key: cord-0897310-e0v4yfee authors: nan title: This summer, not all flu-like symptoms will be COVID-19s… date: 2020-07-14 journal: Bull Acad Natl Med DOI: 10.1016/j.banm.2020.07.016 sha: 056c11774d699168077a417065bcb658ed91d9a8 doc_id: 897310 cord_uid: e0v4yfee nan This summer, not all flu-like symptoms will be COVID-19s. . . ଝ The recent occurrence of an outbreak of tick-borne Q3 encephalitis (TBE) in the Oyonnax basin (Ain department) [1] first suggested the diagnosis of COVID-19. Indeed, the characteristic biphasic evolution of TBE starts with a flu-like syndrome (fever, fatigue, headaches and muscular pains) for 2 to 4 days, followed one to two weeks later by a second phase characterized by meningoencephalitis in a third of the patients. TBE is mainly transmitted by a tick of the genus Q4 Ixodes but, for the first time in France, this outbreak, which affected 26 people, recognizes a food origin (cheese made from raw goat's milk). With an average incidence of 20 cases per year, France is not ''a'' ''TBE'' endemic region, apart from the reporting in 2016 of 54 cases in Alsace [2] , but this zoonosis seems to be in a phase of recrudescence, as it is progressing significantly in the border countries (Switzerland, Germany). With the summer season approaching, the increasing scarcity of new cases of COVID-19 in France should broaden the differential diagnosis of influenza-like syndromes to include summer zoonotic infections (TBE, Q fever, Lyme disease, granulocytic anaplasmosis, tularemia, leptospirosis, hepatitis E, etc.), or not (enteroviruses, mycoplasmoses, chlamydioses). Like TBE, several summer infections (Q fever, Lyme disease, anaplasmosis) are transmitted by a tick bite (in par-DOI of original article:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.banm. 2020.07.015. ଝ Press release from the French National Academy of Medicine and Veterinary Academy of France, June 12, 2020. ticular Ixodes ricinus) [3] which can sometimes inoculate several pathogens simultaneously. The survey carried out since 2017 via the ''Signalement Tiques'' (''Tick Report'') application shows that tick bites are not limited to forest excursions, that they occur in a third of the cases in private gardens and public parks and that reports have doubled compared to previous years [4] , with 2020 appearing to be a year where ticks are particularly active. Maintaining the vigilance necessary for the epidemiological surveillance of COVID-19 should not overshadow the summer flu-like syndromes. This is why the National Academy of Medicine and the Veterinary Academy of France recommend: • to systematically resort to laboratory diagnosis (RT-PCR supplemented by serology) before any clinical suspicion of a COVID-19; • in the ''case'' ''plutôt que'' event of repeated negativity of the COVID-19 diagnostic tests, to ''consider'' ''plutôt que'' refer to a zoonotic infection in the event of any summer flu syndrome, particularly when there is an outbreak of several infected persons in a tick-rich region; • to prevent tick bites by applying the usual recommendations for ''forest walks'' ''plutôt que'' in the forest, but also in gardens and public parks. The authors declare that they have no competing interest. encéphalite à tiques : une zoonose ancienne émergente ? Première description d'un foyer de contamination +Model xxx Coronavirus: Opinion of the French National Academy of Medicine d'origine alimentaire en France. La dépêche vétérinaire A new hot spot for tick-borne encephalitis (TBE): a marked increase of TBE cases in France in 2016 Les syndromes grippaux estivaux et infections transmises par la tique Ixodes ricinus Programme Citique. Les maladies transmises par les tiques. Q6