Spyke

From Wikipedia:

Dabie bandavirus, also called SFTS virus, is a tick-borne virus in the genus Bandavirus in the family Phenuiviridae, order Bunyavirales.[2] The clinical condition it caused is known as severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS).[2] SFTS is an emerging infectious disease that was first described in northeast and central China 2009 and now has also been discovered in Japan, South Korea, Vietnam and Taiwan in 2015. SFTS has a fatality rate of 12% and as high as over 30% in some areas. The major clinical symptoms of SFTS are fever, vomiting, diarrhea, multiple organ failure, thrombocytopenia (low platelet count), leukopenia (low white blood cell count) and elevated liver enzyme levels. Another outbreak occurred in East China in the early half of 2020.

56
rhabarbareply
feddit.de

Luckily, scorpions rarely attack you from a tree in Central Europe.

27
ShortN0tereply
lemmy.ml

That ticks attack you from trees is actually wrong.

12
trevdogreply
lemmy.world

can you enlighten us on the probable vectors of tick to human contact?

4

basically, ticks are fishing from the low brush and grass. they hang around with their "hooks" out waiting for something to wander by where their hair or fur snags on the tick's hooks and away they go!

16

They hang out in grass that's a little higher which is why putting your pants in your socks can work sometimes.

That and having a shower after having been in the forest. I lived in a Lymes area and never got anything like that.

8

They usually climb up grass and wait till something passes they can hold on to.

4

No problem, I always wanted to have a reason to never leave the house anymore anyway.

9

Ticks and mosquitos can go extinct, I wouldn't care in the slightest.

5

That must have been quite the blood splatter from catheter to the doctors eye. I mean, not disputing this, just wondering if that's really the only way it could have transmitted.

13
Drusasreply
kbin.social

The article states that it has already happened in China and Korea, but not previously in Japan.

14

We had so many mutations because of lack of precaution on the last one that this is like the round 50 boss

6

You reached the end

Japan confirms first human-to-human transmission of tick-borne SFTS virus | Spyke