What is Lyme disease in dogs?

Lyme disease is one of the most common tick-borne illnesses in the world.
It is a bacterial illness that certain kinds of ticks can transfer to people and animals they bite. Ticks don't fly or jump. Instead, they crawl to the tips of long grass or the edge of bushes' low-lying leaves and wait for a person or animal to brush past them.
The tick then crawls around trying to find a good place to bite. If a tick carries the bacteria Borrelia burgdorferi and bites a dog or person, they will become infected as the bacteria enters their bloodstream.

Once the bacteria has entered the bloodstream, it can travel throughout the body, causing problems in specific organs such as joint pain, as well as general illness.
A tick usually has to be attached to a dog between 24 and 48 hours for the pup to become infected.

Ticks prefer to live in wooded areas, low-growing grasslands, and yards. Not all ticks carry the Lyme disease bacteria. Depending on the location, anywhere from less than 1% to more than 50% of the ticks are infected with it. While most tick bites are harmless, several species can cause life-threatening diseases.

The most common type of tick to carry Lyme disease is the deer tick, also known as the black-legged tick (ixodes scapularis).
In general, infected ticks must be attached for more than 24 hours to transmit infection; prompt tick removal can prevent transmission.