While I always say that knowledge is power, perhaps this bit of confirmation of the knowledge I've had since March 2011 isn't necessarily power. Where was this information when I was desperately in search of it?
*********************
SM |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A 1955 report to the medical literature, apparently
overlooked or ignored, sheds new light on the National
Pediculosis Association's efforts to alert the medical community
and health officials to the ability of Collembola to infest
humans.Needham, MA (PRWEB) August 19, 2005 -- Collembola,
also known as springtails or snow fleas, are described in the
authoritative "Biology of Springtails" by Hopkin as among the
most widespread and abundant terrestrial arthropods on earth.
Collembola are referred to as the earliest fossil proof of
insect life on the planet. Why should people care? Collembola
are being found in human hair and skin. Infestations appear to
be communicable from particular environmental conditions or from
one person to another, and there is no known cure once a person
is infested. And worse yet, people desperate for medical help
with this problem are seldom taken seriously.
A 1955 report to the medical literature, apparently overlooked
or ignored, sheds new light on the problem and the National
Pediculosis Association's (NPA) efforts to alert the medical
community and public health officials to the ability of
Collembola to infest or colonize humans. (http://www.headlice.org/news/2005/0519.htm)
In 2004, the National Pediculosis Association reported
Collembola in skin scrapings collected from 18 of 20 research
participants in its study published in the Journal of the New
York Entomological Society at
http://www.headlice.org/news/2004/delusory.htm.
Some Collembola experts disagreed with the NPA's research
findings, insisting that it was impossible for Collembola to
live in human skin.
Deborah Altschuler, lead author of the NPA paper, likens the
scenario of Collembola and humans to the discovery of
Helicobacter (H.) pylori otherwise hidden in the stomach lining,
and the erroneous yet long held assumption that the stomach was
a sterile environment and that peptic ulcers were caused by
lifestyle choices. According to Kimball C. Atwood IV, MD.,
physicians scoffed when first faced with the notion of a
bacterial basis for peptic ulcer disease.
Altschuler asserts that there is more of a scientific basis for
Collembola in humans than the entomologist and physician's
overwhelming acceptance of a psychiatric explanation (Delusions
of Parasitosis) for people's sensations of biting, stinging and
crawling in their skin.
The more symptoms are discounted as delusions, the more
determined sufferers become to document their reality. Such was
the topic of a one hour public radio interview with David from
Canada who told of how Collembola wreaked havoc on his life and
described his battle to have his symptoms taken seriously. (The
interview is available at
www.headlice.org/news.) Barbara Glickstein, MPH, RN, co-host
of New York City's WBAI Radio "HealthStyles," began the
interview stating, “It is invariably the sufferers who bring
first attention of a new disease to the medical community.”
And it was another sufferer, Michael, who searching on the
internet came upon the title of a paper describing Collembola as
human parasites, and notified the NPA.
The NPA says even the experts appear to have missed this 1955
Swedish Medical Journal report in which the well-respected
entomologist, anthropologist and author, Felix Bryk, refers to
the incidence of Collembola in humans as a plague, making
mention of colleagues who during that time had also found
Collembola as parasites in humans. Bryk said the Springtail Sira,
(today's spelling Seira), was a human parasite being confirmed
for the first time in Sweden. All this prompted him to write a
report to the medical literature in which he stated:
“Until now, Collembolans or “springtails” have played a
miniscule role as parasitic insects on the human body from an
entomological/medical standpoint. Rarely, if ever, are they
mentioned in the scientific literature. However the appearance
of a previously unknown Collembolan as an occasional parasite
that for years caused depression in a patient and continues to
do so … has now rightly gotten the attention of scientists.”
The NPA had the article translated from Swedish and the first
English translation of the Bryk report is now available on the
NPA website,
www.headlice.org/swedish, with the permission of the Swedish
medical journal Lakartidningen.
###
|
|
|
|
|
Printer Friendly Version |
Jane Cotter
NATIONAL PEDICULOSIS ASSOCIATION
Visit Our Site
781-449-6487
Email
us Here |
|
Who was Felix Bryk?
Attached is a copy of the original typewritten obituary for Felix
Bryk who died in 1957, one week before his 75th birthday. The NPA
obtained the fascinating remembrance from the Smithsonian Museum's
archival collection of scientists who made significant
contributions to a particular body of entomological work. There
are certain ironies with the document given its mention of Bryk's
contributions in uncovering great rarities as a result of his
bibliographic research.
Uploaded: Aug 17, 2005
File Name:
RU7323b3f16BrykBrinck1.pdf |
|
If you have any questions regarding information in
these press releases please contact the company listed in the
press release. Please do not contact PRWeb. We will be unable to
assist you with your inquiry. PRWeb disclaims any content
contained in these release. Our complete disclaimer appears
here.
|
|
|
|
Disclaimer: If you have any questions regarding
information in these press releases please contact the company
listed in the press release. Please do not contact PRWeb. We
will be unable to assist you with your inquiry. PRWeb disclaims
any content contained in these release. Our complete disclaimer
appears here. |
© Copyright 1997-2006, PR Web. All Rights Reserved
|
|
|
The
National Pediculosis Association,®
Inc.
A Non-Profit Organization
Serving The Public Since 1983.
No comments:
Post a Comment