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Myiasis

Myiasis (/m.ˈ.ə.səs/ my-EYE-ə-səss[1]), also known as flystrike or fly strike, is the parasitic infestation of the body of a live animal by fly larvae (maggots) that grow inside the host while feeding on its tissue. Although flies are most commonly attracted to open wounds and urine- or feces-soaked fur, some species (including the most common myiatic flies—the botfly, blowfly, and screwfly) can create an infestation even on unbroken skin and have been known to use moist soil and non-myiatic flies (such as the common housefly) as vector agents for their parasitic larvae.

Myiasis
Other namesFlystrike, blowfly strike, fly-blown
Cutaneous myiasis in the shoulder of a human
Pronunciation
SpecialtyInfectious disease

Because some animals (particularly non-native domestic animals) cannot react as effectively as humans to the causes and effects of myiasis, such infestations present a severe and continuing problem for livestock industries worldwide, causing severe economic losses where they are not mitigated by human action.[2] Although typically a far greater issue for animals, myiasis is also a relatively frequent disease for humans in rural tropical regions where myiatic flies thrive, and often may require medical attention to surgically remove the parasites.[3]

Myiasis varies widely in the forms it takes and its effects on those affected. Such variations depend largely on the fly species and where the larvae are located. Some flies lay eggs in open wounds, other larvae may invade unbroken skin or enter the body through the nose or ears, and still others may be swallowed if the eggs are deposited on the lips or on food.[3] There can also be accidental myiasis that E. tenax can cause in humans via water containing the larvae or in contaminated uncooked food. The name of the condition derives from ancient Greek μυῖα (myia), meaning "fly".[4]

Signs and symptoms edit

How myiasis affects the human body depends on where the larvae are located. Larvae may infect dead, necrotic (prematurely dying) or living tissue in various sites: the skin, eyes, ears, stomach and intestinal tract, or in genitourinary sites.[5] They may invade open wounds and lesions or unbroken skin. Some enter the body through the nose or ears. Larvae or eggs can reach the stomach or intestines if they are swallowed with food and cause gastric or intestinal myiasis.[3] In extremely rare cases, maggots may occasionally infest the vulvar area.[6]

Several different presentations of myiasis and their symptoms:[3]

Syndrome Symptoms
Cutaneous myiasis Painful, slow-developing ulcers or furuncle- (boil-) like sores that can last for a prolonged period
Nasal myiasis Obstruction of nasal passages and severe irritation. In some cases facial edema and fever can develop. Death is not uncommon.
Aural myiasis Crawling sensations and buzzing noises. Smelly discharge is sometimes present. If located in the middle ear, larvae may get to the brain.
Ophthalmomyiasis Severe irritation, edema, and pain. Fairly common.

Wound edit

 
Wound myiasis in the scalp

Wound myiasis occurs when fly larvae infest open wounds. It has been a serious complication of war wounds in tropical areas, and is sometimes seen in neglected wounds in most parts of the world. Predisposing factors include poor socioeconomic conditions, extremes of age, neglect, mental disability, psychiatric illness, alcoholism, diabetes, and vascular occlusive disease.[7][8][9][10][11]

Eye edit

Myiasis of the human eye or ophthalmomyiasis can be caused by Hypoderma tarandi, a parasitic botfly of caribou. It is known to lead to uveitis, glaucoma, and retinal detachment.[12]

Cause edit

Life cycle edit

The life cycle in sheep is typical of the disease. The female flies lay their eggs on the sheep in damp, protected areas of the body that are soaked with urine and feces, mainly the sheep's breech (buttocks). It takes approximately eight hours to a day for the eggs to hatch, depending on the conditions. Once hatched, the larvae then lacerate the skin with their mouthparts, causing open sores. Once the skin has been breached, the larvae then tunnel through the sores into the host's subcutaneous tissue, causing deep and irritating lesions highly subject to infection. After about the second day, bacterial infection is likely and, if left untreated, causes bacterial bloodstream infections or sepsis. This leads to anorexia and weakness and is generally fatal if untreated.[13]

Human vectors edit

There are three main fly families causing economically important myiasis in livestock and also, occasionally, in humans:[citation needed]

Other families occasionally involved are:[citation needed]

Specific myiasis edit

Caused by flies that need a host for larval development:

Semispecific myiasis edit

Caused by flies that usually lay their eggs in decaying animal or vegetable matter, but that can develop in a host if open wounds or sores are present:

Flesh flies, or sarcophagids, members of the family Sarcophagidae, can cause intestinal myiasis in humans if the females lay their eggs on meat or fruit.[18]

Accidental myiasis edit

Also called pseudomyiasis. Caused by flies that have no preference or need to develop in a host but that will do so on rare occasions. Transmission occurs through accidental deposit of eggs on oral or genitourinary openings, or by swallowing eggs or larvae that are on food.[citation needed] The cheese fly (Piophila casei) sometimes causes myiasis through intentional consumption of its maggots (which are contained in the traditional Sardinian delicacy casu marzu).[19][20] Other flies that can accidentally cause myiasis are:[21][22]

The adult flies are not parasitic, but when they lay their eggs in open wounds and these hatch into their larval stage (also known as maggots or grubs), the larvae feed on live or necrotic tissue, causing myiasis to develop. They may also be ingested or enter through other body apertures.[citation needed]

Diagnosis edit

Myiasis is often misdiagnosed in the United States because it is rare and its symptoms are not specific. Intestinal myiasis and urinary myiasis are especially difficult to diagnose.[3]

Clues that myiasis may be present include recent travel to an endemic area, one or more non-healing lesions on the skin, itchiness, movement under the skin or pain, discharge from a central punctum (tiny hole), or a small, white structure protruding from the lesion.[23] Serologic testing has also been used to diagnose the presence of botfly larvae in human ophthalmomyiasis.[12]

Classifications edit

German entomologist Fritz Zumpt describes myiasis as "the infestation of live human and vertebrate animals with dipterous larvae, which at least for a period, feed on the host's dead or living tissue, liquid body substances, or ingested food". For modern purposes however, this is too vague. For example, feeding on dead or necrotic tissue is not generally a problem except when larvae such as those of flies in the family Piophilidae attack stored food such as cheese or preserved meats; such activity suggests saprophagy rather than parasitism; it even may be medically beneficial in maggot debridement therapy (MDT).[citation needed]

Currently myiasis commonly is classified according to aspects relevant to the case in question:

  • The classical description of myiasis is according to the part of the host that is infected. This is the classification used by ICD-10. For example:[25]
  • Another aspect is the relationship between the host and the parasite and provides insight into the biology of the fly species causing the myiasis and its likely effect. Thus the myiasis is described as either:[25]
    • obligatory, where the parasite cannot complete its life cycle without its parasitic phase, which may be specific, semispecific, or opportunistic
    • facultative, incidental, or accidental, where it is not essential to the life cycle of the parasite; perhaps a normally free-living larva accidentally gained entrance to the host[3]

Accidental myiasis commonly is enteric, resulting from swallowing eggs or larvae with one's food. The effect is called pseudomyiasis.[26] One traditional cause of pseudomyiasis was the eating of maggots of cheese flies in cheeses such as Stilton. Depending on the species present in the gut, pseudomyiasis may cause significant medical symptoms, but it is likely that most cases pass unnoticed.[citation needed]

Prevention edit

The first control method is preventive and aims to eradicate the adult flies before they can cause any damage and is called vector control. The second control method is the treatment once the infestation is present, and concerns the infected animals (including humans).[citation needed]

The principal control method of adult populations of myiasis inducing flies involves insecticide applications in the environment where the target livestock is kept. Organophosphorus or organochlorine compounds may be used, usually in a spraying formulation. One alternative prevention method is the sterile insect technique (SIT) where a significant number of artificially reared sterilized (usually through irradiation) male flies are introduced. The male flies compete with wild breed males for females in order to copulate and thus cause females to lay batches of unfertilized eggs that cannot develop into the larval stage.[citation needed]

One prevention method involves removing the environment most favourable to the flies, such as by removal of the tail. Another example is the crutching of sheep, which involves the removal of wool from around the tail and between the rear legs, which is a favourable environment for the larvae. Another, more permanent, practice that is used in some countries is mulesing, where skin is removed from young animals to tighten remaining skin – leaving it less prone to fly attack.[27]

To prevent myiasis in humans, there is a need for general improvement of sanitation, personal hygiene, and extermination of the flies by insecticides. Clothes should be washed thoroughly, preferably in hot water, dried away from flies, and ironed thoroughly. The heat of the iron kills the eggs of myiasis-causing flies.[23]

Treatment edit

This applies once an infestation is established. In many circles the first response to cutaneous myiasis once the breathing hole has formed, is to cover the air hole thickly with petroleum jelly. Lack of oxygen then forces the larva to the surface, where it can more easily be dealt with. In a clinical or veterinary setting there may not be time for such tentative approaches, and the treatment of choice might be more direct, with or without an incision. First the larva must be eliminated through pressure around the lesion and the use of forceps. Secondly the wound must be cleaned and disinfected. Further control is necessary to avoid further reinfestation.[citation needed]

Livestock may be treated prophylactically with slow-release boluses containing ivermectin, which can provide long-term protection against the development of the larvae. Sheep also may be dipped, a process that involves drenching the animals in persistent insecticide to poison the larvae before they develop into a problem.[citation needed]

Epidemiology edit

Myiasis is prevalent in livestock, and especially in domestic sheep. Myiasis in sheep is often caused by blowflies (Lucilia sericata and L. cuprina in particular), and is commonly referred to as blowfly strike. Blowfly strike, and other flystrike, occurs worldwide, but is most common in regions where hot and wet conditions are sustained, such as Sub-Saharan Africa,[28] Southeast Asia,[29] Latin America, Australia, and New Zealand.[30] As of 2021, blowfly strike accounts for over A$280 million a year in losses for the Australian sheep industry.[31] As mitigation, Australian sheep farmers may engage in mulesing, a procedure designed to remove strips of wool-producing skin that are the most common targets for flies.[32] Farmers may also dock lambs' tails to reduce the likelihood of infestation.[33] However, both mulesing and tail-docking have received criticism from animal welfare groups, who say the mitigative procedures are excessive and can have other negative effects.[34]

In addition to blowfly strike in sheep, myiasis from screwworm flies (Cochliomyia hominivorax in particular) regularly cause upwards of US$100 million in annual damages to domestic cows and goats.[35] Screwworm-related myiasis is primarily mitigated through the sterile insect technique.[36]

History edit

 
Myiasis in a cat's flesh
 
Myiasis in a dog's flesh

Frederick William Hope coined the term myiasis in 1840 to refer to diseases resulting from dipterous larvae as opposed to those caused by other insect larvae (the term for this was scholechiasis). Hope described several cases of myiasis from Jamaica caused by unknown larvae, one of which resulted in death.[37]

Even though the term myiasis was first used in 1840, such conditions have been known since ancient times. Ambroise Paré, the chief surgeon to King Charles IX and King Henry III, observed that maggots often infested open wounds.[38]

Maggot therapy edit

Throughout recorded history, maggots have been used therapeutically to clean out necrotic wounds, an application known as maggot therapy.[citation needed]

Fly larvae that feed on dead tissue can clean wounds and may reduce bacterial activity and the chance of a secondary infection. They dissolve dead tissue by secreting digestive enzymes onto the wound as well as actively eating the dead tissue with mouth hooks, two hard, probing appendages protruding on either side of the "mouth".[39] Maggot therapy – also known as maggot debridement therapy (MDT), larval therapy, larva therapy, or larvae therapy – is the intentional introduction by a health care practitioner of live, disinfected green bottle fly maggots into the non-healing skin and soft tissue wounds of a human or other animal for the purpose of selectively cleaning out only the necrotic tissue within a wound in order to promote healing.[citation needed]

Although maggot therapy has been used in the US for the past 80 years, it was approved by the FDA as a medical device only in 2004 (along with leeches).[40] Maggots were the first live organism to be marketed in the US according to FDA regulations, and are approved for treating neuropathic (diabetic) foot ulcers, pressure ulcers, venous stasis ulcers, and traumatic and post-surgical wounds that are unresponsive to conventional therapies. Maggots were used in medicine before this time, but were not federally regulated. In 1990, California internist Ronald Sherman began treating patients with maggots produced at his lab at the UC Irvine School of Medicine.[40] Sherman went on to co-found Monarch Labs in 2005, which UC Irvine contracted to produce maggots for Sherman's own continuing clinical research on myiasis at the university. Monarch Labs also sells maggots to hospitals and other medical practices, the first US commercial supplier to do so since the last one closed in 1935.[41]

In the US, demand for these fly larvae doubled after the FDA ruling. Maggot therapy is now used in more than 300 sites across the country.[39] The American Medical Association and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently clarified the reimbursement guidelines to the wound care community for medicinal maggots, and this therapy may soon be covered by insurance.[42] The larvae of the green bottle fly (Lucilia fly) are now used exclusively for this purpose, since they preferentially devour only necrotic tissue, leaving healthy tissue intact. This is an important distinction, as most other major varieties of myiasitic fly larvae attack both live and dead wound tissue indiscriminately, effectively negating their benefit in non-harmful wound debridement. Medicinal maggots are placed on the wound and covered with a sterile dressing of gauze and nylon mesh. However, too many larvae placed on the wound could result in healthy tissue being eaten, efficiently creating a new wound, rendering it as a type of myiasis.[38]

History edit

Maggot therapy has a long history and prehistory. The indigenous people of Australia used maggot therapy, and so do the Hill Peoples of Northern Burma, and possibly the Mayans of Central America.[3] Surgeons in Napoleon's armies recognized that wounded soldiers with myiasis were more likely to survive than those without the infestation. In the American Civil War, army surgeons treated wounds by allowing blowfly maggots to clean away the decayed tissue.[citation needed]

William Baer, an orthopedic surgeon at Johns Hopkins during the late 1920s, used maggot therapy to treat a series of patients with osteomyelitis, an infection of bone or bone marrow. The idea was based on an experience in World War I in which two soldiers presented to him with broken femurs after having lain on the ground for seven days without food. Baer could not figure out why neither man had a fever or signs of sepsis. He observed: "On removing the clothing from the wounded part, much was my surprise to see the wound filled with thousands and thousands of maggots, apparently those of the blow fly. The sight was very disgusting and measures were taken hurriedly to wash out these abominable looking creatures." However, he then saw that the wounds were filled with "beautiful pink granulation tissue" and were healing well.[43]

Maggot therapy was common in the United States during the 1930s. However, during the second half of the twentieth century, after the introduction of antibiotics, maggot therapy was used only as a last resort for very serious wounds.[3] Lately maggots have been making a comeback due to the increased resistance of bacteria to antibiotics.[44]

References edit

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External links edit

  • Myiasis, reviewed and published by WikiVet
  • Exotic Myiasis, University of Sydney Department of Medical Entomology
  • Identification key to species of myiasis-causing fly larvae, Natural History Museum (London)
  • Parasitic Insects, Mites and Ticks: Genera of Medical and Veterinary Importance: Botflies

myiasis, səss, also, known, flystrike, strike, parasitic, infestation, body, live, animal, larvae, maggots, that, grow, inside, host, while, feeding, tissue, although, flies, most, commonly, attracted, open, wounds, urine, feces, soaked, some, species, includi. Myiasis m aɪ ˈ aɪ e s e s my EYE e sess 1 also known as flystrike or fly strike is the parasitic infestation of the body of a live animal by fly larvae maggots that grow inside the host while feeding on its tissue Although flies are most commonly attracted to open wounds and urine or feces soaked fur some species including the most common myiatic flies the botfly blowfly and screwfly can create an infestation even on unbroken skin and have been known to use moist soil and non myiatic flies such as the common housefly as vector agents for their parasitic larvae MyiasisOther namesFlystrike blowfly strike fly blownCutaneous myiasis in the shoulder of a humanPronunciation m aɪ ˈ aɪ e s e s SpecialtyInfectious diseaseBecause some animals particularly non native domestic animals cannot react as effectively as humans to the causes and effects of myiasis such infestations present a severe and continuing problem for livestock industries worldwide causing severe economic losses where they are not mitigated by human action 2 Although typically a far greater issue for animals myiasis is also a relatively frequent disease for humans in rural tropical regions where myiatic flies thrive and often may require medical attention to surgically remove the parasites 3 Myiasis varies widely in the forms it takes and its effects on those affected Such variations depend largely on the fly species and where the larvae are located Some flies lay eggs in open wounds other larvae may invade unbroken skin or enter the body through the nose or ears and still others may be swallowed if the eggs are deposited on the lips or on food 3 There can also be accidental myiasis that E tenax can cause in humans via water containing the larvae or in contaminated uncooked food The name of the condition derives from ancient Greek myῖa myia meaning fly 4 Contents 1 Signs and symptoms 1 1 Wound 1 2 Eye 2 Cause 2 1 Life cycle 2 2 Human vectors 2 2 1 Specific myiasis 2 2 2 Semispecific myiasis 2 2 3 Accidental myiasis 3 Diagnosis 3 1 Classifications 4 Prevention 5 Treatment 6 Epidemiology 7 History 8 Maggot therapy 8 1 History 9 References 10 External linksSigns and symptoms editHow myiasis affects the human body depends on where the larvae are located Larvae may infect dead necrotic prematurely dying or living tissue in various sites the skin eyes ears stomach and intestinal tract or in genitourinary sites 5 They may invade open wounds and lesions or unbroken skin Some enter the body through the nose or ears Larvae or eggs can reach the stomach or intestines if they are swallowed with food and cause gastric or intestinal myiasis 3 In extremely rare cases maggots may occasionally infest the vulvar area 6 Several different presentations of myiasis and their symptoms 3 Syndrome SymptomsCutaneous myiasis Painful slow developing ulcers or furuncle boil like sores that can last for a prolonged periodNasal myiasis Obstruction of nasal passages and severe irritation In some cases facial edema and fever can develop Death is not uncommon Aural myiasis Crawling sensations and buzzing noises Smelly discharge is sometimes present If located in the middle ear larvae may get to the brain Ophthalmomyiasis Severe irritation edema and pain Fairly common Wound edit nbsp Wound myiasis in the scalpWound myiasis occurs when fly larvae infest open wounds It has been a serious complication of war wounds in tropical areas and is sometimes seen in neglected wounds in most parts of the world Predisposing factors include poor socioeconomic conditions extremes of age neglect mental disability psychiatric illness alcoholism diabetes and vascular occlusive disease 7 8 9 10 11 Eye edit Myiasis of the human eye or ophthalmomyiasis can be caused by Hypoderma tarandi a parasitic botfly of caribou It is known to lead to uveitis glaucoma and retinal detachment 12 Cause editLife cycle edit The life cycle in sheep is typical of the disease The female flies lay their eggs on the sheep in damp protected areas of the body that are soaked with urine and feces mainly the sheep s breech buttocks It takes approximately eight hours to a day for the eggs to hatch depending on the conditions Once hatched the larvae then lacerate the skin with their mouthparts causing open sores Once the skin has been breached the larvae then tunnel through the sores into the host s subcutaneous tissue causing deep and irritating lesions highly subject to infection After about the second day bacterial infection is likely and if left untreated causes bacterial bloodstream infections or sepsis This leads to anorexia and weakness and is generally fatal if untreated 13 Human vectors edit There are three main fly families causing economically important myiasis in livestock and also occasionally in humans citation needed Calliphoridae blowflies Some examples include Calliphora vomitoria Calliphora vicina and Cordylobia Oestridae botflies Sarcophagidae fleshflies Sarcophaga barbata are usually found in dead and rotting meat and animal excrement which are prime environments for them This is because their larvae are facultative parasites as they feed on organic tissue and use the hosts oxygen reserve Other families occasionally involved are citation needed Anisopodidae Piophilidae Stratiomyidae SyrphidaeSpecific myiasis edit Caused by flies that need a host for larval development Dermatobia hominis human botfly Cordylobia anthropophaga tumbu fly Cordylobia rodhaini Lund s fly 14 Oestrus ovis sheep botfly Hypoderma spp cattle botflies or ox warbles Gasterophilus spp horse botfly Cochliomyia hominivorax new world screwworm fly Chrysomya bezziana old world screwworm fly Auchmeromyia senegalensis Congo floor maggot Cuterebra spp rodent and rabbit botfly Semispecific myiasis edit Caused by flies that usually lay their eggs in decaying animal or vegetable matter but that can develop in a host if open wounds or sores are present Lucilia spp green bottle fly 15 Cochliomyia spp screw worm fly 15 Phormia spp black bottle fly 16 Calliphora spp blue bottle fly 17 Sarcophaga spp flesh fly or sarcophagids Flesh flies or sarcophagids members of the family Sarcophagidae can cause intestinal myiasis in humans if the females lay their eggs on meat or fruit 18 Accidental myiasis edit Also called pseudomyiasis Caused by flies that have no preference or need to develop in a host but that will do so on rare occasions Transmission occurs through accidental deposit of eggs on oral or genitourinary openings or by swallowing eggs or larvae that are on food citation needed The cheese fly Piophila casei sometimes causes myiasis through intentional consumption of its maggots which are contained in the traditional Sardinian delicacy casu marzu 19 20 Other flies that can accidentally cause myiasis are 21 22 Musca domestica housefly Fannia spp latrine flies Eristalis tenax rat tailed maggots Muscina spp The adult flies are not parasitic but when they lay their eggs in open wounds and these hatch into their larval stage also known as maggots or grubs the larvae feed on live or necrotic tissue causing myiasis to develop They may also be ingested or enter through other body apertures citation needed Diagnosis editMyiasis is often misdiagnosed in the United States because it is rare and its symptoms are not specific Intestinal myiasis and urinary myiasis are especially difficult to diagnose 3 Clues that myiasis may be present include recent travel to an endemic area one or more non healing lesions on the skin itchiness movement under the skin or pain discharge from a central punctum tiny hole or a small white structure protruding from the lesion 23 Serologic testing has also been used to diagnose the presence of botfly larvae in human ophthalmomyiasis 12 source source source source source Ultrasound showing maggot infestation 24 source source source source source Ultrasound showing maggot infestation 24 nbsp Ultrasound showing maggot infestation 24 Classifications edit German entomologist Fritz Zumpt describes myiasis as the infestation of live human and vertebrate animals with dipterous larvae which at least for a period feed on the host s dead or living tissue liquid body substances or ingested food For modern purposes however this is too vague For example feeding on dead or necrotic tissue is not generally a problem except when larvae such as those of flies in the family Piophilidae attack stored food such as cheese or preserved meats such activity suggests saprophagy rather than parasitism it even may be medically beneficial in maggot debridement therapy MDT citation needed Currently myiasis commonly is classified according to aspects relevant to the case in question The classical description of myiasis is according to the part of the host that is infected This is the classification used by ICD 10 For example 25 dermal sub dermal cutaneous B87 0 creeping where larvae burrow through or under the skin furuncular where a larva remains in one spot causing a boil like lesion nasopharyngeal in the nose sinuses or pharynx B87 3 ophthalmic or ocular in or about the eye B87 2 auricular in or about the ear gastric rectal or intestinal enteric for the appropriate part of the digestive system B87 8 urogenital B87 8 Another aspect is the relationship between the host and the parasite and provides insight into the biology of the fly species causing the myiasis and its likely effect Thus the myiasis is described as either 25 obligatory where the parasite cannot complete its life cycle without its parasitic phase which may be specific semispecific or opportunistic facultative incidental or accidental where it is not essential to the life cycle of the parasite perhaps a normally free living larva accidentally gained entrance to the host 3 Accidental myiasis commonly is enteric resulting from swallowing eggs or larvae with one s food The effect is called pseudomyiasis 26 One traditional cause of pseudomyiasis was the eating of maggots of cheese flies in cheeses such as Stilton Depending on the species present in the gut pseudomyiasis may cause significant medical symptoms but it is likely that most cases pass unnoticed citation needed Prevention editThe first control method is preventive and aims to eradicate the adult flies before they can cause any damage and is called vector control The second control method is the treatment once the infestation is present and concerns the infected animals including humans citation needed The principal control method of adult populations of myiasis inducing flies involves insecticide applications in the environment where the target livestock is kept Organophosphorus or organochlorine compounds may be used usually in a spraying formulation One alternative prevention method is the sterile insect technique SIT where a significant number of artificially reared sterilized usually through irradiation male flies are introduced The male flies compete with wild breed males for females in order to copulate and thus cause females to lay batches of unfertilized eggs that cannot develop into the larval stage citation needed One prevention method involves removing the environment most favourable to the flies such as by removal of the tail Another example is the crutching of sheep which involves the removal of wool from around the tail and between the rear legs which is a favourable environment for the larvae Another more permanent practice that is used in some countries is mulesing where skin is removed from young animals to tighten remaining skin leaving it less prone to fly attack 27 To prevent myiasis in humans there is a need for general improvement of sanitation personal hygiene and extermination of the flies by insecticides Clothes should be washed thoroughly preferably in hot water dried away from flies and ironed thoroughly The heat of the iron kills the eggs of myiasis causing flies 23 Treatment editThis applies once an infestation is established In many circles the first response to cutaneous myiasis once the breathing hole has formed is to cover the air hole thickly with petroleum jelly Lack of oxygen then forces the larva to the surface where it can more easily be dealt with In a clinical or veterinary setting there may not be time for such tentative approaches and the treatment of choice might be more direct with or without an incision First the larva must be eliminated through pressure around the lesion and the use of forceps Secondly the wound must be cleaned and disinfected Further control is necessary to avoid further reinfestation citation needed Livestock may be treated prophylactically with slow release boluses containing ivermectin which can provide long term protection against the development of the larvae Sheep also may be dipped a process that involves drenching the animals in persistent insecticide to poison the larvae before they develop into a problem citation needed Epidemiology editMain article Flystrike in sheep Myiasis is prevalent in livestock and especially in domestic sheep Myiasis in sheep is often caused by blowflies Lucilia sericata and L cuprina in particular and is commonly referred to as blowfly strike Blowfly strike and other flystrike occurs worldwide but is most common in regions where hot and wet conditions are sustained such as Sub Saharan Africa 28 Southeast Asia 29 Latin America Australia and New Zealand 30 As of 2021 blowfly strike accounts for over A 280 million a year in losses for the Australian sheep industry 31 As mitigation Australian sheep farmers may engage in mulesing a procedure designed to remove strips of wool producing skin that are the most common targets for flies 32 Farmers may also dock lambs tails to reduce the likelihood of infestation 33 However both mulesing and tail docking have received criticism from animal welfare groups who say the mitigative procedures are excessive and can have other negative effects 34 In addition to blowfly strike in sheep myiasis from screwworm flies Cochliomyia hominivorax in particular regularly cause upwards of US 100 million in annual damages to domestic cows and goats 35 Screwworm related myiasis is primarily mitigated through the sterile insect technique 36 History edit nbsp Myiasis in a cat s flesh nbsp Myiasis in a dog s fleshFrederick William Hope coined the term myiasis in 1840 to refer to diseases resulting from dipterous larvae as opposed to those caused by other insect larvae the term for this was scholechiasis Hope described several cases of myiasis from Jamaica caused by unknown larvae one of which resulted in death 37 Even though the term myiasis was first used in 1840 such conditions have been known since ancient times Ambroise Pare the chief surgeon to King Charles IX and King Henry III observed that maggots often infested open wounds 38 Maggot therapy editMain article Maggot therapy Throughout recorded history maggots have been used therapeutically to clean out necrotic wounds an application known as maggot therapy citation needed Fly larvae that feed on dead tissue can clean wounds and may reduce bacterial activity and the chance of a secondary infection They dissolve dead tissue by secreting digestive enzymes onto the wound as well as actively eating the dead tissue with mouth hooks two hard probing appendages protruding on either side of the mouth 39 Maggot therapy also known as maggot debridement therapy MDT larval therapy larva therapy or larvae therapy is the intentional introduction by a health care practitioner of live disinfected green bottle fly maggots into the non healing skin and soft tissue wounds of a human or other animal for the purpose of selectively cleaning out only the necrotic tissue within a wound in order to promote healing citation needed Although maggot therapy has been used in the US for the past 80 years it was approved by the FDA as a medical device only in 2004 along with leeches 40 Maggots were the first live organism to be marketed in the US according to FDA regulations and are approved for treating neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers pressure ulcers venous stasis ulcers and traumatic and post surgical wounds that are unresponsive to conventional therapies Maggots were used in medicine before this time but were not federally regulated In 1990 California internist Ronald Sherman began treating patients with maggots produced at his lab at the UC Irvine School of Medicine 40 Sherman went on to co found Monarch Labs in 2005 which UC Irvine contracted to produce maggots for Sherman s own continuing clinical research on myiasis at the university Monarch Labs also sells maggots to hospitals and other medical practices the first US commercial supplier to do so since the last one closed in 1935 41 In the US demand for these fly larvae doubled after the FDA ruling Maggot therapy is now used in more than 300 sites across the country 39 The American Medical Association and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently clarified the reimbursement guidelines to the wound care community for medicinal maggots and this therapy may soon be covered by insurance 42 The larvae of the green bottle fly Lucilia fly are now used exclusively for this purpose since they preferentially devour only necrotic tissue leaving healthy tissue intact This is an important distinction as most other major varieties of myiasitic fly larvae attack both live and dead wound tissue indiscriminately effectively negating their benefit in non harmful wound debridement Medicinal maggots are placed on the wound and covered with a sterile dressing of gauze and nylon mesh However too many larvae placed on the wound could result in healthy tissue being eaten efficiently creating a new wound rendering it as a type of myiasis 38 History edit Maggot therapy has a long history and prehistory The indigenous people of Australia used maggot therapy and so do the Hill Peoples of Northern Burma and possibly the Mayans of Central America 3 Surgeons in Napoleon s armies recognized that wounded soldiers with myiasis were more likely to survive than those without the infestation In the American Civil War army surgeons treated wounds by allowing blowfly maggots to clean away the decayed tissue citation needed William Baer an orthopedic surgeon at Johns Hopkins during the late 1920s used maggot therapy to treat a series of patients with osteomyelitis an infection of bone or bone marrow The idea was based on an experience in World War I in which two soldiers presented to him with broken femurs after having lain on the ground for seven days without food Baer could not figure out why neither man had a fever or signs of sepsis He observed On removing the clothing from the wounded part much was my surprise to see the wound filled with thousands and thousands of maggots apparently those of the blow fly The sight was very disgusting and measures were taken hurriedly to wash out these abominable looking creatures However he then saw that the wounds were filled with beautiful pink granulation tissue and were healing well 43 Maggot therapy was common in the United States during the 1930s However during the second half of the twentieth century after the introduction of antibiotics maggot therapy was used only as a last resort for very serious wounds 3 Lately maggots have been making a comeback due to the increased resistance of bacteria to antibiotics 44 References edit Definition of MYIASIS www merriam webster com Retrieved 2023 05 19 Otranto Domenico 2001 The immunology of myiasis parasite survival and host defense strategies Trends in Parasitology 17 4 176 182 doi 10 1016 S1471 4922 00 01943 7 PMID 11282507 a b c d e f g h John David Petri William eds 2006 Markell and Voge s Medical Parasitology 9th ed Missouri Saunders Elsevier pp 328 334 ISBN 978 0 7216 4793 7 myῖa Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Ockenhouse Christian F Samlaska Curt P Benson Paul M Roberts Lyman W Eliasson Arn Malane Susan Menich Mark D 1990 Cutaneous myiasis caused by the African tumbu fly Cordylobia anthropophaga Archives of Dermatology 126 2 199 202 doi 10 1001 archderm 1990 01670260069013 PMID 2301958 Gupta Sanjeev Kataria Usha Siwach Sunita 2013 Myiasis in female external genitalia Indian Journal of Sexually Transmitted Diseases and AIDS 34 2 129 131 doi 10 4103 0253 7184 120555 ISSN 0253 7184 PMC 3841665 PMID 24339466 Namazi MR Fallahzadeh MK November 2009 Wound myiasis in a patient with squamous cell carcinoma ScientificWorldJournal 9 1192 3 doi 10 1100 tsw 2009 138 PMC 5823144 PMID 19882087 Screwworm flies as agents of wound myiasis Fao org Retrieved 2013 11 05 El Azazy O M E 1989 Wound myiasis caused by Cochliomyia hominivorax in Libya Vet Rec 124 4 103 doi 10 1136 vr 124 4 103 a PMID 2929078 S2CID 26982759 Huntington T E Voigt David W Higley L G January 2008 Not the Usual Suspects Human Wound Myiasis by Phorids Journal of Medical Entomology 45 1 157 159 doi 10 1603 0022 2585 2008 45 157 NTUSHW 2 0 CO 2 PMID 18283957 Cleveland Clinic 13 August 2010 Current Clinical Medicine Expert Consult Online Elsevier Health Sciences pp 1396 ISBN 978 1 4377 3571 0 Retrieved 22 April 2013 a b Lagace Wiens P R et al January 2008 Human ophthalmomyiasis interna caused by Hypoderma tarandi Northern Canada Emerging Infectious Diseases 14 1 64 66 doi 10 3201 eid1401 070163 PMC 2600172 PMID 18258079 Hall M J R 1997 Traumatic myiasis of sheep in Europe a review Parassitologia 39 409 413 Tamir Jeremy Haik Josef Schwartz Eli 8 March 2006 Myiasis with Lund s Fly Cordylobia rodhaini in Travelers Journal of Travel Medicine 10 5 293 295 doi 10 2310 7060 2003 2732 PMID 14531984 S2CID 21353772 a b Cruz Clavijo Sara E Mendez Rodriguez Ivan A April 2015 Furuncular myiasis Eco epidemiological view of a case report Infectio 19 2 83 87 doi 10 1016 j infect 2014 02 007 Abdel Hafeez Ekhlas H Mohamed Rabie M Belal Usama S Atiya Ahmed M Takamoto Masaya Aosai Fumie October 2015 Human wound myiasis caused by Phormia regina and Sarcophaga haemorrhoidalis in Minia Governorate Egypt Parasitology Research 114 10 3703 3709 doi 10 1007 s00436 015 4599 4 PMID 26122995 S2CID 253974900 Salvetti Massimo Corbellini Claudia Aggiusti Carlo Rosei Enrico Agabiti Muiesan Maria Lorenza September 2012 Calliphora vicina human myiasis a case report Internal and Emergency Medicine 7 S2 135 137 doi 10 1007 s11739 011 0720 6 PMID 22045266 S2CID 2383454 Najjari Mohsen Dik Bilal Pekbey Gamze 7 November 2020 Gastrointestinal Myiasis Due to Sarcophaga argyrostoma Diptera Sarcophagidae in Mashhad Iran a Case Report Journal of Arthropod Borne Diseases 14 3 317 324 doi 10 18502 jad v14i3 4565 PMC 7903363 PMID 33644245 Peckenscneider L E Polorny C and Hellwig C A 1952 Intestinal infestation with maggots of the cheese fly Piophila casei J Am Med Assoc 1952 May 17 149 3 262 3 Gastrointestinal Myiasis Report of a case Alonzo F Brand M D Arch Intern Med Chic 1931 47 1 149 154 doi 10 1001 archinte 1931 00140190160017 Archives of Internal Medicine 47 1 149 154 January 1931 doi 10 1001 archinte 1931 00140190160017 Archived from the original on 9 January 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2018 Sunder Singh Dogra Vikram K Mahajan 2010 Oral myiasis caused by Musca domestica larvae in a child International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology Extra 5 3 105 107 doi 10 1016 j pedex 2009 05 002 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Aydenizoz M Gokpinar S 26 December 2020 Urogenital by Psychoda albipennis Diptera Nematocera and Intestinal Myiasis by Fannia canicularis Diptera Fanniidae in Kirikkale Turkey Report Two Cases International Journal of Veterinary and Animal Research 3 3 2020 2023 eISSN 2651 3609 Retrieved 24 October 2021 a b Adisa Charles Adeyinka Mbanaso Augustus 2004 Furuncular myiasis of the breast caused by the larvae of the Tumbu fly Cordylobia anthropophaga BMC Surgery 4 5 doi 10 1186 1471 2482 4 5 PMC 394335 PMID 15113429 a b c UOTW 22 Ultrasound of the Week Ultrasound of the Week 14 October 2014 Retrieved 27 May 2017 a b Janovy John Schmidt Gerald D Roberts Larry S 1996 Gerald D Schmidt amp Larry S Roberts Foundations of parasitology Dubuque Iowa Wm C Brown ISBN 0 697 26071 2 Zumpt Fritz Konrad Ernst 1965 Myiasis in man and animals in the old world Butterworth Standard Operating Procedures sheep Mulesing teacher s notes New South Wales Department of Primary Industries March 8 2004 Retrieved 2007 01 09 Kouam M K Meutchieye F Miegoue E Nguafack T T Tchoumboue J Teguia A Jan 2017 Prevalence and husbandry related risk factors of myiasis in domestic cavies in the western highlands of Cameroon Epidemiology and Infection 145 2 339 346 doi 10 1017 S0950268816002466 ISSN 0950 2688 PMC 9507628 PMID 27780497 Obligatory Myiasis producing Flies of Animals Integumentary System Merck Veterinary Manual Retrieved 2023 05 19 Royal Dick School of Veterinary Studies Veterinary Record 160 19 669 2007 05 12 doi 10 1136 vr 160 19 669 b ISSN 0042 4900 S2CID 219190547 Managing flystrike in sheep www agric wa gov au Retrieved 2023 05 19 Managing flystrike in sheep Page 2 of 4 www agric wa gov au Retrieved 2023 05 19 Managing flystrike in sheep Page 2 of 4 www agric wa gov au Retrieved 2023 05 19 What is the RSPCA s view on mulesing and flystrike prevention in sheep RSPCA Knowledgebase Retrieved 2023 05 19 Hill Dennis S 1997 The economic importance of insects Springer p 102 ISBN 0 412 49800 6 Sterile insect technique www iaea org 2016 04 13 Retrieved 2023 05 19 Introduction to myiasis Natural History Museum Nhm ac uk Retrieved 2013 11 05 a b Sherman RA Hall MJR Thomas S 2000 Medicinal Maggots An ancient remedy for some contemporary afflictions Annual Review of Entomology 45 55 81 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 45 1 55 PMID 10761570 a b Greer Kathleen A January February 2005 Age old therapy gets new approval Advances in Skin amp Wound Care 18 1 12 5 doi 10 1097 00129334 200501000 00003 PMID 15716781 a b Rubin Rita 2004 07 07 Maggots and leeches Good medicine Usatoday Com Retrieved 2013 11 05 Carlson Bob February 2006 Crawling Through the Millennia Maggots and Leeches Come Full Circle Biotechnology Healthcare 3 1 14 17 PMC 3571037 PMID 23424330 Insurance may soon cover maggot therapy Health Health care NBC News NBC News 2008 11 19 Retrieved 2013 11 05 Baer William S 1931 The treatment of chronic osteomyelitis with the maggot larva of the blow fly Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 13 3 438 475 Bonn Dorothy 2000 09 30 Maggot therapy an alternative for wound infection The Lancet 356 9236 1174 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 05 72870 1 PMID 11030307 S2CID 27100272 External links editMyiasis reviewed and published by WikiVet Exotic Myiasis University of Sydney Department of Medical Entomology Identification key to species of myiasis causing fly larvae Natural History Museum London Parasitic Insects Mites and Ticks Genera of Medical and Veterinary Importance Botflies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Myiasis amp oldid 1184027250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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