Removing a tick

Attention

  • Try to avoid tick bites
    • Stay away from areas with lots of ticks
    • When in area with ticks, wear clothes that cover your skin (eg long-sleeved shirt)
  • Remove ticks as soon as you can
  • Do not squeeze, crush or puncture tick's body — its fluids may contain infectious agents
  • Need to remove mouth parts of tick, not just body
  • On east coast of mainland Australia and Tasmania ticks can carry a bacteria that causes tick typhus
    • If fever and rash develop within 1 week of removing tick — report to PHU
  • Only try to kill tick before removing it if using alternate tick removal method

What you need

  • Sterile dressing pack to use as clean work area
  • Normal saline
  • Tick remover or pointed tweezers, preferably curved
  • Do not use normal household tweezers — they will squeeze the contents of the tick into the blood stream
  • Anaesthetic drops (eg tetracaine (amethocaine) 1%) if tick is in ear

What you do

For ticks on skin

  • Lay out dressing pack and equipment
  • Grasp tick firmly by its mouth parts, as close to skin as possible — Figure 7.20
  • Pull up to remove
  • Clean bite area and your hands well with soap and water or alcohol wipe

Figure 7.20   

For ticks in ear

  • If safe to do so — remove as for ticks on skin
  • OR Try washing out with anaesthetic drops 

Alternate tick removal

May be preferable to kill the tick in place. Removing ticks by force may increase the likelihood of allergic reaction

  • Large ticks — apply freezing agent containing ether (eg Tick off) to tick
    • Wait 10 minutes for tick to die
    • Remove tick by its mouth parts using fine tipped forceps or tick remover
  • Small ticks or tick larva — apply cream containing permethrin (eg Lyclear) to tick
    • Apply cream at least twice, waiting 1 minute between applications
    • ​Wait for ticks or larva to die or cover with band-aid and leave overnight
    • Remove tick by its mouth parts using fine tipped forceps or tick remover