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Dad battles deadly tick bite illness after Lake District trip


A FATHER-of-two is seriously ill with the potentially life-threatening Lyme Disease after being bitten by a blood-sucking parasite while in the Lake District.

Father of two, Kevin Slater, 48, was walking in Grisedale Valley, Patterdale, when he was bitten by a tick.

A tick is an arachnid that cuts through flesh with barbed teeth before inserting a needle-like feeding tube.

The disease has now developed into encephalitis – inflammation of the brain that can cause brain damage, blindness and even death.

Now, after receiving conflicting medical advice, Mr Slater is calling for a greater recognition of Lyme Disease among the UK medical profession, and that landowners erect warning signs in places known to house ticks carrying Lyme Disease.

Mr Slater noticed the parasite clinging to his calf while in the shower the day after the walk in August.

“It looked like a blood clot. I brushed it and it fell off.

“I picked it up and could see it had small legs. It was fully engorged – very round and filled with blood,” he said.

Aware not all ticks carry Lyme Disease, Mr Slater carried on as normal.

“Three days later I began to feel very odd. The first feeling was like motion sickness; light headed and giddy. Then there was a feeling of nausea,” he said.

Mr Slater, a self-employed engineering consultant from York, was in Germany and rang NHS Direct.

Back in the UK, he visited various doctors, becoming frustrated with their advice, which he felt was contradictory.

NHS director of public health for the North West, Professor John Ashton, said the UK was behind America in recognising Lyme Disease, but steps were now being taken to make people more aware of the dangers.

Mr Slater has been unable to work for eight weeks and is currently receiving antibiotic treatment from his specialist in Newcastle.


Your Say YourGazette

dailyjogger, Southborne says...
4:36pm Mon 26 Oct 09

I'm sorry that Mr Slater had such a bad time and that there was so little medical awareness. I got Lyme disease and my doctor didn't have a clue.

The registered charity Borreliosis & Associated Diseases Awareness (BADA UK) was of huge support to me (Borreliosis is another term for Lyme disease as the illness is caused by bacteria called Borrelia).

BADA UK has a really detailed website which gives tips on bite prevention and correct tick removal. Removing ticks correctly is very important as wrong methods can cause the tick to vomit infected fluids into you. You shouldn't use stuff like spirits to suffocate them or burn or freeze them. You should also use needle nosed tweezers so you don't squeeze the tick's body. It's all detailed on the BADA UK website -
http://www.bada-uk.o
rg/defence/indexdefe
nce.php

If it hadn't been for their information, I wouldn't have got a diagnosis.

dailyjogger, Southborne says...
4:40pm Mon 26 Oct 09

I forgot to say I got a really useful tick remover from the charity which I have now used a number of times on myself and my dogs. As that link wasn't very clear, the main website is www.bada-uk.org

RichDavy, says...
5:21pm Mon 26 Oct 09

Sadly, these cases are all too common and until the Government and the NHS recognise this killer disease soon we will all know someone who is either dead or dying due to Lyme Disease. My thoughts are with Kevin, his family, and with all Lymes sufferers and their families. People reading this, please raise as much Lyme awareness as you can, there's no support offered by the NHS whatsoever and only through raising awareness can a change happen and people don't need to suffer or die so needlessly.

LIcheHazel, Lancaster says...
9:51am Tue 27 Oct 09

I'm in Lancaster and got bitten by ticks many years ago, and getting a Diagnosis is the key to treatment unfortunately the diagnosis is the biggest problem in the UK at the moment. Even the USA is ahead of us now! I wish Mr Slater all the best and hope he returns to good health promptly

jaydee_97, East Anglia says...
9:52am Tue 27 Oct 09

I would like to extend my best wishes to Kevin and his family and thank you for running this story. It is very important to raise awareness. I was bitten in the Lake District in 2004 but didn't find out what it was till 3 years later, despite a multitude of tests, x-rays, scans, etc. However, I would like to point out that I could just as easily have been bitten in my own garden. There are various known hotspots for ticks, but they really can be anywhere. Awareness is the key. I didn't even know what a tick was, I really wish I had.

geordie212, St Albert says...
10:09am Tue 27 Oct 09

Thank you for writing about this young man and his battle with Lyme Disease and the political nightmare surrounding it. I was infected in Germany and came home to Canada not realising I was sick. Luckily I was not as ill as many but with the "we do not have Lyme Disease or infected ticks in Canada" attitude getting treatment is a nighmare. www.canlyme.com and http://health.groups
.yahoo.com/group/Eur
oLyme/ are 2 of my favourite sources of support and information on the disease. being able to 'talk' with others with the disease realy helps .
Hang in there . Your are not alone
Alison

Joanne Drayson, GUILDFORD says...
10:49am Tue 27 Oct 09

Thank you Kevin and the Gazette for raising awareness of this dreadfull illness that can so easily be dealt with if caught in the initial stages and treated.
I spent 6 1/2 years with Lyme Disease undiagnosed for 4 and it has taken many months of antibiotics to regain my health.
Charity www.lymediseaseactio
n.org.uk and www.badauk.org hold much useful information on their websites.

It is time there was much more publicity in the media on the controversy over this illness that causes our doctors trouble diagnosing and treating us.

Such a waste of peoples lives that could so easily have been avoided.

tmccall, usa says...
1:42pm Tue 27 Oct 09

Kevin: I wish the best in your battle with lyme disease. I am in United States and the situation is the same here. It took me four months to get diagnosed- It is unacceptable! I wonder why the countries don't put their perspective scientists and doctors together to figure out this disease and put a stop to it. Thanks for speaking out. Tess in Texas

Sick of being Sick, says...
9:22pm Tue 27 Oct 09

Thankyou for pointing out the seriousness of Lyme and associated diseases. Sadly there is not enough awareness given to the public and you should be on the look out for strange symptoms if a tick has been attached to you for ANY period of time. Please also make sure you are treated properly for bacterial infections...the myth that Lyme (Borrelia) is "hard to catch and easy to cure" simply isn't true and it is a very complex pathogen with the ability to "hide" and evade detection, so current tests may not even come back positive even if you ARE infected.

There is a lot of information available, so please do your homework and don't believe the misconception that a 2 - 4 week dose of weak antibiotics will kill this bacteria. The science behind this deception is majorly flawed and the guidelines in general use in USA are currently under review and the panel who drew up the guidelines are under investigation for GROSS conflicts of interest! (These guidelines are so restrictive, many healthcare providers and insurance companies WORLDWIDE use them as FACT (to withhold and withdraw treatment), when really, different guidelines should be drawn up as the bacteria appears in different strains worldwide and needs to be treated differently).

Comments are closed on this article.

BLOOD-SUCKING: Kevin Slater, pictured with his two sons, was bitten by a tick, BLOOD-SUCKING: Kevin Slater, pictured with his two sons, was bitten by a tick,

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