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  2. How does tularemia spread? Tularemia spreads (is transmitted) in many different ways. You can get tularemia from: Bites from ticks, mosquitos, deer flies and other biting insects. Bites from infected animals. Touching infected animals. If you touch the infected tissue or body fluids of an animal, it can get into your body through breaks in your ...

  3. Dec 13, 2018 · How does tularemia spread? People can get tularemia many different ways: Being bitten by an infected tick, deerfly or other insect; Handling infected animal carcasses; Eating or drinking contaminated food or water; Breathing in the bacteria, F. tularensis; Tularemia is not known to be spread from person to person.

  4. How Does Tularemia Spread? People can get tularemia many different ways: being bitten by an infected tick, deerfly or other insect ; handling infected animal carcasses ; eating or drinking contaminated food or water ; breathing in the bacteria, F. tularensis; Tularemia is not known to be spread from person to person.

  5. May 30, 2018 · Francisella tularensis is the bacterium that causes tularemia, a life-threatening disease spread to humans via contact with an infected animal or through mosquito, tick or deer fly bites. As few as 10 viable bacteria can cause the disease, which has a death rate of up to 60 percent.

  6. Dec 13, 2018 · Transmission. The bacterium that causes tularemia is highly infectious and can enter the human body through the skin, eyes, mouth, or lungs. Symptoms of infection vary depending on the route of entry. Usual sources of infection are described below. Transmission of tularemia from person to person has not been reported.

  7. Dec 13, 2018 · People can become infected in several ways, including: Tick and deer fly bites. Skin contact with infected animals. Drinking contaminated water. Inhaling contaminated aerosols or agricultural and landscaping dust. Laboratory exposure. In addition, people could be exposed as a result of bioterrorism.

  8. Jul 17, 2023 · Etiology. Tularemia is caused by the highly infectious gram-negative coccobacillus Francisella tularensis. Infection can occur with a small number of organisms and through a variety of entry sites, including inhalation, direct contact with non-intact skin or mucous membranes, ingestion or via the bite of a tick or fly vector.

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