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My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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I caught them one time, once over with Scabiol and they were gone, but no

idea what is in that.

Jane

> My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

> hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

> cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

> traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

> using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

> Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

> itch just to think of it!

>

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my daughter insists that no see ums run from diotomatious

earth

Norm

http://www.scabies-killer.com/

Re: Scabies

My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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Mara, this is Obie, saying that I had a case of Scabies last year; worst

experience of my life. I came to learn that Scabies are little bugs which

are lipid dissolvable, that the secret is not drugs, but soap blended with

water and a little added food grade alcohol. They will dissolve quick

enough. If she'll put her solution into a garden spray bottle, a big one,

she'll have enough to complete the job. She should wash all clothing and

linens each day, open her bed and generously spray the top and bottom

sheets, leave it open to dry, spray the seats she sits in, including the

autos and they will leave. And she should spay herself and rub it in. They

will die, she will survive. Obie.

___________________________________________________________________

My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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Have read where DE is preventative (used for livestock) but not for infestation.

I would use Happy Jack mange soap/shampoo. Works for killing chiggers. Hot

brine bath would do it too.

Re: Scabies

My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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Oh-o-o-o, I really meant to type spray herself. Obie.

___________________________________________________________________

Mara, this is Obie, saying that I had a case of Scabies last year; worst

experience of my life. I came to learn that Scabies are little bugs which

are lipid dissolvable, that the secret is not drugs, but soap blended with

water and a little added food grade alcohol. They will dissolve quick

enough. If she'll put her solution into a garden spray bottle, a big one,

she'll have enough to complete the job. She should wash all clothing and

linens each day, open her bed and generously spray the top and bottom

sheets, leave it open to dry, spray the seats she sits in, including the

autos and they will leave. And she should spay herself and rub it in. They

will die, she will survive. Obie.

__________________________________________________________

My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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Oh, thankyou, Obie. I haven't had such a good laugh in days! And I missed

the typo till you mentioned it.

It's cracking me up!

Sharon

> Oh-o-o-o, I really meant to type spray herself. Obie.

>

> ___________________________________________________________________

>

> Mara, this is Obie, saying that I had a case of Scabies last year; worst

> experience of my life. I came to learn that Scabies are little bugs which

> are lipid dissolvable, that the secret is not drugs, but soap blended with

> water and a little added food grade alcohol. They will dissolve quick

> enough. If she'll put her solution into a garden spray bottle, a big one,

> she'll have enough to complete the job. She should wash all clothing and

> linens each day, open her bed and generously spray the top and bottom

> sheets, leave it open to dry, spray the seats she sits in, including the

> autos and they will leave. And she should spay herself and rub it in. They

> will die, she will survive. Obie.

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I've had them twice; first time picked up from trying shorts on at store,

second from buying the right sized shorts then taking them home and rinsing

them only in the washer (no soap) and then drying them, and that turned out

not to be enough to kill them.

Considering that second experience, Obie's cure makes a lot of sense.

Depending on the area of the body infected you may choose soap/alcohol

solution or DE.

Diatomaceous earth will kill them, but food grade DE makes a muddy mess if

you sweat. Swimming Pool Grade DE will kill them and is comfortable against

the skin and won't turn to mud.

DMSO and some otherwise therapeutic oils did not stop them for me and only

made me more irritated.

It helps to understand what they do and how they live and reproduce.

The females burrow into the skin making them hard to kill. They lay eggs in

the burrows. When the eggs hatch the new females make for a new burrow but

the males crawl all over the place looking for females to mate with. When

the eggs hatch the egg detritus stays in your skin and makes toxins adding

to your misery.

If you keep up the pressure with DE it will kill all crawling mites and you

will break the reproductive cycle. But the itch can last 3 more weeks after

the death of the population because all detritus- eggs and dead mites- must

break down. It is misery. I never found an itch reliever that helped but

that's not to say their isn't something.

I now keep a box of pool grade DE on hand. There have been a few suspicious

itches since. I keep a small container of PGDE in the bathroom. At the first

crawly itch I'll use it and it works quick.

DaddyBob

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I just had another case of these critters the last 2 weeks. I tried neem seed

oil, DE by itself but the results are slow and with the rubbing between the legs

at work it wouldn't take long for it to be gone and I'd have to reapply or

suffer. I found a good remedy that works for me. If you're not allergic to

sulfur, then try the De La Cruz brand of Sulfur Ointment 10%. You can find it in

the Hispanic food section at most Walmart stores for just under $5.00. They also

have a sulfur bar soap from the same maker for around $1.00. I noticed immediate

results and just 3 days later they're almost gone. I, too, use food grade DE to

" dust " my underwear, pant legs and house. Seems they come around this time of

year and show no mercy. Hope this helps your situation safely and quickly.

yHave a great day!

 

Subject: Re: Scabies

To: DimethylSulfoxide-DMSO

Date: Sunday, January 10, 2010, 7:06 AM

 

I've had them twice; first time picked up from trying shorts on at store,

second from buying the right sized shorts then taking them home and rinsing

them only in the washer (no soap) and then drying them, and that turned out

not to be enough to kill them.

Considering that second experience, Obie's cure makes a lot of sense.

Depending on the area of the body infected you may choose soap/alcohol

solution or DE.

Diatomaceous earth will kill them, but food grade DE makes a muddy mess if

you sweat. Swimming Pool Grade DE will kill them and is comfortable against

the skin and won't turn to mud.

DMSO and some otherwise therapeutic oils did not stop them for me and only

made me more irritated.

It helps to understand what they do and how they live and reproduce.

The females burrow into the skin making them hard to kill. They lay eggs in

the burrows. When the eggs hatch the new females make for a new burrow but

the males crawl all over the place looking for females to mate with. When

the eggs hatch the egg detritus stays in your skin and makes toxins adding

to your misery.

If you keep up the pressure with DE it will kill all crawling mites and you

will break the reproductive cycle. But the itch can last 3 more weeks after

the death of the population because all detritus- eggs and dead mites- must

break down. It is misery. I never found an itch reliever that helped but

that's not to say their isn't something.

I now keep a box of pool grade DE on hand. There have been a few suspicious

itches since. I keep a small container of PGDE in the bathroom. At the first

crawly itch I'll use it and it works quick.

DaddyBob

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Long time ago what everybody did for scabies   we used a folk , home made

salve and it worked

Ingredients:  Organic Pork fat .The best one is to make your own.Get a piece of

raw  bacon

                 part, cut on small pieces, slowly  fry till

you get the fat, cool

get some powdered  Sulfur from a pharmacy , mix  both  and apply on the skin

The ratio?    approximate:  100--120 grams  fat,   8-10-12 grams  sulfur

Iva

Subject: Re: Scabies

To: DimethylSulfoxide-DMSO

Date: Saturday, January 9, 2010, 12:11 PM

 

My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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I've read that Epsom Salts sprayed on the body eliminates parasites too.

Patty

Re: Scabies

To:

DimethylSulfoxide-DMSO <mailto:DimethylSulfoxide-DMSO%40yahoogrou\

ps.com>

Date: Saturday, January 9, 2010, 12:11 PM

My sister seems to have picked up a resistant form of Scabies from a

hotel room. She has tried taking Ivermectin and using Permethrin

cream, but the darn bugs keep coming back. It has been very

traumatic--the whole story is too long to post. I wondered about

using DMSO with something like Neem, or perhaps some kind of bath.

Any suggestions? Apparently this is becoming more common--makes me

itch just to think of it!

Mara

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Thanks everyone for your Scabies suggestions. I am passing them

along to my sister--might even try a few myself just to be proactive--

I'm really getting a little paranoid about this having watched what

my sister is going through.

A couple of you suggested sulpher treatments. Is it hard on the skin

to use these--any downsides?

This group is the BEST!! I can always count on it for great

information.

Mara

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