Deterrence/Prevention
Individuals traveling to rural endemic areas should be covered at all times with long-sleeved garments and hats. At night, sleeping under a mosquito net is appropriate. Insect repellents are also recommended. Clothing should be hot ironed and dried appropriately to remove any residual eggs.
To prevent wound myiasis, simple antisepsis is usually adequate. Wounds should be cleaned and irrigated intermittently, and proper dressings should be applied. Patients with any type of wound should not be permitted to sleep outside and, if in an indoor or hospital environment, the windows should never be opened, unless properly screened.[13]
Complications
Care must be taken to extract the larvae whole, otherwise a considerable foreign body reaction may ensue. Also, in the case of secondary pyogenic infection, appropriate antibiotics should be administered.
Prognosis
Myiasis is a self-limiting infestation with minimal morbidity and mortality. The major reasons for treatment are reduction of pain, cosmesis, and psychologic relief. Once the larva has emerged or has been removed, the lesions rapidly resolve.[2] However, larvae such as C hominivorax (cause of wound myiasis) can infest around orifices of the head and may burrow into brain tissue.[1]
Patient Education
Patients should be educated about the preventive measures (see Deterrence/Prevention above) to avoid exposure to or being bitten by Diptera flies.
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