Abstract
Borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of Lyme borreliosis, is vectored in Europe byIxodes ricinus. In unfed ticks, the spirochaete resides primarily in the midgut, but a low percentage (5.5%; 4/73) of naturally infected ticks may present a systemic infection involving organs such as the salivary glands and central ganglion (Burgdorferet al., 1983).
In this study, we examined 79 unfed nymphs collected in two sites in Switzerland (Neuchâtel and Aarberg), and 35 unfed nymphs which were fed as uninfected larvae on 3 infectedApodemus sylvaticus mice. Dieterle silver staining was used to visualize the spirochaetes in the ticks.
Of the unfed field-collected nymphs, 21/79 (27%) were infected of which 2/21 (10%) had systemic infections. Taking account of the site of collection, we observed that 0/12 ticks from Neuchâtel were systemically infected whereas 2/9 (22%) from Aarberg had a disseminated infection. Out of the 35 unfed nymphs examined after an infectious blood meal on rodents, 14 (40%) were infected and 2 (14%) had a disseminated infection.
A total of 4/35 (11%) unfed infected nymphs presented a systemic infection which represents a higher percentage than previously described. The presence of spirochaetes in salivary glands of systemically infected ticks before the initiation of feeding may reduce the time delay generally recorded for the tick-borne transmission ofB. burgdorferi.
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Lebet, N., Gern, L. Histological examination ofBorrelia burgdorferi infections in unfedIxodes ricinus nymphs. Exp Appl Acarol 18, 177–183 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02353685
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02353685