Me and my parasite

Hope y’all have had your breakfast - appetizing stuff in this article :yukh:

Invasion of the bodysnatchers, BBC, 26 November 2003

When Tanya Andrews returned from a recent family holiday in Costa Rica, she had no idea she had brought back a gruesome souvenir. A month later she developed an extremely painful lump on her head.

At first, she thought she had an abscess, but then it wriggled.

At the Hospital for Tropical Diseases they recognised the problem straight away - it was the living maggot larva of a botfly.

While Tanya was enjoying her holiday a mosquito had delivered a tiny botfly egg onto the surface of her scalp. The egg hatched into a maggot and burrowed deep inside. Incredibly, this happens to thousands of people every year. As we travel to ever more exotic holiday destinations, we are at the mercy of a whole range of bizarre parasites just waiting to colonise us.

[thumb=E]_39536408_botfly2036483_3841622.JPG[/thumb]
The Botfly larva pulled from Tanya’s head

Soon after travel writer, Broughton Coburn, returned from Nepal he began to experience regular, inexplicable nosebleeds. They continued for three weeks until an embarrassing encounter in a teashop made him realise that something was seriously wrong. As he was being served, the waiter took one look at him and fled in horror.

Broughton chased him down the street urging him to tell him what was wrong. But the boy would only point, wordlessly, at his nose.

Broughton returned home and sat in trepidation in front of a mirror.

His patience was rewarded when a brown worm-like creature emerged from his right nostril and looked around.

“I swear it had two beady eyes on it. And it came out two or three inches, looked around and then retracted. I thought it was a dream, a vision of some sort.”

In shock, Broughton rushed off to his doctor who tried to remove the mysterious creature. But it wasn’t going to give up its home easily. “He had this thing pulled out eight or ten inches and I’m looking at it cross-eyed down the end of my nose, and he’s looking at it, he has a look of absolute horror on his face. And the thing came off. And there was this leech.”

Broughton had been invaded by an aquatic leech. It made its move while he was drinking from a mountain stream. These thirsty bloodsuckers can drink three times their bodyweight at each feed and inject an anaesthetic so their victim feels nothing.

But not all parasites are unwanted and uninvited. As part of a University of Salford experiment to develop a diagnostic test for beef tapeworm, biologist Mike Leahy volunteered to grow this gruesome parasite inside his own gut. Mike swallowed the immature tapeworm cyst with a glass of red wine and the worm started to grow at an initial rate of four centimetres a week.

Twelve weeks later he had to call a halt to the unusual experiment because he was getting married!

After a dose of anti-worm pill Mike passed out an intact tapeworm three metres long.

Disgusted? Well according to Dr Val Curtis, an expert on hygiene, this reaction is a natural survival mechanism. "In the same way that you have an immune system which helps to protect you from parasites we also have a behavioural system.

“When you feel the emotion of disgust it is a driver of your behaviour to make you keep away from or drop the thing that might be about to make you sick.”

And, it seems, we need all the protection we can get. Every living thing has at least one parasite and many creatures, including humans, have far more.

In fact, parasites make up the majority of species on Earth.

:eek:

i always thought ppl were kidding when they said referring to someone else ’ us kai ander to keera hai !! ’ and also gives a new meaning to the good job that desi aunties do when they sit down and find ‘keeray’ in other ppl .. :slight_smile: on a more serious note i think its the same old thing with a new dimension.. everyone has heard of people with parasites in and around their intestines and passing out thru stool etc.. if you are really interested i think you will find this helpful..

Parasites can be found all through the body. Some of them are the familiar, round worm, pin worm, seat worm, hook worm, and tape worm. There are many more. They are in the lungs, liver, and blood. over 80% of all people have them.

nice read...

in Remote Viallages of Pakistan, older ppl use leeches for some remedies, specially like taking harmfull blood out.

German researchers have found results indicating that placing leeches on your joints may be a more technique for symptomatic relief of arthritis than modern medicine is.

You just place some leeches on your knee until they get full of blood and fall off, and then you’re good to go for a couple of days :smiley:

^using leaches was common practice in Europe to 'clean' blood. And in fact it still is, although newer techniques are used for that.

As for the parasites: if u go to Pakistan, or any other tropical country for that matter, high chance ull get some sort of parasite in ur body. But u can reduce the risk by preparing ur food well. And not get into contact with dirty water (like lakes etc.)

Actually, most of us are already infected by a parasite: Toxoplasmosis. it can be anywhere: in ur muscles, brains etc. But we don't notice it cuz we have a good immune system. Often this is the cause why AIDS patients die: Toxoplasmosis of the brain.

lol yeah I saw a documentary about this on tv once, think it was the Discovery Channel. While living in Zambia we were in constant fear of the Putse Fly. Basically this thing used to like damp clothes and laid its eggs on damp clothes outside, so one had to iron all their clothes really well before wearing them, even all your underwear. Zambia was a tropical and wet country where we had rain 6 months of the year, so putse flies were common.

Well once I had the most excruciating pain in my back in 3 different places. The pain only used to arise every few minutes, went to the doctor and she said I had 3 worms in my back which used to come up for air every now and then, and I had to have these removed. It was the putsi fly's larvae. It was horrid, I wouldnt wish it upon anyone. :p

Have u heard of the one where a woman licked an envelope on which a roach had laid an egg…the woman had a cut on her tongue, which became the egg’s new resting place.
I wonder what it felt like to have a roach grow inside ur tongue. :eek:

^ :yukh:

So if most of us are carrying parasites, how do we know if we have one ? whats the symptoms ? how do we go about figuring out and then getting rid of the stupid munkies ?

Argh ewww ewww ewww sick sick how the heck can we prevent ourselves from getting this? I nearly get a heart attack any time i see something slimy that crawls so eww ewww ewww. There should be a disclaimer in the title, I'd have been better off without this info.

You know, I had a really good reason I never visited this section of GupShup...Thanks for giving me a better reason to visit this area more often...:D

OMGGGGGGGG EWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW ughhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by ~NiQ@Bi~: *
OMGGGGGGGG EWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW ughhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
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You likey likey, huh? :D

This was just unreal...

[quote]

"I swear it had two beady eyes on it. And it came out two or three inches, looked around and then retracted. I thought it was a dream, a vision of some sort."

[/quote]

yeah, this stuff is funky! I've heard plenty of horror stories from friends that worked in Central America.. I'd like to go there someday but I think I'll skip the worms and head straight to Argentina :D

okay.. eww!

I had heard about tapeworms being a common parasite in the bodies of people in the indian subcontinent. But the maggot thing has really grossed me out..

There’re some that are beneficial after all..

LONDON, England (Reuters) – Starting this month, British doctors will be able to prescribe maggots to patients with infected wounds, a hospital official said.

He said the state National Health Service had realized that maggots were a cheaper and more beneficial way of treating wounds than using conventional medicine.

Patients would be able to treat themselves at home and avoid the possibility of picking up a hospital infection.
Maggots have been used for centuries to rid wounds of decaying flesh, but after the discovery of antibiotics their use went into decline.

“People didn’t like the thought of creepy-crawlies on their skin,” said Tony Fowler, customer services manager at the Princess of Wales Hospital in Bridgend, Wales.
“But now there is a renewed interest because of the problems caused by the over-use of antibiotics, and the NHS has seen the cost-effectiveness of maggots.”

Research at the Princess of Wales Hospital confirmed that placing sterile maggots on wounds could make them heal faster than conventional medicine.
The creatures devour dead, infected tissue and kill off bacteria that could block the healing process without damaging surrounding tissue, since they cannot ingest healthy flesh.

Previously, patients could obtain sterile maggots only from certain hospitals and research centers.

Re: Me and my parasite

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Nadia_H: *

In fact, parasites make up the majority of species on Earth.
[/QUOTE]

Take the Israelis, for example.