lindane creme, calamine lotion, with hot dry. Therapure Bug Juice rubbed into the affected areas.