Hello, I'm the OUTDOOR PROFESSOR from DiscoveringTheOutdoors.com.
Here's your outdoor tip on how to remove a tick.
A tick is a blood-feeding parasite—not an insect. They are closely related to scorpions, spiders and mites. Ticks feed on mammals, reptiles, birds, or frogs to give them the blood meal they need to survive and reproduce. Most tick bites do not result in illness, but they can transmit several diseases such as Lyme disease, rocky mountain spotted fever and tick paralysis.
Ticks frequently become passengers on you or your dog when you are exploring the woods and grasslands. People talk about ticks jumping on them, but ticks don’t jump or hang on trees waiting to drop down on you. Most ticks ambush their victims using behavior called questing. Hungry ticks crawl up a tall plant stem and extend their front legs using them to sniff the air for your scent or to sense your movement. They can detect the carbon dioxide you exhale and the ammonia in your sweat—maybe your temperature as you come near them. Once the hungry critter senses your approach, some may run up the plant toward you or others just wait for you to sweep by so they can grab hold of your leg as you brush by.
Understanding tick behavior should help you lessen your risk of tick bites. Be careful walking through thick or high vegetation and keep your legs covered and treated with tick repellent. Unless you have done handstands in the grass, finding a tick in your head hair or upper body is probably because it crawled from your leg.
Always do a thorough check of your full body when you return from the outdoors. You can remove most ticks before they enjoyed much of a meal of your blood—and be sure to check your dog too. This will discourage any diseases being transmitted to you or your pet.
Take your time in removing a tick correctly when found. Do not follow some old myths about removing ticks:
Do NOT paint the tick with nail polish
Do NOT twist the tick when pulling it out.
Do NOT try to burn the tick with a match or other hot object.
Do NOT try to kill, smother, or lubricate the tick with oil, alcohol, Vaseline, or similar material.
Smothering a tick with the above methods could make it release fluid which could be infected and be transmitted to your body causing infection.
The way to remove a tick safely is to:
1. Don’t panic—take your time.
2. Use tweezers to handle the tick. Do not use your bare hands.
3. Grab the tick as close to the skin surface as possible. You want to grasp the head of the tick and not separate it from the body when being removed. Do not grab the swollen belly as this could push infection into your body.
4. Pull the head straight out with a steady even pressure. Do not twist or jerk. You do not want to break it into pieces leaving mouthparts in the skin.
5. Put the tick in a plastic bag and save it in case you later want to have it tested.
6. Disinfect the bite site with rubbing alcohol, an iodine scrub, or soap and water after removing the tick. Do not apply any salve or oil that would suffocate a mistakenly left piece.
For the next several weeks after the tick is removed, watch for:
Pain, swelling, or redness
Red streaks leading from the wound
Pus draining from the wound
Fever
Chances are you will have no after affect from a tick bite, but if you have any doubts about your condition, see a doctor immediately.
This is the OUTDOOR PROFESSOR from DiscoveringTheOutdoors.com.
References-Additional Reading
Tick Removal
http://www.cdc.gov/ticks/removing_a_tick.html
How to remove a tick
http://www.webmd.com/first-aid/tc/how-to-remove-a-tick-overview
3 Ways to remove a tick
http://www.wikihow.com/Remove-a-Tick
Ticks around your home
http://www.clemson.edu/cafls/departments/esps/factsheets/medvet/ticks_around_your_home_mv05.html
How do ticks get on you?
http://insects.about.com/od/ticksmites/ss/How-Do-Ticks-Get-On-You.htm
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