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SCOLECIASIS (Contact) Please CLICK on Image
& underlined links for details: Scoleciasis generally involves
infections caused by the larvae of moths (Lepidoptera) but can include other insect orders as
well. The disease is rare and
frequently mistaken for other ailments, however Hope (1840) reported on
several cases. However, Matheson
(1950) noted that the only really reliable case was of a male child who
consumed infested raw cabbage, which he subsequently vomited with larvae of
the cabbage butterfly, Pieris brassicae. Church (1936) recorded a case where larvae
of the Corn Borer, Pyrausta nubilalis,
had attacked the body tissues of a woman. = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = = Key References: <medvet.ref.htm> <Hexapoda> Church, H. B. 1936. a case of infestation with the corn borer,
Pyrausta nubilalis
(Scoleciasis). J. Canad Med. Assoc. 668- Hope, F. W. 1840.
On insects and their larvae in the human body. Trans. Ent. Soc. London 2: 256-271. Legner, E.
F.
1995. Biological
control of Diptera of medical and veterinary importance. J. Vector Ecology 20(1): 59_120. Legner, E. F.. 2000.
Biological control of aquatic Diptera. p. 847_870.
Contributions to a Manual of Palaearctic Diptera, Vol. 1, Sci. Herald, Budapest. 978 p. Matheson, R. 1950. Medical Entomology. Comstock Publ. Co, Inc. 610 p. Service, M. 2008.
Medical Entomology For Students.
Cambridge Univ. Press. 289 p Walsh, J. J. 1902.
Winged insects and their larvae as parasites of man. Clinical lecture at the New York Polyclinic
Hospital. |