Tick bites with the head broken off in the skin can be treated surgically by removing the skin tissue containing the head joints together.
Tick bites with the head or mouthparts remaining in the skin can lead to a series of infectious symptoms or immune responses, such as fever, nausea, vomiting, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and other symptoms of infectious toxicity, so the insect tissues remaining in the skin should be surgically removed in time.
After the tick bite, it should be avoided to pull out the body directly by hand, and anesthetics can be used to anesthetize the bite site of the body, and after the tick is anesthetized, its mouthparts stabbed in the skin can be loosened due to anesthesia.
Tick bites should be treated under the guidance of a doctor, and it is recommended to go to the hospital in a timely manner to avoid delaying the diagnosis and treatment and causing serious consequences.