Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity

Objective:The aim of the present study was to determine tick species found on humans who suffered from tick bite in the Southwestern Anatolia Region, Turkey.Methods:Between January and October 2007, ticks were collected from people admitted to the city and/or town hospitals with complaints of tick b...

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Main Authors: Serkan Bakırcı, Nuran Aysul, Hüseyin Bilgin Bilgiç, Selin Hacılarlıoğlu, Hasan Eren, Tülin Karagenç
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galenos Yayinevi 2019-03-01
Series:Türkiye Parazitoloji Dergisi
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.turkiyeparazitolderg.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/tick-bites-on-humans-in-southwestern-region-of-tur/26298
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spelling doaj-16761a319c5c4f888aba0f64e4446ffb2020-11-25T01:51:49ZengGalenos YayineviTürkiye Parazitoloji Dergisi2146-30772146-30772019-03-01431303510.4274/tpd.galenos.2019.621913049054Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species DiversitySerkan Bakırcı0Nuran Aysul1Hüseyin Bilgin Bilgiç2Selin Hacılarlıoğlu3Hasan Eren4Tülin Karagenç5 Aydın Adnan Menderes University Faculty of Veterinary, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Türkiye Aydın Adnan Menderes University Faculty of Veterinary, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Türkiye Aydın Adnan Menderes University Faculty of Veterinary, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Türkiye Aydın Adnan Menderes University Faculty of Veterinary, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Türkiye Aydın Adnan Menderes University Faculty of Veterinary, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Türkiye Aydın Adnan Menderes University Faculty of Veterinary, Department of Parasitology, Aydın, Türkiye Objective:The aim of the present study was to determine tick species found on humans who suffered from tick bite in the Southwestern Anatolia Region, Turkey.Methods:Between January and October 2007, ticks were collected from people admitted to the city and/or town hospitals with complaints of tick bites in nine different provinces of Turkey. Genus and/or species of the ticks in adult, larva and nymph stages were identified microscopically. Identification was done using related taxonomic keys.Results:A total of 2.610 ticks were collected from humans who were admitted to the hospitals with complaints of tick bites in the Southwestern Anatolia Region in the present study. Of these, 1.858 samples were collected from the Aegean Region and the remaining 752 from the Mediterranean Region of the country. The ticks were identified as Hyalomma spp. (78.58%), Rhipicehalus spp. (18.89%), Ixodes spp. (0.88%), Dermacentor spp. (0.77%), Haemaphysalis spp. (0.61%), Argas spp. (0.23%), and Ornithodoros spp. (0.04%). Results indicated that the majority of the ticks were nymphs of Hyalomma spp. (n=1.582). Nymphal stage was most commonly encountered from the Aegean Region and the Mediterranean Region with a prevalence of 46.13% (n=1.204) and 14.48% (n=378) respectively. Within the collected adult ticks (n=913), the majority of the samples were identified as H. marginatum (n=233, 26.09%).Conclusion:The results indicate the high diversity of tick species infesting humans in the Southwestern Anatolia Region, Turkey. So, it is crucial to publish information on tick bite prevention, which would play an important role in reducing the incidence of tick-borne diseases. http://www.turkiyeparazitolderg.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/tick-bites-on-humans-in-southwestern-region-of-tur/26298 HumanSouthwestern regiontick bitesTurkey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Serkan Bakırcı
Nuran Aysul
Hüseyin Bilgin Bilgiç
Selin Hacılarlıoğlu
Hasan Eren
Tülin Karagenç
spellingShingle Serkan Bakırcı
Nuran Aysul
Hüseyin Bilgin Bilgiç
Selin Hacılarlıoğlu
Hasan Eren
Tülin Karagenç
Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity
Türkiye Parazitoloji Dergisi
Human
Southwestern region
tick bites
Turkey
author_facet Serkan Bakırcı
Nuran Aysul
Hüseyin Bilgin Bilgiç
Selin Hacılarlıoğlu
Hasan Eren
Tülin Karagenç
author_sort Serkan Bakırcı
title Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity
title_short Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity
title_full Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity
title_fullStr Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity
title_full_unstemmed Tick Bites on Humans in Southwestern Region of Turkey: Species Diversity
title_sort tick bites on humans in southwestern region of turkey: species diversity
publisher Galenos Yayinevi
series Türkiye Parazitoloji Dergisi
issn 2146-3077
2146-3077
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Objective:The aim of the present study was to determine tick species found on humans who suffered from tick bite in the Southwestern Anatolia Region, Turkey.Methods:Between January and October 2007, ticks were collected from people admitted to the city and/or town hospitals with complaints of tick bites in nine different provinces of Turkey. Genus and/or species of the ticks in adult, larva and nymph stages were identified microscopically. Identification was done using related taxonomic keys.Results:A total of 2.610 ticks were collected from humans who were admitted to the hospitals with complaints of tick bites in the Southwestern Anatolia Region in the present study. Of these, 1.858 samples were collected from the Aegean Region and the remaining 752 from the Mediterranean Region of the country. The ticks were identified as Hyalomma spp. (78.58%), Rhipicehalus spp. (18.89%), Ixodes spp. (0.88%), Dermacentor spp. (0.77%), Haemaphysalis spp. (0.61%), Argas spp. (0.23%), and Ornithodoros spp. (0.04%). Results indicated that the majority of the ticks were nymphs of Hyalomma spp. (n=1.582). Nymphal stage was most commonly encountered from the Aegean Region and the Mediterranean Region with a prevalence of 46.13% (n=1.204) and 14.48% (n=378) respectively. Within the collected adult ticks (n=913), the majority of the samples were identified as H. marginatum (n=233, 26.09%).Conclusion:The results indicate the high diversity of tick species infesting humans in the Southwestern Anatolia Region, Turkey. So, it is crucial to publish information on tick bite prevention, which would play an important role in reducing the incidence of tick-borne diseases.
topic Human
Southwestern region
tick bites
Turkey
url http://www.turkiyeparazitolderg.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/tick-bites-on-humans-in-southwestern-region-of-tur/26298
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AT nuranaysul tickbitesonhumansinsouthwesternregionofturkeyspeciesdiversity
AT huseyinbilginbilgic tickbitesonhumansinsouthwesternregionofturkeyspeciesdiversity
AT selinhacılarlıoglu tickbitesonhumansinsouthwesternregionofturkeyspeciesdiversity
AT hasaneren tickbitesonhumansinsouthwesternregionofturkeyspeciesdiversity
AT tulinkaragenc tickbitesonhumansinsouthwesternregionofturkeyspeciesdiversity
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