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-Short Attention Span Theater- |
Hong Kong man found being eaten alive by maggots |
2006-08-15 |
![]() The grisly affliction is known as human myiasis, a rare disease that results from flies infesting wounds or sores. Usually a problem for older people who have trouble looking after themselves, the flies lay their eggs in fresh or weeping wounds and sometimes even in the mouth, nose and ears. The hatched larvae then feed from the rotting flesh, quickly spreading through the body. In the latest case in Hong Kong, the maggots infested a number of cuts on the man's face. Health officials urged carers and staff at homes for the elderly to be alert to signs of the disease, which has so far this year been detected in seven other people. |
Posted by:anonymous5089 |
#11 Barbara, Barbra, as you well know Az has plenty of those Giant Brown Cockroaches LOL! sweet dreams! >:: |
Posted by: RD 2006-08-15 22:15 |
#10 #9 TW - yep. AND never set our bags down inside the house [didn't need them - we were basically a taxi :-( ]. AND stamped our feet real hard as soon as we set foot outside the house (in case some had gotten on our shoes or pants). We've been to calls in a lot of roachy places, but this one took the cake (or would have, if the roaches hadn't already carried it off). |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2006-08-15 18:42 |
#9 Barbara, you did sterilize the ambulance after, I hope. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2006-08-15 17:32 |
#8 Wasn't this a scene in a Star trek Movie??? |
Posted by: USN, ret. 2006-08-15 14:39 |
#7 Yikes! A definite "eeewwwwww" moment. I can't decide which is worse - this, or the woman we took to the hospital with a cockroach inside her ear canal. (As well as in her clothes and all over her house. Bleechh.) |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2006-08-15 12:24 |
#6 IIRC, there are various species of african flies' larvaes (maggot) which happilly eat a people from inside out, and I know of one horse-disease which consists of flies eggs hatching inside the horse's stomach, with subsequent maggots eating off the organ (this is not even fatal, only debilitating). And we've all seen that picture serie of surgeons removing a live maggot from a patient's eye. |
Posted by: anonymous5089 2006-08-15 11:31 |
#5 I agree with mom. Maggots is apparently used in this article simply to mean the grub phase of an unknown insect, not specifically fly larvae. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2006-08-15 10:07 |
#4 There are all kinds of bugs out there, not all of them benign. From the article below, these parasites start with the rotting flesh but "quickly spread through the body." Hence they are not just feeding on the gangrenous tissue. |
Posted by: mom 2006-08-15 09:58 |
#3 Maggots eat the gangrene. Not the live flesh. The maggots probably saved his life. |
Posted by: Bright Pebbles 2006-08-15 08:59 |
#2 During WWII it was not uncommon for doctors to put maggots on a wound and then cover with a cast. A few days later when the cast was removed all the dead flesh was gone. Maggots will not eat a person alive. |
Posted by: Deacon Blues 2006-08-15 08:34 |
#1 Ewwwww..... But, as I learned from CSI, they feast on the "rotting" flesh, so they aren't exactly eating the man alive..... Ah, the power of the headline! |
Posted by: Bobby 2006-08-15 06:30 |