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Variable spikes in tick-borne encephalitis incidence in 2006 independent of variable tick abundance but related to weather
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  • 作者:Sarah E Randolph (1)
    Loreta Asokliene (2) (3)
    Tatjana Avsic-Zupanc (4)
    Antra Bormane (5)
    Caroline Burri (6)
    Lise Gern (6)
    Irina Golovljova (7)
    Zdenek Hubalek (8)
    Natasa Knap (4)
    Maceij Kondrusik (9)
    Anne Kupca (10)
    Milan Pejcoch (8)
    Veera Vasilenko (7)
    Milda ?ygutiene (2)
  • 刊名:Parasites & Vectors
  • 出版年:2008
  • 出版时间:December 2008
  • 年:2008
  • 卷:1
  • 期:1
  • 全文大小:3125KB
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  • 作者单位:Sarah E Randolph (1)
    Loreta Asokliene (2) (3)
    Tatjana Avsic-Zupanc (4)
    Antra Bormane (5)
    Caroline Burri (6)
    Lise Gern (6)
    Irina Golovljova (7)
    Zdenek Hubalek (8)
    Natasa Knap (4)
    Maceij Kondrusik (9)
    Anne Kupca (10)
    Milan Pejcoch (8)
    Veera Vasilenko (7)
    Milda ?ygutiene (2)

    1. Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, OX1 3PS, Oxford, UK
    2. Centre for Communicable Diseases Prevention and Control, Vilnius, Lithuania
    3. Ministry of Health of the Republic of Lithuania, Vilnius, Lithuania
    4. Institute of Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, Ljubljana, Slovenia
    5. State Agency "Public Health Agency", Riga, Latvia
    6. Institut de Parasitologie, Université de Neuchatel, Switzerland
    7. National Institute for Health Development, Tallinn, Estonia
    8. Academy of Sciences, Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Brno, Czech Republic
    9. Department of Infectious Diseases, Medical Academy, Bialystok, Poland
    10. Department of Comparative Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich, Germany
文摘
Background The incidence of tick-borne encephalitis showed a dramatic spike in several countries in Europe in 2006, a year that was unusually cold in winter but unusually warm and dry in summer and autumn. In this study we examine the possible causes of the sudden increase in disease: more abundant infected ticks and/or increased exposure due to human behaviour, both in response to the weather. Methods For eight countries across Europe, field data on tick abundance for 2005-007, collected monthly from a total of 41 sites, were analysed in relation to total annual and seasonal TBE incidence and temperature and rainfall conditions. Results The weather in 2006-007 was exceptional compared with the previous two decades, but neither the very cold start to 2006, nor the very hot period from summer 2006 to late spring 2007 had any consistent impact on tick abundance. Nor was the TBE spike in 2006 related to changes in tick abundance. Countries varied in the degree of TBE spike despite similar weather patterns, and also in the degree to which seasonal variation in TBE incidence matched seasonal tick activity. Conclusion The data suggest that the TBE spike was not due to weather-induced variation in tick population dynamics. An alternative explanation, supported by qualitative reports and some data, involves human behavioural responses to weather favourable for outdoor recreational activities, including wild mushroom and berry harvest, differentially influenced by national cultural practices and economic constraints.

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