Monday, November 18, 2013

Does anybody know what type of bug bite this is?

nail polish vector
 on Nail polish vector art - Download Nail vectors
nail polish vector image



Kayla


I have a lot of red spots all over my butt and only my butt, i already put nail polish on them incase they were chiggers but i wanna be sure. I went swimming in Lake Michigan a couple days ago, but i felt my self just get bit, so it must of happened while i was sleeping. It doesn't itch, it Just hurts when i put pressure on it


Answer
Mosquito bite

Mosquitoes go through four stages in their life-cycle: egg, larva, pupa, and adult or imago. Adult females lay their eggs in standing water, which can be a salt-marsh, a lake, a puddle, a natural reservoir on a plant, or an artificial water container such as a plastic bucket. The first three stages are aquatic and last 5â14 days, depending on the species and the ambient temperature; eggs hatch to become larvae, then pupae. The adult mosquito emerges from the pupa as it floats at the water surface. Adults live for 4â8 weeks.[7]

Mosquitoes have mouthparts that are adapted for piercing the skin of plants and animals. While males typically feed on nectar and plant juices, the female needs to obtain nutrients from a "blood meal" before she can produce eggs.

There are about 3,500 species of mosquitoes found throughout the world. In some species of mosquito, the females feed on humans, and are therefore vectors for a number of infectious diseases affecting millions of people per year.[8][9] Some scientists believe that eradicating mosquitoes would not have serious consequences for any ecosystems.

How do you safely remove wood ticks?




HAWKEYE





Answer
Remove the tick properly. Using sharp pointed tweezers, or specially made tick tweezers, grasp the tick as close to your skin as possible, as close to its embedded mouthparts as you can. If you squeeze the body or head, you risk compressing the guts and salivary glands and expelling even more organisms through their mouth into your body.

Do not twist the tick or turn the tweezers as you pull out the tick. Pull out straight with a slow, steady motion. Twisting may force more organisms into your body, and may result in the head or more of the mouthparts being left in your body.

Do not apply any substances to the tick before removing it - no alcohol or nail polish, no petroleum jelly or other ointments, and do not try to burn it out or otherwise convince to let go of you. It won't let go. It will just happily keep on sucking your blood and pumping pathogens into you.
Save the tick or any nymphs or larvae that you find on you. Store them in a clean glass jar or film container, tightly lidded and labeled with the date you pulled the tick off you and the location you were when you acquired the tick.

Ideally, you should have the tick tested right away to see what it contains. Ixodes pacificus is currently the only western tick associated with Babesia, Bartonella, Borrelia and Ehrlichia, but other ticks, such as the Dermacentor variabilis (American Dog tick) can carry pathogenic organisms causing diseases in humans and domestic pets (in this case, Rocky Mountain spotted fever and tularemia); Dermacentor andersonii is also a vector for RMSF.

A good rule of thumb: have all ticks tested regardless of species. There is a fee associated with tick testing.

Ticks can be sent to

IgeneX Inc.
797 San Antonio Rd.
Palo Alto, CA 94303
800.832 3200

or delivered to your county's public health laboratory:

Public Health Laboratory
3313 Chanate Road
Santa Rosa, CA 95404
707-565-4711 Marin County HHS
Public Health Lab
415- 499-6849
Mendocino Public Health Lab
501 Low Gap Road, Basement
Ukiah, CA 95482
707-463-4145




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

No comments:

Post a Comment