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Squirming Larvae Pulled From Man's Head

SoulManX

The Inspector!
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Doctors thought the strange, bleeding bumps on Aaron Dallas' head might be from gnat bites or shingles. Then the bumps started moving.
A doctor found five active bot fly larvae living beneath the skin atop Dallas' head.



"I'd put my hand back there and feel them moving. I thought it was blood coursing through my head," Dallas told the (Glenwood Springs) Post Independent.
"I could hear them. I actually thought I was going crazy."
Dallas said he likely received the larval infestation while on a trip to Belize this summer. Bot fly infections are not uncommon in parts of Central and South America.
Adult bot flies are hairy and look like bees, without bristles. The larvae, which are about one-third the size of a penny, were living in a pit 2- to 3- millimeters wide. They were removed Thursday.



It was weird and traumatic," said Dallas, of Carbondale. "I would get this pain that would drop me to my knees."
After a specialist told him he might have shingles, Dallas tried different creams and salves. But the pain only got worse.
"When I saw him again, it was pretty obvious something else was going on," said Dr. Kimball Spence, who could see the spots moving on Dallas' head. "There's an open pit. You see a little activity, not necessarily the larvae, but a fluctuation of the fluid in the pit."
Dallas' wife, Midge Dallas, teased him about it.
"I told him, 'I will love you through your maggots,'" she told the newspaper.
But Dallas saw little to laugh about.
"It's much funnier to everyone else," he said. "It makes my stomach turn over. It was cruel."



 
[FONT=arial, tahoma, Times New Roman] The botfly that uses humans as hosts may be the nastiest little creature you've ever come across!

'Botfly' is the common name for several types of hairy flies whose larvae live as parasites within the bodies of mammals. There are types of botfly that target horses, sheep, cattle, deer and other mammals.

[/FONT][FONT=arial, tahoma, Times New Roman]
We hope you have a strong stomach!

[/FONT][FONT=arial, tahoma, Times New Roman]A species of botfly (found only in Central and South America) captures a mosquito and lays its eggs on it ... about 30 of them. The botfly then releases the mosquito. Eventually the mosquito lands on a person. The warmth causes the eggs to hatch, and the larvae (or maggots) fasten to the person's skin.

The larvae now eat their way into the skin of the person, and begin feeding on muscle tissue. Tiny hooks hold them in place. A hole is left in the skin so the larvae can breathe.

A boil-like lesion develops at the site of infestation. After about 6 weeks the larvae have grown fat while dining on your flesh; they eat their way out and drop to the ground, where they pupate. Adult botflies emerge from the pupas in about 20 days, and the cycle starts all over again.

People who have had a botfly larvae infestation in their flesh report that they could feel the maggots moving under their skin. Removing the maggots is difficult, as they are hooked to the flesh. Sometimes they can be squeezed out, but often surgery is necessary. Doctors actually advise that victims not try to remove the larvae on their own, as the larvae may burst, leaving maggot parts inside your skin that could lead to infection.

Usually the wound heals quickly, with no side-effects other than a small scar. Occasionally there may be infection. However, if the site where the maggots are is easily damaged, quick removal is necessary to prevent other complications. Below left, a botfly maggot is exiting a person's chest. The picture in the centre below shows a botfly maggot being removed from someone's eye, where it had been feeding and growing. At the right below, maggots that get into the brain can cause meningitis and death.


[/FONT]
 
I once saw video of this on TLC of an incident of which this happened to a woman who went overseas and couldn't figure out what the pulsating sensation in her skull was.
 
This totally makes me think of Lightning Strykez centipede thread from earlier today.

jag
 
Will they come out on their own or do they have to be yanked out?
 
Were the extra pics really necessary? :dry:
 
Ugh. Now my hair is on end, and the hair rising together is making me feel all sorts of sensations on my scalp. Ugh.
 
It's bad enough this happed to someone but why go to the newspapers about it, I would just hide this incident in the closet with the rest of my skeletons.
 
Ugh. Now my hair is on end, and the hair rising together is making me feel all sorts of sensations on my scalp. Ugh.

Could be lice, laying their little eggs all over your scalp. :o

jag
 
Doctors thought the strange, bleeding bumps on Aaron Dallas' head might be from gnat bites or shingles. Then the bumps started moving.
A doctor found five active bot fly larvae living beneath the skin atop Dallas' head.



"I'd put my hand back there and feel them moving. I thought it was blood coursing through my head," Dallas told the (Glenwood Springs) Post Independent.
"I could hear them. I actually thought I was going crazy."
Dallas said he likely received the larval infestation while on a trip to Belize this summer. Bot fly infections are not uncommon in parts of Central and South America.
Adult bot flies are hairy and look like bees, without bristles. The larvae, which are about one-third the size of a penny, were living in a pit 2- to 3- millimeters wide. They were removed Thursday.



It was weird and traumatic," said Dallas, of Carbondale. "I would get this pain that would drop me to my knees."
After a specialist told him he might have shingles, Dallas tried different creams and salves. But the pain only got worse.
"When I saw him again, it was pretty obvious something else was going on," said Dr. Kimball Spence, who could see the spots moving on Dallas' head. "There's an open pit. You see a little activity, not necessarily the larvae, but a fluctuation of the fluid in the pit."
Dallas' wife, Midge Dallas, teased him about it.
"I told him, 'I will love you through your maggots,'" she told the newspaper.
But Dallas saw little to laugh about.
"It's much funnier to everyone else," he said. "It makes my stomach turn over. It was cruel."




I could really go for some spagetti right now. :csad:


spaghetti-carbonara.jpg
 
Imagine if those things mutated, and if they infected humans they could control their hosts, creating a zombie-like epidemic?

:wow:
 
I have a friend who looks towards everything for a zombie epidemic. I should pass the idea by him some time just to see his reaction.
 
That is on hell of thing to leave with me before I go to bed.
Tomorrow I fumigate weather I need it or not. :(

*scratches head*
 
That is on hell of thing to leave with me before I go to bed.
Tomorrow I fumigate weather I need it or not. :(

*scratches head*

Random fact of the day: Galen used to cure schizophrenics in ancient Greece with fumigation of the vagina. :ninja:
 

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