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Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence of multiple myiases in breasts of rural women and oral infection in infants from the human warble fly larvae in the humid Tropic-Niger Delta.

TLDR
Twenty‐eight rural women of the Niger Delta were infected with the human warble fly larva, Cordylobia anthropophaga, and of the women examined, 22 (78.5%) were nursing‐mothers and a positive correlation was drawn between the incidence of breast and oral myiases.
Abstract
Twenty-eight rural women of the Niger Delta were infected with the human warble fly (Tumbu fly) larva, Cordylobia anthropophaga, and of the women examined, 22 (78.5%) were nursing-mothers. Among the percentage of women with cutaneous myiasis, 20 had multiple myiases in their breasts. Larvae were also extracted from the upper and lower lips of breast-fed infants. A positive correlation was drawn between the incidence of breast and oral myiases.

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Citations
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Oral myiasis caused by Musca domestica larvae in a child

TL;DR: Oral myiasis in a 16-year-old girl of hypotonic cerebral palsy is described, which includes episodic fever, fetid breath, erythematous, tender and ulcerated swelling over anterior palate from which pus and maggots were coming out.
Journal Article

Human myiasis in New Zealand: imported and indigenously-acquired cases: the species of concern and clinical aspects.

TL;DR: As many medical practitioners are unaware of myiasis or encounter it rarely, a brief discussion of the clinical features and treatment is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oral infection by Diptera larvae in children: a case report.

TL;DR: Oral myiasis is usually caused by flies of the order Diptera, which is a true obligate parasite of mammals and one of the causes of human myiasis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oral myiasis: case report and review of literature.

TL;DR: A case of oral myiasis in a mentally challenged patient is presented and it is revealed that most of the cases involved the anterior part of the oral cavity of male patients living in developing or underdeveloped countries and also that predisposing factors invariably accompanied infestation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Medicinal Maggots: An Ancient Remedy for Some Contemporary Afflictions

TL;DR: In this review, the biology of myiasis and the history of maggot therapy are presented, the current status of the authors' understanding and clinical use of medicinal maggots is discussed, and opportunities for future research and applications are proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Myiasis due to tumbu fly.

A. Chopra, +2 more
- 18 May 1985 - 
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