April 28, 2003
(The Albany Times Union) -- Through
the accident of geography, Columbia
County has become ground zero in the
public health battle against Lyme
disease.
The rural county that hugs the
Massachusetts border has the highest
per capita rates of the disease in the
nation.
As temperatures begin to warm up,
public health officials have launched
an aggressive campaign to reduce the
number of cases in the county of
60,000 people. Last year, doctors
treated about 1,000 patients with Lyme
disease, nearly double the number two
years ago.
And health officials in Rensselaer
and Albany counties to the north are
keeping a close eye on their
neighbors, fearful that the ticks are
headed their way.
"We may be the epicenter now, but
we're just the natural path," said
Marcia Fabiano, an epidemiologist with
the Columbia County Health Department.
"Five years from now, Albany and
Rensselaer County might be the
epicenter."
More than 16,000 Americans are
infected with Lyme disease each year,
according to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. In New
York state, 5,481 people had the
disease last year, according to
preliminary figures from the state
Health Department.
People get Lyme disease when bitten
by an infected deer tick -- which
might have picked up the bacteria from
a mouse or bird. Days to weeks
afterward, most people have a red,
slowly expanding bull's-eye rash,
along with fatigue, fever, headache,
stiff neck, muscle aches and joint
pain, according to the CDC.
Antibiotics work well, but only if
the disease is caught early.
Unfortunately, about 20 percent of
people who contract Lyme never get the
characteristic rash, health experts
said. If the Lyme disease is
undetected and goes untreated, weeks
to months later some patients may
develop arthritis, neurological
problems such as meningitis, brain or
nerve inflammation, and, rarely,
severe heart problems.
Experts are predicting an abundance
of ticks this year. Despite the
prolonged frigid temperatures the past
few months, adult ticks might have
thrived over the winter under layers
of cozy, insulating snow. Next month,
the nymphs will abound -- they are
newborn ticks the size of poppyseeds,
difficult to see and responsible for
the majority of Lyme disease cases.
Long Island and the lower Hudson
River Valley were previously the hot
spots for Lyme disease in New York.
Health experts believe the disease has
moved northward due to both the
migration of deer ticks and the
vigilance of downstate residents who
now routinely follow prevention
guidelines.
Columbia County has had the state's
highest per-capita rates of the
disease since 1999. This year, the
county has already logged 65 cases of
Lyme disease -- in people who were
apparently infected last fall and went
undiagnosed for months, Fabiano said.
Last year, Dr. Ananthakrishnan
Ramani, Columbia Memorial Hospital's
only infectious disease consultant,
treated hundreds of people with Lyme
disease. He saw the most severe cases
in Columbia and Greene counties --
those that primary care doctors
couldn't detect or treat with
antibiotics. Several of his patients
had severe and unusual symptoms,
including heart block, a condition in
which the heart beats irregularly.
Even more patients came into
Ramani's office with the suspicion
they had the illness, Ramani said.
Awareness of the tick-borne illness is
so high that people assume they have
Lyme when they begin to get symptoms
of arthritis or neurological problems.
Columbia County health officials
are working on increased prevention
and early detection - getting people
to wear pants, long sleeve shirts and
insect repellant, to check their skin
for ticks every time they are
outdoors, and to call their local
health department or doctor early if
they suspect a case.
Copyright 2003 The Albany Times
Union. All rights reserved.