Adult Ixodes dammini on Rabbits: A Hypothesis for the Development and Transmission of Borrelia burgdorferi

JL Benach, JL Coleman, RA Skinner… - Journal of Infectious …, 1987 - academic.oup.com
JL Benach, JL Coleman, RA Skinner, EM Rosler
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1987academic.oup.com
A histological study of unfed Ixodes dammini adults has shown that the Lyme disease
spirochete can be found in the midgut diverticula of these ticks and is presumably carried
over from the nymphal stage. Sequential histology of the early stages of ticks feeding on a
rabbit showed that spirochetes began to divide and were located in close proximity or
attached to the epithelial cells of the diverticulae. Evidence for division was obtained by the
higher number of spirochetes per tick after a three-day feeding period than in the unfed …
Abstract
A histological study of unfed Ixodes dammini adults has shown that the Lyme disease spirochete can be found in the midgut diverticula of these ticks and is presumably carried over from the nymphal stage. Sequential histology of the early stages of ticks feeding on a rabbit showed that spirochetes began to divide and were located in close proximity or attached to the epithelial cells of the diverticulae. Evidence for division was obtained by the higher number of spirochetes per tick after a three-day feeding period than in the unfed females. Although the mechanism is unclear, some spirochetes become systemic by the fifth day of feeding and can be detected in low numbers in other tick organs. Spirochetes were also noted in the feeding cavities created by I. dammini in the dermis after five days of attachment. Spirochetes were not detected in salivary glands or in the feces of I. dammini during the feeding period.
Oxford University Press