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Re: Botflies, oh my

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wow!You never know what will walk in the door!

So if I wasn't a loner and had been practicing with some of you folks,

could you have told me that I was going to encounter a botfly larva

before I cut into a patient who had traveled to the Amazon a couple of

months ago? I didn't realize I'd need tropical medicine in NC, but it

would have been a good one to have looked up before encountering in

person....

Haresch

-- If you are a patient please allow up to 12 hours for a reply by email/please note the new email address.Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/ MD

ph fax

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Wow, you are too cool.

Sharon

Sharon McCoy , M.D.

Renaissance Family Medicine

The

Rebirth of Personal Healthcare

www.SharonMD.com

Phone Fax (949)

281-2197

If you received this message in error, please notify me and then

delete. EMail may not be entirely confidential.

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of Haresch

Sent: Tuesday, September 30, 2008 5:38 AM

To:

Subject: Botflies, oh my

So if I wasn't a loner and had been practicing

with some of you folks,

could you have told me that I was going to encounter a botfly larva

before I cut into a patient who had traveled to the Amazon a couple of

months ago? I didn't realize I'd need tropical medicine in NC, but it

would have been a good one to have looked up before encountering in

person....

Haresch

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Hi, from Drain Oregon.

You don't need to go to the Amazon to get bot flies. All you have to do is sit still around the animals who attract them. The chubby pop-bottle shaped larvae grow under the skin and act like a boil, eating the serum made by their irritating spiney skin. The difference is, when you look at the seeping wound in the center of the boil, you can see their little moving mouth parts, wiggling gently around. That is the key: don't squish them out. Some few people will develop allergies to the larvae protein and will go into anaphylactic shock when you squish them. You anesthetize the area locally, gently open the lump with a scalpal cutting from just next to the moving mouth part through the wall of the boil, and remove the larvae whole. Then you debride and curette the infected area more vigorously with your half circle curette and remove all the nasty

tissue. Heal by secondary intention.

I used to take these out of dogs and cats several times a year in the midwest. Only one taken out of a human teen living on a ranch. Probably fell asleep under the haystack.

Joanne Holland DVM/MD

Subject: Botflies, oh myTo: Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2008, 5:38 AM

So if I wasn't a loner and had been practicing with some of you folks,could you have told me that I was going to encounter a botfly larvabefore I cut into a patient who had traveled to the Amazon a couple ofmonths ago? I didn't realize I'd need tropical medicine in NC, but itwould have been a good one to have looked up before encountering inperson.... Haresch

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Joann

I admire you i really do

But that is gross

I see moving mouth parts, man, i am outta there.

> Hi, from Drain Oregon.

>

> You don't need to go to the Amazon to get bot flies. All you have to

> do is sit still around the animals who attract them. The chubby pop-bottle

> shaped larvae grow under the skin and act like a boil, eating the serum made

> by their irritating spiney skin. The difference is, when you look at the

> seeping wound in the center of the boil, you can see their little moving

> mouth parts, wiggling gently around. That is the key: don't squish them

> out. Some few people will develop allergies to the larvae protein and will

> go into anaphylactic shock when you squish them. You anesthetize the area

> locally, gently open the lump with a scalpal cutting from just next to the

> moving mouth part through the wall of the boil, and remove the larvae

> whole. Then you debride and curette the infected area more vigorously with

> your half circle curette and remove all the nasty tissue. Heal by

> secondary intention.

> I used to take these out of dogs and cats several times a year in the

> midwest. Only one taken out of a human teen living on a ranch. Probably

> fell asleep under the haystack.

>

> Joanne Holland DVM/MD

>

>

>

>

>

> Subject: Botflies, oh my

> To:

> Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2008, 5:38 AM

>

>

>

>

>

>

> So if I wasn't a loner and had been practicing with some of you folks,

> could you have told me that I was going to encounter a botfly larva

> before I cut into a patient who had traveled to the Amazon a couple of

> months ago? I didn't realize I'd need tropical medicine in NC, but it

> would have been a good one to have looked up before encountering in

> person....

>

> Haresch

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

--

If you are a patient please allow up to 12 hours for a reply by email/

please note the new email address.

Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/

MD

ph fax

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I'm no Joanne either. The patient had a nightmare the night before

about things crawling out of her head. I not only took her bug, I took

her nightmares on myself, too....

does it help that I read that the mouth parts are actually

pointing in? What you can sometimes see are really the breathing parts.

>

> Joann

> I admire you i really do

> But that is gross

>

> I see moving mouth parts, man, i am outta there.

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oh yeah sure that helps sooo much... Pedro- I am not watching that .whatever it is.aughI have never even had to look in a n ear and see a (magnified)bug looking at meick...

I'm no Joanne either. The patient had a nightmare the night before

about things crawling out of her head. I not only took her bug, I took

her nightmares on myself, too....

does it help that I read that the mouth parts are actually

pointing in? What you can sometimes see are really the breathing parts.

>

> Joann

> I admire you i really do

> But that is gross

>

> I see moving mouth parts, man, i am outta there.

-- If you are a patient please allow up to 12 hours for a reply by email/please note the new email address.Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/ MD

ph fax

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Share on other sites

oh yeah sure that helps sooo much... Pedro- I am not watching that .whatever it is.aughI have never even had to look in a n ear and see a (magnified)bug looking at meick...

I'm no Joanne either. The patient had a nightmare the night before

about things crawling out of her head. I not only took her bug, I took

her nightmares on myself, too....

does it help that I read that the mouth parts are actually

pointing in? What you can sometimes see are really the breathing parts.

>

> Joann

> I admire you i really do

> But that is gross

>

> I see moving mouth parts, man, i am outta there.

-- If you are a patient please allow up to 12 hours for a reply by email/please note the new email address.Remember that e-mail may not be entirely secure/ MD

ph fax

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Did you take a video ? Can you post it on youtube so I can watch it

during my dinner tonight?

> Hi, from Drain Oregon.

>

> You don't need to go to the Amazon to get bot flies. All you have to

> do is sit still around the animals who attract them. The chubby pop-bottle

> shaped larvae grow under the skin and act like a boil, eating the serum made

> by their irritating spiney skin. The difference is, when you look at the

> seeping wound in the center of the boil, you can see their little moving

> mouth parts, wiggling gently around. That is the key: don't squish them

> out. Some few people will develop allergies to the larvae protein and will

> go into anaphylactic shock when you squish them. You anesthetize the area

> locally, gently open the lump with a scalpal cutting from just next to the

> moving mouth part through the wall of the boil, and remove the larvae

> whole. Then you debride and curette the infected area more vigorously with

> your half circle curette and remove all the nasty tissue. Heal by

> secondary intention.

> I used to take these out of dogs and cats several times a year in the

> midwest. Only one taken out of a human teen living on a ranch. Probably

> fell asleep under the haystack.

>

> Joanne Holland DVM/MD

>

>

>

>

> Subject: Botflies, oh my

> To:

> Date: Tuesday, September 30, 2008, 5:38 AM

>

> So if I wasn't a loner and had been practicing with some of you folks,

> could you have told me that I was going to encounter a botfly larva

> before I cut into a patient who had traveled to the Amazon a couple of

> months ago? I didn't realize I'd need tropical medicine in NC, but it

> would have been a good one to have looked up before encountering in

> person....

>

> Haresch

>

>

>

--

Graham Chiu

http://www.synapsedirect.com

Synapse - the use from anywhere EMR.

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