BACTERIAL AND VIRAL PATHOGENS IN IXODES SP. TICKS IN ST. PETERSBURG AND LENINGRAD DISTRICT
- Authors: Panferova Y.A.1, Suvorova M.A.2, Shapar A.O.3, Tokarevich N.K.4
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Affiliations:
- St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute
- Explana JSC, St. Petersburg
- Center of State Sanitary and Epidemiological Surveillance
- St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute North-Western State Medical University named after I.I. Mechnikov
- Issue: Vol 8, No 2 (2018)
- Pages: 219-222
- Section: SHORT COMMUNICATIONS
- Submitted: 10.09.2018
- Accepted: 10.09.2018
- Published: 10.09.2018
- URL: https://iimmun.ru/iimm/article/view/741
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.15789/2220-7619-2018-2-219-222
- ID: 741
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Abstract
Tick-borne infections are the most common group of zooanthroponotic diseases in the Northern Hemisphere. For the Baltic Sea region and Fennoscandia, the dominant infectious pathologies transmitted by ticks are tick-borne borreliosis and tick- borne encephalitis. The presence of vast forested areas, actively visited by people in St. Petersburg and the Leningrad region, contributes to a rather high level of encroachment on the flares and intelligence of the borreliosis and tick-borne encephalitis among the population of these regions. The relatively dangerous pathogens that can be transmitted with the tick bite are also of particular danger: Anaplasma sp., Ehrlichia sp., Coxiella burnetii, Rickettsia sp. In this work, detection was performed using molecular genetic methods of TBE virus, B. burgdorferi sensu lato and Rickettsia sp. in engorged ticksple, as well as questing ticks collected from vegetation. The established levels of infection of TBE on infected ticks, levels of infection by pathogenic Borrelia of questing and engorgeded ticks were approximately equal. Rickettsia was not found in the ticks. The conducted analysis of the pathogens prevalence in comparison with the data of russian and foreign authors. Monitoring the prevalence of tick-borne pathogens is an important issue in the prevention of tick- borne infections in the North-Western Russia.
About the authors
Yu. A. Panferova
St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute
Author for correspondence.
Email: ersvart@inbox.ru
Junior Researcher, Laboratory of Zoonoses, St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
197101, Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, Mira str., 14
Phone: +7 (812) 232-21-36 (office). Fax: +7 (812) 233-20-92
РоссияM. A. Suvorova
Explana JSC, St. Petersburg
Email: fake@neicon.ru
General Manager, Explana JSC, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
РоссияA. O. Shapar
Center of State Sanitary and Epidemiological Surveillance
Email: fake@neicon.ru
Head of Parasitological Department, Center of State Sanitary and Epidemiological Surveillance, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
РоссияN. K. Tokarevich
St. Petersburg Pasteur InstituteNorth-Western State Medical University named after I.I. Mechnikov
Email: fake@neicon.ru
PhD, MD (Medicine), Professor, Head of the Laboratory of Zoonoses, St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation; Professor, Department of Epidemiology, North-Western State Medical University named after I.I. Mechnikov, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
РоссияReferences
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