When I showered I felt something in my groin
and flicked it off. Looked to me like a green seed pod but when I stepped on the
pod a lot of blood spurted out. My
blood. Ouch.
It was a tick. Specifically,
the tick was Amblyomma cajennense. This
tick is found mostly in the jungle and likes to prey on animals.
Amblyomma cajennense |
There was a small black central puncture wound with an area
of redness around the bite that was about half a centimeter wide.
I had showered for dinner the night before and surely would
have noticed the tick then, so my thoughts are that the tick arrived
overnight, perhaps picked up in my clothes earlier that day. As this thought settled, I recollected an itch in the same area overnight. The itch was likely the bite. I didn’t check the time, I just rolled over and went back to sleep. I only slept
for six hours that night, so the tick was attached for a maximum of six hours
and this detail is important because the duration is correlated with the risk
of infection with Rickettsiae rickettsia, which causes Rocky Mountain Spotted
Fever, or just Spotted Fever in Latin America.
I immediately took some clarithromycin, which I had on hand, and the next day I obtained Doxycycline, which is the recommended
treatment.
The incubation period for Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever ranges from 3 to 12 days. The tick needs to be attached for 2 to 10 hours for
the Rickettsiae to be released from the tick salivary gland and an earlier onset of symptoms occurs when there is a large volume of the inoculum. I likely have a
low risk for infection, but there is a risk. I will just have to wait and see.
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