Newly infected deadly ticks in the USA At least six states in the US have reported a rare tick-borne virus that has the potential to kill adults with any preexisting ailment, causing panic. The Heartland virus is circulating in Georgia in the lone star tick—a type of tick common in Eastern and Southeastern US states. In severe cases of the Heartland virus, patients have required hospitalization. Even though the fatality rate has been low with patients mostly recovering, a few older individuals with medical conditions have died, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. The Heartland virus in humans was first found reported back in 2009 in Missouri, according to the CDC. Quickly, the number moved to 50 between 2009 and January 2021 in 11 Midwestern and Southern states: Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Tennessee, the Self reported. The spread of this virus necessitated research based on test samples to shed more light on it. Researchers in Emory University found out that lone star ticks in Georgia had picked up the Heartland virus. The report was published in the ‘Emerging Infectious Diseases’ publication. A team of researchers began their study after a retroactive analysis of a 2005 death in Georgia was found to be caused due to the Heartland virus. “Heartland is an emerging infectious disease that is not well understood,” Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec, PhD, associate professor in Emory’s Department of Environmental Sciences and senior author of the study, said in a press release. “We’re trying to get ahead of this virus by learning everything that we can about it before it potentially becomes a bigger problem,” he added. The primary symptoms include fever, fatigue, reduced appetite, headache, nausea, diarrhea, and muscle or joint pain. According to the CDC, many of these symptoms overlap with other tick-borne diseases, like ehrlichiosis. The patients usually begin to show low white blood cell counts and platelet counts, and/or higher levels of liver enzymes. The symptoms, which can begin up to two weeks after a person is bitten, often lead to hospitalisation, the CDC said (https://bit.ly/3ubBUGF).