Other tick-borne diseases?

Other tick-borne diseases are very rarely caught following tick bites in the UK, however they may be acquired overseas. They may be co-infections with Lyme disease [66].


Tick-borne disease include:
  • Anaplasmosis (granular ehrlichiosis) – reported in US and Europe
  • fever, severe headaches, malaise, muscle pains, and chills. Other symptoms may include confusion, hemorrhages, and renal failure. http://www.aldf.com/anaplasmosis/
  • Babesiosis – most commonly reported on the East coast of the US, but also occurs sporadically in other parts of the world
  • Babesiosis – Clinical features are similar to malaria - including fever, generalized weakness, gastrointestinal symptoms, headache, myalgia, weight loss, respiratory symptoms, dark urine. https://www.aafp.org/afp/2001/0515/p1969.html
  • Q fever – only very rarely acquired through tick bites
  • Q –fever – flu-like symptoms within 2 – 3 weeks of being infected, such as: fever, aching muscles, tiredness, sore throat, swollen glands . Symptoms usually last 2 -3 weeks. https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/q-fever/
  • Rickettsial diseases – occurs in parts of Europe, Asia and Africa but never acquired in the UK
  • Rickettsial diseases – fever >38 ℃ rash, eschar (a slough or a dead piece of skin that is cast off from the surface of the skin), lymphadenopathy (swollen lymph nodes) associated with eschar.