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Why is tick-borne encephalitis increasing? A review of the key factors causing the increasing incidence of human TBE in Sweden
Why is tick-borne encephalitis increasing? A review of the key factors causing the increasing incidence of human TBE in Sweden
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Why is tick-borne encephalitis increasing? A review of the key factors causing the increasing incidence of human TBE in Sweden
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Why is tick-borne encephalitis increasing? A review of the key factors causing the increasing incidence of human TBE in Sweden
Why is tick-borne encephalitis increasing? A review of the key factors causing the increasing incidence of human TBE in Sweden
Journal Article

Why is tick-borne encephalitis increasing? A review of the key factors causing the increasing incidence of human TBE in Sweden

2012
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Overview
The highest annual incidence of human tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) in Sweden ever recorded by the Swedish Institute for Communicable Disease Control (SMI) occurred last year, 2011. The number of TBE cases recorded during 2012 up to 6th August 2012 indicates that the incidence for 2012 could exceed that of 2011. In this review of the ecology and epidemiology of TBE in Sweden our main aim is to analyse the possible reasons behind the gradually increasing incidence of human TBE during the last 20 years. The main TBE virus (TBEV) vector to humans in Sweden is the nymphal stage of the common tick Ixodes ricinus . The main mode of transmission and maintenance of TBEV in the tick population is considered to be when infective nymphs co-feed with uninfected but infectible larvae on rodents. In most locations the roe deer, Capreolus capreolus is the main host for the reproducing adult I. ricinu s ticks. The high number of roe deer for more than three decades has resulted in a very large tick population. Deer numbers have, however, gradually declined from the early 1990s to the present. This decline in roe deer numbers most likely made the populations of small rodents, which are reservoir-competent for TBEV, gradually more important as hosts for the immature ticks. Consequently, the abundance of TBEV-infected ticks has increased. Two harsh winters in 2009–2011 caused a more abrupt decline in roe deer numbers. This likely forced a substantial proportion of the “host-seeking” ticks to feed on bank voles ( Myodes glareolus ), which at that time suddenly had become very numerous, rather than on roe deer. Thus, the bank vole population peak in 2010 most likely caused many tick larvae to feed on reservoir-competent rodents. This presumably resulted in increased transmission of TBEV among ticks and therefore increased the density of infected ticks the following year. The unusually warm, humid weather and the prolonged vegetation period in 2011 permitted nymphs and adult ticks to quest for hosts nearly all days of that year. These weather conditions stimulated many people to spend time outdoors in areas where they were at risk of being attacked by infective nymphs. This resulted in at least 284 human cases of overt TBE. The tick season of 2012 also started early with an exceptionally warm March. The abundance of TBEV-infective “hungry” ticks was presumably still relatively high. Precipitation during June and July was rich and will lead to a “good mushroom season”. These factors together are likely to result in a TBE incidence of 2012 similar to or higher than that of 2011.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd
Subject

adults

/ Animals

/ Arachnid Vectors

/ Arachnid Vectors - growth & development

/ Arachnid Vectors - virology

/ Arvicolinae

/ Arvicolinae - parasitology

/ Bank vole

/ Biomedical and Life Sciences

/ Biomedicine

/ borrelia-burgdorferi

/ Capreolus capreolus

/ classification

/ Clethrionomys glareolus

/ climate-change

/ complications

/ Control

/ Deer

/ Deer - parasitology

/ disease control

/ Disease Reservoirs

/ Disease Reservoirs - classification

/ Disease transmission

/ Encephalitis Viruses, Tick-Borne

/ Encephalitis Viruses, Tick-Borne - physiology

/ Encephalitis, Tick-Borne

/ Encephalitis, Tick-Borne - epidemiology

/ Encephalitis, Tick-Borne - transmission

/ Encephalitis, Tick-Borne - virology

/ Entomology

/ Epidemiology

/ Genetic vectors

/ geographical-distribution

/ growth & development

/ host seeking

/ hosts

/ Humans

/ Incidence

/ infected ticks

/ Infectious Diseases

/ Infectious Medicine

/ Infektionsmedicin

/ Ixodes

/ Ixodes - growth & development

/ Ixodes - virology

/ Ixodes ricinus

/ ixodes-ricinus acari

/ Larva

/ Larva - virology

/ larvae

/ lyme borreliosis

/ migrating birds

/ mushrooms

/ Myodes glareolus

/ Nymph

/ Nymph - virology

/ nymphs

/ Parasitology

/ people

/ physiology

/ Review

/ risk

/ Risk factors

/ Rodent Diseases

/ Rodent Diseases - epidemiology

/ Rodent Diseases - parasitology

/ Rodent Diseases - virology

/ rodents

/ roe

/ Roe deer

/ Seasons

/ small mammals

/ south-central sweden

/ Sweden

/ Sweden - epidemiology

/ TBE Epidemiology

/ Tick Infestations

/ Tick Infestations - complications

/ Tick Infestations - epidemiology

/ Tick Infestations - parasitology

/ Tick-borne encephalitis

/ Tick-borne encephalitis virus

/ ticks

/ transmission

/ Tropical Medicine

/ vegetation

/ Veterinary Medicine/Veterinary Science

/ Virology

/ viruses

/ Vulpes vulpes

/ Weather