The Research Journal of Satyendra Sunkavally, page 64.
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from Poland
seen from Bulgaria

seen from Puerto Rico

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Bulgaria

seen from Russia

seen from Bulgaria

seen from Germany
seen from France
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Singapore
The Research Journal of Satyendra Sunkavally, page 64.
Can Dogs Bring Chiggers Into the House?
Learn if your furry friend can be a chigger chauffeur and how to stop these hitchhikers from infesting your home.
Worried about chiggers hitching a ride on your dog? Our vet-approved guide debunks the myth and gives tips to keep your pup (& your home) ch
Damn chiggers! I got into them AGAIN! That's the third day in a row, and I've just spent half and hour trying to scrape off as many as I could.
In case you don't know, chiggers are teeny, tiny little things. They look like moving specks of dirt. If you have good eyes for small things, or use a magnifying glass, they look a bit like miniature ticks, and in fact my family always referred to them as "baby ticks". Don't let their size fool you into thinking they are no big deal. They are so small you don't actually feel them on you until they are biting. They don't stay still except when they are biting, and they don't just brush off. Also, you don't get dozens on you at once, you get hundreds. You end up looking like you have broken out in a nasty rash wherever they ended up before you realize you even got into them.
Oh, and those bites? Itchy as hell! Mom always says they "Itch like the mischief", and it's the only thing she says that about. I've been bitten by so many bugs, and I get into poison ivy all the time (more than once with it on my face so badly my eyes were nearly swollen shut) and I think these bites might be the itchiest thing I have to put up with.
Trying not to scratch is a constant battle. It's so easy to end up with not just inflamed and itchy bites, but infected wounds from the impulse to claw at them. Scratching myself bloody in my sleep happens constantly.
So now I have gotten into them THREE days in a row! I still can't figure out where. I've narrowed it down to two places I can't avoid, which doesn't really help....
Seriously, these bites are driving me nuts!!!!
Some people develop a food allergy to red meat, and researchers suspect chiggers bites are to blame.
Chiggers are a common summertime irritation. These tiny parasites — a type of mite — can leave itchy, red spots on the skin. And that itch can be so severe that it drives people to distraction. But a new report suggests these mite bites might trigger even bigger problems: an allergy to red meat.
Chiggers are the larvae of harvest mites. These tiny spider relatives hang out in forests, shrubs and grassy areas. Adult mites feed on plants. But their larvae eat skin. When people or other animals spend time in — or even just walk through — areas with chiggers, the larvae may drop or climb onto them.
Once the larval mites find a patch of skin, they inject saliva into it. Enzymes in that saliva help break down skin cells into a gloopy liquid. Think of it as a smoothie that chiggers slurp up. It’s the body’s reaction to those enzymes that make the skin itch.
But the saliva may contain more than just enzymes, finds Russell Traister. He works at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, N.C. As an immunologist, he studies how our bodies respond to germs and other invaders. Traister teamed up with colleagues at Wake Forest and the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. They also worked with an entomologist, or insect biologist, at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville. The group reported on three cases of people who developed allergies to red meat after a skin infestation of chiggers. Such allergies had previously been seen only after tick bites.
The body detects an invader
How could a chigger’s dining on skin make the body later react to eating meat? Red meat comes from mammals. And the muscle cells of mammals contain a carbohydrate made from small sugar molecules known as galactose (Guh-LAK-tose). Scientists call this muscle carb “alpha-gal” for short.
Meat is rich in muscle. Normally, when people eat red meat, its alpha-gal stays in their gut, where it causes no problem. But some critters, such as the Lone Star tick, have alpha-gal in their saliva. When these ticks bite someone, that alpha-gal gets into their blood. The victim’s immune system can react as though alpha-gal is some germ or other invader. Their body then creates lots of antibodies against alpha-gal. (Antibodies are proteins that help the immune system respond quickly to what the body views as a threat.)
The next time these people eat red meat, their bodies are primed to react — even though that alpha-gal poses no real harm. Such immune responses to non-threatening things (like pollen or alpha-gal) are known as allergies. Symptoms may include hives (big, red welts), vomiting, a runny nose or sneezing. Affected people may even go into anaphylaxis (AN-uh-fuh-LAK-sis). This is an extreme allergic reaction. It makes the body go into shock. In some instances, it can cause death.
Allergic reactions to alpha-gal are tricky to identify. They only show up several hours after eating meat. So it can be hard for people to realize the meat was responsible.
Hunting down the cause
Traister and his team knew tick bites could trigger alpha-gal allergies. It’s not very common, but does happen. So when they met three patients who had recently developed the allergy, it wasn’t too surprising. Except that none had recent tick bites. What each patient did have in common: chiggers.
One man became allergic after his skin had become infested by hundreds of chiggers while hiking. He had been bitten by ticks years earlier. But his meat allergy only showed up after the chigger encounter — soon after.
Another man had worked near some shrubs. He found dozens of tiny red mites on himself. His skin also developed the telltale red blotches from some 50 chigger bites. A few weeks later, he ate meat and for the first time ever reacted by breaking out in hives.
And a woman similarly became allergic to meat after chigger bites. Although she too had suffered tick bites years earlier, her meat reaction emerged only after the chiggers.
Traister’s group described these cases July 24 in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology: In Practice.
Could this be mistaken identity?
It might seem these chigger encounters were clearly behind the new cases of alpha-gal allergy. But Traister cautions that it can be hard to know for sure. Chiggers look a lot like “seed ticks” — the tiny larvae of ticks. The skin reaction to each also looks similar and becomes equally itchy.
For these reasons, Traister says, “It is easy for a layperson to misidentify [what] has bitten them.” And that, he adds, makes it difficult to prove chiggers caused the meat allergy. Still, the circumstances certainly suggest the three new cases got their meat allergy from chiggers. Two of them even described their attackers as red — the color of adult mites. The researchers also questioned several hundred other people with alpha-gal allergy. Some of them, too, said they never had been bitten by a tick.
“The notion of chiggers causing red-meat allergy makes sense,” says Scott Commins. He is an immunologist at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. He was not involved with the study but notes that chiggers and ticks share some habits. “Both can take blood meals through the skin,” he says, “which is the ideal route to create an allergic response.”
The researchers are working to figure out whether chiggers are the source of some alpha-gal allergies. Fortunately, it’s not something to get too worried about. “Overall, this allergy is very rare,” Traister says. Few people infested by ticks or chiggers ever become allergic to meat.
This red bug is called a Chigger, watch out, they bite!
If there is a hell, it is full of chiggers. That is all.
Repetitive Strain
With symptoms including fevers and rashes, scrub typhus is a disease estimated to affect a million people annually, mostly in Asia, and is caused by the bacterium Orientia tsutsugamushi. Transmitted by the bites of mite larvae, known as chiggers, O. tsutsugamushi is an obligate intracellular pathogen, meaning that it must be inside a host cell to survive. Compared to other closely-related bacteria with a similar lifestyle, it has a large genome, featuring many repeated sequences of DNA. These repeats are represented in this diagram: along the genome, pictured as a grey circle, each coloured bar indicates a region of DNA with multiple copies, linked together to show where the repeats are found. Piecing together a genome with so many repeats is challenging, but new sequencing techniques recently enabled more accurate reconstructions of genomes from multiple O. tsutsugamushi strains, providing more detailed insights into an important yet relatively poorly-understood pathogen.
Written by Emmanuelle Briolat
Image by Elizabeth Batty, created using Sibelia (http://bioinf.spbau.ru/sibelia) and Circos (http://circos.ca/ )
Mahidol-Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Faculty of Tropical Medicine, Mahidol University, Bangkok, Thailand, Centre for Tropical Medicine and Global Health, Nuffield Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Originally published under a Creative Commons Licence (BY 4.0)
Published in PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, June 2018
You can also follow BPoD on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook
#HappyBirthdayMelissaMcBride #Repost @sauceboss_89 (@get_repost) ・・・ Happy Birthday to the one and only Melissa McBride. I’ll never forget you double fisting bug spray and spraying me down on my first day on set “just to make sure I don’t get destroyed by chiggers.” The sweetest. • • • • • #melissamcbride #twdfamily #bts #behindthescenes #thewalkingdead #georgia #southgeorgia #chiggers #season8twd #bugspray setlife #amcthewalkingdead #twdfandom #twdfans #happybirthday #twitter #carolpeletier #carol #badass #daryldixon #rickgrimes #negan #hilltop #alexandria #kingdom #ahk #squad @bigbaldhead @amcthewalkingdead