How To Remove A Tick



Valuable Information On How To Remove A Tick

It is quite important that you know how to remove a tick from yourself, your children, or from your pets. Following the proper procedures will find you with a fully intact, researchable specimen which hasn’t been given the opportunity to release more pathogens into your blood stream. These tips for how to remove a tick could mean the difference between a quick pluck and a trip to the doctor’s office. The faster and more efficiently the tick is removed, the greater your chances of dodging potentially fatal illness.

This is really quite simple once you know how to remove a tick, and those who are forced to reside in heavily infested areas may need to use these techniques often during the heavy springtime feeding frenzy. As careful as we try to be, if a tick senses your gases and fluids from as far as 300 yards away, he will likely be waiting for you to happen by so that he can make good on the promise of reproduction. They need their nutrients, too, and your supple skin is the perfect texture for his opportunistic habits. So now that he has found you, and you have found him, and you have freaked out and tried to run away from your own arm at the very sight of his ugly head imbedded in your wrist, it is time to calm down and focus on getting him out of your skin.

A tick's head will be left inside of your body if it isn’t removed properly. It will not grow a new body, as the legend has it, but the stress of this type of attack will cause the tick head to release more potential hazardous toxins into your bloodstream. And, of course, with nothing to grab onto in order to remove the deeply rooted head, you will need to receive medical extraction of the head. Learning how to remove a tick properly will save you the time, stress, and money involved with such a mess.

Using tweezers or your finger nails, depending on the initial size of the tick and whether or not he is engorged, you will want to get a good firm grip on the midsection of the tick. Try to avoid twisting, turning, or jerking on the tick. Ideally, a firm, steady pull in the exact opposite direction of his imbedded angle will produce a fully intact extraction. Try also not to squeeze the tick or apply any unnecessary pressure to its body, as this can cause him to not only get a firmer grip with his mouth parts, but may force pathogens into your blood. Once extraction is complete, it is wise to have the tick inspected and identified. 


 

 

 


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