390 Merritt St, St Catharines, Ontario Bed Bug Registry Map
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Address : 390 Merritt St, St Catharines, Ontario

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Bed Bugs, Kissing Bugs Linked to Deadly Chagas Disease in U.S.

Risk may still be low, but findings lead scientists to call for better studies

Triatoma gerstaeckeri collected in Southeast Texas. Credit: Rodion Gorchakov

Every year, the hearts of millions of Central and South Americans are quietly damaged by parasites. During the night, insects called kissing bugs emerge by the hundreds from hiding places in peoples mud and stick homes to bite their sleeping victims. The bugs defecate near the punctured skin and wriggling wormlike parasites in this poop may enter the wound and head for their victims' hearts. There, in about a third of victims, they damage the organs for decades before causing potentially lethal heart disease. Around 12,000 people worldwide die each year from the ailment, called Chagas disease.

Scientists thought Americans were safe in their sturdier houses. Now some are not so sure. Chagas-infected kissing bugs do enter at least some southern U.S. dwellings and bite people living there, recent studies suggest. And a new study published two weeks ago raises the specter of Chagas from another more familiar insect pest: bed bugs, found all over the country. Biting bed bugs have been found to transmit the parasite between mice.

The bed bug effect has not been demonstrated yet among people but these studies have made some physicians and scientists wonder if they have underestimated the chance of acquiring Chagas in this country. We are very likely missing [Chagas] cases, said a May 2014 editorial in The American Journal of Medicine. A systemic survey of the high-risk population in the U.S. is urgently needed.

Thats a sentiment echoed by at least one CDC scientist. We know that people are acquiring this infection in the United States. But it's not common, says Susan Montgomery, epidemiology team lead of the Parasitic Diseases Branch at the CDC. Epidemiologists do know that eight million people in Central and South America and up to 300,000 U.S. immigrants are infected. Can we interpret that to say we know a lot about this? No, we don't know much. We really need more studies to understand what the risk is, Montgomery says.

Kissing bugs carrying Chagas are prevalent throughout the southern U.S. and 24 mammal species can act as reservoirs for the disease. Although it has long been known that kissing bugs carrying the Chagas parasite, which is called Trypanosoma. cruzi, conventional wisdom held that the bugs in the U.S. are repulsed by our well-sealed homes with solid walls and prefer to nest in animal burrows anyway. Until now only 23 cases of U.S.-acquired Chagas have been identified, the first recognized as early as 1955. But the flurry of new results hint the rarity of cases may have more to do with a lack of looking than a lack of disease. There's a long history of positive bugs in the southern United States, and a long history of mammals being infected, says Melissa Nolan Garcia, a research associate at Baylor College of Medicine's National School of Tropical Medicine who has studied southeastern Texas blood donors infected with T. cruzi. It's just that we're not doing enough to look at actual humans.

One actual human, a 74-year-old woman in rural New Orleans Parish, was found to have contracted Chagas from kissing bugs invading her home in 2006. The bugs had bitten her more than 50 times and left her walls and nightgown streaked with bug feces. Twenty dead bugs were found in her home and in an additional building on her property with a bed after fumigation and over half were infected with T. cruzi. Neither nymphs nor eggs were found in the house, indicating the bugs weren't even nesting there, but the home was 29 years old and had many gaps through which bugs could enter.

A year later, researchers collected an additional 49 kissing bugs from inside and around the outside of the womans home and found nearly half the bugs had fed on eight different humans. In the December 2014 issue of Emerging Infectious Diseases the scientists who made this discovery also reported that about 40 percent of all the bugs were infected with T. cruzi and three of the humans had been bitten by infected bugs. According to Garcia, those most likely at risk of contracting Chagas in the U.S. are outdoor enthusiasts in the South and Southwest, along with people living in substandard homes with many cracks and crevices permitting bug entry.

More evidence of human infection has emerged from studies of U.S. blood donors, whose donations have been tested for T. cruzi since 2007. In the last two years small studies have revealed that 7.5 percent of a national sample of Chagas-positive blood donors and 36 percent of a sample of donors from southeastern Texas seemed likely to have acquired their infections here in the U.S. Although blood donor samples may be biased in ways that make them poor representatives of the wider population, some researchers suggest blood donors may actually underrepresent infections: Poor or sick peoplethe most vulnerable to the parasitemay be less likely to donate.

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NMSU work may aid bed bug fight Affordable Bedbug Pest …

December 8th, 2014 Bed Bugs, by admin.

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Bed bugs are very good at smelling out a meal, which is often human blood. The insects smell our perspiration and the carbon dioxide we exhale and come running.

A bed bug is injected with dye at New Mexico State University. Researchers at the school say in a new study that certain chemical compounds interfere with bed bugs sense of smell, offering a potential new weapon in our battle with the insects. (Courtesy of Immo Hansen)

Researchers at New Mexico State University said in a new study that certain chemical compounds interfere with bed bugs sense of smell, offering a potential new weapon for protecting ourselves from the bloodsuckers.

The same compounds also appear to have the added benefit of making it harder for bed bugs to reproduce by hindering the movement of sperm, said Immo Hansen, an associate professor of biology at NMSU.

Most bloodsucking insects find their host by using their sense of smell, said Hansen, the studys lead author. If you can block that, or if you have repellents that cause (bed bugs) to actively avoid a certain area, then you can treat these areas and prevent getting bitten.

The study was published Nov. 20 on PLOS One, a peer-reviewed online publication.

Bed bugs have re-emerged in recent years as a serious and growing problem in the U.S. and around the world, the study said. The insects have also developed resistance to a wide variety of insecticides, calling for new strategies to fight infestations.

HANSEN: Research may help manage bugs

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NMSU work may aid bed bug fight Affordable Bedbug Pest ...

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No bed bug infestation at Towson district courthouse, officials say after inspection

After a weekend inspection, officials say there is no bed bug infestation at the District Court of Maryland's Towson courthouse.

The courthouse closed early Friday after a single bed bug was found in a file room. Over the weekend, exterminators and a team of four dogs inspected the building and its annex and found no other bed bugs, said Angelita Plemmer Williams, a spokeswoman for the Maryland Judiciary.

The file room where the insect was found was treated, and the courthouse was open as usual Monday, Plemmer Williams said.

About 120 judiciary employees work at the Towson courthouse, she said.

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No bed bug infestation at Towson district courthouse, officials say after inspection

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Bed Bugs- U of I Extension

This article was originally published on August 22, 2011 and expired on September 22, 2011. It is provided here for archival purposes and may contain dated information.

Bed bugs continue to be a problem around central Illinois. Rhonda Ferree, University of Illinois Extension, horticulture educator, reports that she recently had bed bugs brought into her Jacksonville office for identification.

The bed bug feeds at night on the blood of humans and other warm-blooded animals including chickens, cage birds, and other birds as well as dogs, cats, and other mammals. Infestations can come from bird nests on buildings as well as in clothes, luggage, and other materials transported from infested areas. People generally do not react to the bites for several weeks, but eventually develop red welts similar to those of poison ivy. Frequently, several welts are produced in the vicinity of a single bite and may even be produced on other parts of the body remote from the bites. Bed bugs do not transmit diseases with their bites, but secondary infections can result from scratching the bites.

Bed bugs are active from about 9 p.m. until 7 a.m., being most active from midnight to 3 a.m. They are relatively fast-moving. Unfed bed bugs are flattened, tan, circular bugs up to three-sixteenths inch in diameter. Bugs that have recently fed are blackish and somewhat rotund from their blood meal. Eggs are white and elongate, being of the size and color of house dust. They are cemented to harborage surfaces and are difficult to see without a hand lens.

During the day, bed bugs hide in cracks and crevices near where the person or other host sleeps. They are most common in or near beds and upholstered furniture, being most common under the dust cover of the box springs and in cracks and crevices of the bed headboard. They are also common along piping on the edge of the mattress and springs, behind pictures and electrical outlet plates, under baseboards, along the edge of carpeting and rugs, and in cracks and crevices associated with the bed frame, bedside table, and dresser. Most are located within three to four feet of the sleeping person, but a few may be twenty or more feet away. Detailed searching of these areas is essential in locating them. They produce black fecal spots in their harborage areas, making it easier to identify these areas even if the bugs are not found.

According to Phil Nixon, Extension entomologist with University of Illinois Extension, control of bed bugs involves a multi-pronged, IPM approach. Bugs are killed with direct application of various insecticides, steam, and cold. All are used by various pest management professionals. Bed bugs show varying levels of resistance to pyrethroids, but are effective when sprayed directly onto bed bugs. There are no labeled insecticides that are effective as a dried spray residue against all bed bugs, but local populations are likely to susceptible to one or more labeled insecticides.

Bed bugs are also killed by exposure to at least 120 degrees F for 30 minutes. Bugs may not be killed by washing, but are killed by typical drying in a clothes dryer. Cold treatment is less consistent in effectiveness, requiring sub-zero degrees F for 2-3 weeks. Mattresses and box springs should be encased in high quality covers such as Protect-A-Bed to eliminate many harborage areas and to avoid direct application of insecticide to them, although proper insecticide application is acceptable. Traps, such as Interceptor, are effective when placed under the legs of the bedstead to catch migrating bugs.

Because bed bug control is very time consuming and involves a multi-directed approach, costs of proper bed control are considerably higher than that for many other pests, whether done by a pest management professional or as a do-it-yourself project.

For those with students returning to college, the Bed Bug IPM website focuses specifically on University of Illinois residence halls and apartments. However, the information applies to anyone in apartments or other schools in the area. For more information, photos, and recommendations, go to bedbugs.illinois.edu

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