The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station (CAES) has identified the first locally acquired human disease case of Rickettsia parkeri rickettsiosis in Connecticut. Transmitted by the Gulf Coast tick, R. parkeri rickettsiosis is an emerging tick-borne disease similar to Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) with relatively milder symptoms in the United States.
Although cases of this disease have been reported in the southeastern part of the country, this is the first report of this disease in the Northeast, an area already plagued by tick-borne diseases, including Lyme disease, babesiosis, anaplasmosis, Powassan virus disease, and ehrlichiosis.
The finding, which was published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases, is based on collaborative field and laboratory investigations by the CAES and CDC scientists on the tick that transmitted the disease and clinical investigations of the affected patient.
“Rising global temperatures, ecological changes, reforestation, and increases in commerce and travel are important underlying factors influencing the rate and extent of range expansion of ticks and associated pathogens," said Dr. Goudarz Molaei, PhD, an associate clinical professor at the Yale School of Public Health and medical entomologist who also directs the CAES Passive Tick and Tick-Borne Disease Surveillance Program. "It is anticipated that warming temperatures related to climate change may lead to the continued range expansion and abundance of several tick species, increasing their importance as emerging threats to humans, domesticated animals, and wildlife."
The Gulf Coast tick is a three-host tick, and all feeding stages of this tick will bite humans. The distribution of this tick was considered restricted predominantly to coastal regions of states bordering the Gulf of Mexico and the southern Atlantic coast. However, in recent decades, its range has expanded northward into the mid-Atlantic states, with new populations reported from Delaware and Maryland.
According to Molaei, the first established population of the Gulf Coast tick was reported in Fairfield County, Connecticut, in 2021, with a 30% infection with R. parkeri. Additional populations of this tick species with higher infections were later reported in New York and New Jersey in 2022 and 2024, respectively. It is believed that migratory grassland birds serve a crucial role in the spread of Gulf Coast ticks to locations in central and northern states that possess favorable environmental conditions for their survival.
“Because of morphological similarities between Gulf Coast ticks and American dog ticks - the principal vector of RMSF in the Northeast - these two species can be misidentified," Molaei said. "Since most tick species are associated with a unique suite of pathogens, it is important to improve regional capacity for accurate detection and identification of ticks and the pathogens they transmit in the Northeast, an area already endemic for Lyme disease, RMSF, ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis, babesiosis, and Powassan virus disease.”
“The rapidly changing dynamics and evolving risks of tick-borne diseases across this region reinforce the need for awareness of and education for tick bite prevention strategies, including the use of repellents registered with the Environmental Protection Agency and performing regular and thorough tick-checks following exposures to tick-infested areas,” Molaei added.