• Patient Gateway Login
  • Patient Gateway Login
  • Giving
  • Careers
  • Contact

Need to talk to us?

Call 617-243-6000
  • Physicians
  • Locations
  • Specialties
  • Patients & Visitors
  • Search
  • More
  • Walk-in Clinics
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Classes & Community Resources
  • Medical Education
  • Nursing Department
  • News
  • Research
  • Volunteer

What can we help you find?

Newton-Wellesley Hospital

2014 Washington Street

Newton, MA 02462

617-243-6000

Open 24 hours
Lab Hours and Holiday Hours Vary
 

Get Directions | View Hours

Ambulatory Care Center - Natick

307 W Central St

Natick, MA 01760

617-243-5345

Get Directions | View Hours

Ambulatory Care Center - Newton

159 Wells Ave

Newton Centre, MA 02459

617-243-5777

Get Directions | View Hours

Ambulatory Care Center - Walpole

111 Norfolk Street

Walpole, MA 02081maps

617-243-5345

Get Directions | View Hours

Ambulatory Care Center – Wellesley

978 Worcester Road (rte 9)

Wellesley, Massachusetts 02482

781-235-5200

Get Directions | View Hours

Maxwell Blum Emergency Pavilion

2014 Washington Street

Newton, MA 02462

617-243-6000

Open 24 hours

Lab Hours and Holiday Hours Vary

Get Directions | View Hours

Outpatient Surgery Center - Wellesley

25 Washington Street

Wellesley, Massachusetts 02481

617-219-1520

Get Directions | View Hours

Waltham Walk-In

9 Hope Ave

Waltham, MA 02453

617-243-5590

Monday through Saturday: 9:00 am to 7:00 pm

Sunday: 9:00 am to 2:00 pm

Lab Hours and Holiday Hours Vary

Get Directions | View Hours

Our Locations

  • Newton-Wellesley Hospital
  • Ambulatory Care Center - Natick
  • Ambulatory Care Center - Newton
  • Ambulatory Care Center - Walpole
  • Ambulatory Care Center – Wellesley
  • Emergency Department
  • Outpatient Surgery Center - Wellesley
View All Locations
  • Allergy and Immunology
  • Laboratory / Pathology
  • Radiology

  • Bariatric Surgery
  • Maternity
  • Rehabilitation Services

  • Cancer Care
  • Medicine
  • Robotic Surgery

  • Cardiovascular
  • Neurology
  • Spine Center

  • Dermatology
  • Neurosurgery
  • Sports Medicine

  • Emergency Medicine
  • OB/GYN
  • Surgical Services

  • Endocrinology & Diabetes
  • Orthopedics
  • Urology

  • Gastroenterology & Hepatology
  • Orthopedic Walk-In
  • Vascular Surgery

  • Heartburn and Reflux
  • Pediatrics
  • Weight Management

  • Infectious Diseases
  • Primary Care
  • Women's Health

  • Kaplan Joint Center
  • Psychiatry
  • View All
Tickborne Illnesses
COVID Information
617-243-6597

Section Menu

  • Infectious Disease Home
  • Our Team
  • Travel Medicine Clinic
  • COVID-19 Information
  • Flu Season Information
  • Mpox Information
  • Tickborne Illnesses
  • Contact Us

Tickborne Illnesses

 

Lyme disease and other illnesses transmitted by ticks have become significant problems in Greater Boston and our entire region. Take steps to protect yourself and your loved ones from these conditions.

How to Avoid Tick Bites

The best thing you can do is to avoid getting bitten by ticks in the first place. Long sleeves and pants can help protect your skin from tick bites, especially if you’re going for a hike in the woods or where there are tall grasses or brush, which are common tick habitats. When you know you’re going to be in possible tick habitats, tucking your pant legs into your socks can lessen your risk of a tick climbing up your pant leg and making its way to your skin. Deer ticks mainly exist as a parasite on field mice, so controlling mouse populations around your home is another good prevention method.

Tick Inspection and Removal

Even when you take all the proper precautions, it’s still possible for a tick to make its way onto your body. Ticks often like to make their way to body creases, such as the underarms, or onto the scalp or behind the ears, so they can attach and feed off your blood. That’s why it’s so important to check yourself and your loved ones for ticks — especially small children. Ticks are small and may be no larger than a sesame seed, so look carefully during your exams.

If you find a tick, use a fine-tipped pair of tweezers to grasp it as close as possible to the point at which it’s attached to the skin, and pull steadily upward until it pops off. Don’t squeeze the body of the tick. This can cause it to release the contents of its gut into or onto your skin and spread disease. Don’t worry if some black specks of the tick body remain in your skin after you remove the tick. They don’t spread disease and will eventually be released.

Ticks have to be attached to the skin for at least 24 hours to spread Lyme disease, but this time limit doesn’t apply to other tickborne illnesses. If you pull off a tick that you think has been attached for more than 24 hours, your doctor may prescribe a single dose of an antibiotic called doxycycline, which one study showed reduces the likelihood of being infected with Lyme disease.

Primary care doctors in our area are well-versed in recognizing these diseases, and our Infectious Diseases team is always available to help.

Tick References and Information

The following are a few good sources of information to consult regarding ticks and tickborne illnesses:

  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) information on ticks and tickborne diseases
  • Massachusetts Department of Public Health information on tickborne diseases
  • “New Scientist” report on the growth of Lyme disease 
  • NPR report on mice, ticks, and Lyme disease
Lyme Disease

The deer tick, Ixodes scapularis, spreads Lyme disease to animals and humans it bites. The first sign of infection is often a rash at or near the bite. This rash may be bull’s-eye-shaped (called erythema migrans), or it can look like a red streak or blotch. The rash is almost always more than three inches wide, so a smaller rash usually isn’t a sign of Lyme disease. In addition to the rash, the first stage of Lyme disease infection often includes fever and chills. Treatment in this stage includes antibiotics, usually doxycycline. No blood testing is needed, as tests are often negative early in the disease process. If Lyme disease isn’t diagnosed and treated early, it can progress to the next phase. At this stage, the bacterium that causes the disease, called Borrelia burgdorferi, gets into the bloodstream. This can cause a variety of problems, such as:

  • Achiness and fever
  • Blockage of electrical circuits in the heart, which leads to a slow heart rate and sometimes loss of consciousness
  • Headache
  • Meningitis, a swelling of the membranes that cover the brain and spinal cord
  • Multiple areas of rash
  • Nerve problems, such as facial paralysis (Bell’s palsy)

In this phase of the illness, patients usually test positive for the disease. Treatment includes antibiotics, either by mouth or intravenously (IV). Without treatment, Lyme disease can cause joint pain or swelling, usually in the knees or other large joints. Patients’ blood tests are always positive in this stage, and treatment includes antibiotics for two to four weeks.

Anaplasmosis

Anaplasmosis is also transmitted by the deer tick and caused by a bacterium. This illness resembles the flu but without the usual hoarseness, cough, and stuffiness that accompany the flu. The main symptom of anaplasmosis is fever, which can be accompanied by:

  • Chills
  • General terrible feeling
  • Headache

Symptoms of anaplasmosis can come on suddenly. We diagnose anaplasmosis with various blood tests, but the results can take a few days to come back, so we often treat the illness with antibiotics up front and then adjust our treatment as we receive lab results. Our main treatment is the antibiotic doxycycline. Some alternative antibiotics that are effective against Lyme disease, such as amoxicillin and cefuroxime, aren’t effective for treating anaplasmosis. Without treatment, anaplasmosis can be a severe illness, although deaths from the disease are rare.

Babesiosis

Babesiosis is also transmitted by the deer tick. However, unlike Lyme disease and anaplasmosis, babesiosis is caused by a parasite that infects red blood cells. The main symptom of babesiosis is fever with chills, along with:

  • Achiness
  • Feeling awful
  • Headache

This infection can be particularly severe in people whose spleens have been removed surgically or do not work well, as well as people with impaired immune systems (e.g., because of infections or infection with HIV). We diagnose babesiosis with a lab analysis of blood smears under a microscope and by DNA detection. Possible complications of babesiosis can include rupture of the spleen and severe anemia. There are several effective treatments for this condition, but they are different than those used for Lyme disease and anaplasmosis, so your doctor needs to think specifically of babesiosis when creating your treatment plan.

Rocky Mountain spotted fever

Despite the name of this disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever has been present in Massachusetts for many years, especially on Cape Cod and the islands. However, it is rare. We have seen very few cases of this condition at Newton-Wellesley Hospital. Rocky Mountain spotted fever is transmitted by the dog tick. Symptoms often include a blotchy rash, and it has a high fatality rate. We treat this disease with the antibiotic doxycycline.

Borrelia miyamotoi infection

This infection is caused by an organism similar to the one that causes Lyme disease. However, the condition itself more closely resembles anaplasmosis. As with both of those conditions, Borrelia miyamotoi is transmitted by the deer tick. It was recognized in our area only a few years ago, and we are still learning about how frequent it is. Special tests are needed to diagnose Borrelia miyamotoi infection. However, treatment with the antibiotic doxycycline is very effective, so we often start patients on this medication before we have definitively diagnosed the illness.

Powassan virus infection

Powassan virus is another emerging infection in our area. We diagnosed Massachusetts’ first case of Powassan in 2013, and only eight cases have been diagnosed so far in the state. The infection seems to mainly cause encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain tissue, which can be severe. Testing for Powassan is usually done at the CDC in Atlanta, and there is no known treatment at this time.

Schedule an Appointment

Connect with our team to discuss your care options for infectious diseases

Schedule Your Appointment

Find the right doctor for you

Go to Find a Doctor

Newton-Wellesley Hospital

2014 Washington Street
Newton, MA 02462
Get Directions
617-243-6000

©2024

 

Contact Us

Quick Links

CareersCommunity Resources DoctorsLocations Medical & Surgical Services Patients & VisitorsPrice Transparency Site Map
Mass General Brigham
Legal Statements | HIPAA Guidelines | Website Privacy | Website Disclaimer

We use cookies and other tools to enhance your experience on our website and to analyze our web traffic. For more information about these cookies and the data collected, please refer to our Privacy Policy.

×