1 / 39

Pest, Plagues & Politics Lecture 12 Dangerous Insects

Pest, Plagues & Politics Lecture 12 Dangerous Insects. Yes, it is true!!. Some insects can hurt you!!!. Stinging Rose caterpillar. Key Points. Modes of Action Venomous Hymenoptera Wasp vs. Bee vs. Ant Allergic vs. toxic response Anaphylaxis Other Families of dangerous insects

dessa
Download Presentation

Pest, Plagues & Politics Lecture 12 Dangerous Insects

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pest, Plagues & PoliticsLecture 12Dangerous Insects Yes, it is true!! Some insects can hurt you!!! Stinging Rose caterpillar

  2. Key Points • Modes of Action • Venomous Hymenoptera • Wasp vs. Bee vs. Ant • Allergic vs. toxic response • Anaphylaxis • Other Families of dangerous insects • Psychological Aspects

  3. Cantharidin • Poisonous chemical secreted by the blister beetle

  4. Dangerous Insects Modes of Action • Bites • Stings • Allergies • Dermatitis • Myiasis • Psychological Disorders

  5. Dangerous Insects • Mortality • 40 to 100 deaths annually in the U.S. • Date Rate (per 1,000,000 people) • Stinging Insects0.20 • Alcohol related 500 • Handgun related85 • Lightning 0.50 • Scholastic football0.12

  6. Insects vs. Arachnids Arachnid venom can be toxic enough to kill with a single envenomation one bite = one death With insect venom, death is “usually” caused by an over reaction of the immune system.

  7. Poisonous Spiders in Oregon • The black widow • The yellow (or gold) sac spider • The hobo spider (aggressive house spider) The brown recluse does not naturally occur in the PNW.

  8. Black Widow

  9. Hobo Spider

  10. Hobo spider bite – mildly venomous – often necrotic

  11. Brown Recluse

  12. Camel Spider – a Solipugid {not a real spider}

  13. Venomous Hymenoptera • Mass envenomation • LD50 of honey bee venom = 1,000 stings • Toxicity of honey bee venom  eastern diamond back rattle snake. • Who is going to stick around to get one thousand stings??

  14. Honey Bee Stinger

  15. Hornet Stinger NO Barbs

  16. Venomous Hymenoptera • Ant Venom • family Formicidae • offense-defense-communication • Wasp Venom • multiple families • prey capture - defense • Bee Venom • multiple families • defense only

  17. The Red Imported Fire Ant – Solenopsis invicta

  18. Dangerous Hymenoptera • Toxic vs. Allergic Response Toxic • results from multiple stings • sometimes difficult to distinguish from an allergic response • Symptoms • gastrointestinal dysfunction • fainting • muscle spasms • convulsions • et alia

  19. Dangerous Hymenoptera • Allergic Reaction • an altered sensitivity due to a previous exposure to the venom • 0.08% of the general population • Are You of this small minority?? • Find Out!!!! • Get treatment!!!!

  20. The Allergic Response • Normal {note: everyone is allergic} • it hurts!! • Pain lasts a variable period • Accompanied by the appearance of a wheal • Soreness & itching which usually persists for 24 to 48 hours.

  21. The Allergic Response • Large Local Reaction • swelling at the sting site & beyond over a 4 to 12 hour period • persists for more than 48 hours • soreness & itching can be severe • not Fun • but not overly serious from a medical standpoint.

  22. The Allergic Response • Systemic Reaction • Deserves serious medical concern • Potentially life threatening • Body responds to the sting in areas far removed from envenomation site. • Anaphylaxis can result

  23. ANAPHALAXIS • Cutaneous • rashes-swelling-hives on various parts of the body • Vascular • dizziness, fainting & unconsciousness • Respiratory • difficulty breathing, constrictions in throat • Misc. • chills, fever, anxiety, incontinence

  24. ANAPHALAXIS • Medical Emergency • 58% of deaths occur within one hour of sting • 75% of deaths occur within six hours of sting • Treatment • EPINEPHRINE (adrenaline) • Causes vasoconstriction, which counteracts the vasodilatation properties of venom

  25. Treatment • Currently two systems • ANA-KIT • EPIPEN • both are sub-epidermal injections of pre-measured doses of adrenaline • Requires a prescription to obtain • Oregon law allows persons other than physicians to administer.

  26. Immunotherapy • Is all the trauma necessary?? NO!! • Desensitization is effective ca. 95% of the time.

  27. ERUCISM • Etymology • Latin ‘eruca’ = caterpillar • Envenomation by toxic setae of caterpillars Puss moth caterpillar Hickory Tussock Moth caterpillar

  28. ERUCISM Io Moth

  29. ERUCISM Saddleback caterpillar Sibine stimuli A Saturnine moth common to the east side of Oregon

  30. LEPIDOPTERISM • An allergic response triggered by the wing scales of any number of moths &/or butterflies. • Expressed by respiratory distress.

  31. Hemiptera • Some formidable biters in several families • Assassin Bugs • family Reduviidae • Predaceous on other insects • utilize extra-oral digestions • enzymes injected into the food/prey item • a fine line between venom & digestive enzymes

  32. Rhodnius prolixus dining

  33. Coleoptera • Bombardier Beetles • family Carabidae • When disturbed release a hot-toxic spray of quinones & H2O2 at temperatures of 100° C.

  34. Psychological Aspects • Entomophobia • a morbid, irrational fear of, or aversion to insects. • Most deeply manifested by the condition of delusional parasitosis

  35. Delusional Parasitosis • Perceived to be “infested” with insects • in or under the skin • around or just inside body openings • in sputum • internally, particularly the stomach or intestines • in the vicinity of the sufferer, particularly in the home • Use of home remedies • Self exposure to often dangerous levels of insecticides.

  36. Delusional Parasitosis • SYMPTOMS • a long time sufferer • seen by numerous physicians, exterminators, parasitologists, hygienists & entomologists • fiercely rejects negative findings • exhibits the “matchbox sign” • delivers or mails containers with “bugs” • samples consist of anything but “bugs” • self-mutilation can occur

  37. Key Points • Modes of Action • Venomous Hymenoptera • Wasp vs. Bee vs. Ant • Allergic vs. toxic response • Anaphylaxis • Other Families of dangerous insects • Psychological Aspects

More Related