Screening ramps up for Lyme Disease Awareness Month
Spring is here and microbiologists at Alberta Precision Laboratories (APL) are getting busy analyzing ticks found in Alberta for the presence of Lyme disease in the province.
Officials with Alberta Health Services (AHS) say APL screens hundreds of ticks throughout the year through Alberta’s Submit-a-Tick Program, which relies on voluntary submissions of ticks from Albertans.
“We screen for ticks year-round, and we test select tick species for Lyme disease, which are mostly collected off companion animals and from the environment, but rarely from humans,” says Kinga Kowalewska-Grochowska, a medical microbiologist with APL’s Provincial Laboratory for Public Health and associate professor in the Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology at University of Alberta.
“Ticks infected with Lyme disease are not yet shown to be common in Alberta and the human cases detected have been acquired outside of the province.”


