Title of article :
Lyme Disease: Self-regulation and Pathogen Invasion
Author/Authors :
Caraco، نويسنده , , Thomas and Gardner، نويسنده , , Geoffrey and Maniatty، نويسنده , , William and Deelman، نويسنده , , Ewa and Szymanski، نويسنده , , Boleslaw K.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Ecological interactions underlying the epidemic of Lyme disease involve a spirochete, a tick (with larval, nymph and adult stages), and two (or more) vertebrate hosts. Juvenile ticks ordinarily feed on mice; adult ticks feed on deer. Mice acquire the spirochete from infected nymphs and then pass the infection to larvae of the next tick generation. Lyme disease may result when a human is inadvertently bitten by an infectious nymph.
del of the Lyme phenomenon counts the total number of ticks in each stage, the numbers of infected ticks by stage, and the number of infected mice. We fix the total population sizes of deer and mice, assume the ticks self-regulate, and solve the homogeneous-mixing case for equilibrium abundances. A local stability analysis identifies a condition where extension of the spirochete is stable. Reversing this condition implies that the spirochete can invade the system of ticks and vertebrate hosts. When the spirochete can invade, a positive equilibrium number of infected organisms is locally stable. Spirochete invasion is promoted by a sufficient density of mice suffering low mortality, high susceptibility to infection in both mice and ticks, a high attack rate of ticks on mice, a high density of larval ticks, and low mortality among tick nymphs. Low mouse mortality allows the frequency of infection among nymphs to approach an individual tickʹs susceptibility when feeding on an infected mouse.
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Theoretical Biology