PDA

View Full Version : 'Super Lice' Leave Parents Scratching Their Heads


stephanie
09-11-2008, 05:40 AM
'Super Lice' Leave Parents Scratching Their Heads

POSTED: 5:31 am PDT September 10, 2008
http://www.nbc11.com/msnbchealth/17439473/detail.html

Three weeks into Maddie Ratcliff's first year of school, the South Carolina kindergartner is already the subject of an unwelcome science experiment: What's the best way to get rid of head lice?
It's a question that has stumped her mother, Brittany Ratcliff, 28, of Charleston, who was horrified to find tiny parasites in her 5-year-old's hair this week - and even more upset to discover that over-the-counter medications wouldn't kill them because the bugs have grown resistant to the poison.

"I'm a little traumatized," said Ratcliff, an office administrator. "I was very grossed out by it."
As school begins, health officials and parents across the country are bracing for this year's bout of what some call "super lice," drug-resistant critters that fend off nearly all pesticides, even as experts say better treatments for the ancient, annoying condition may be waiting in the wings.
Researchers have been warning for years that head lice in the U.S. and around the world are developing immunity to the strong insecticides used in over-the-counter and prescription shampoos. It takes just three to five years for the bugs to adapt to a new product, despite claims to the contrary by the manufacturers, noted Shirley C. Gordon (http://www.nbc11.com/topic/Shirley+Gordon), an associate professor at Florida Atlantic University who studies persistent head lice.
Health officials have continued to recommend the products, however, because over-the-counter medications like the permethrin in Nix, the pyrethrin s in RID, the lindane in Kwell and the prescription malathion in Ovide still work in some people, some of the time.
But the nation's school nurses, often the first defense against the scourge, say it's clear to them that families confronted with the critters are increasingly frustrated by the product failures.
"I had a mom drag her child into my office on the first day of school," said Jill Burgin (http://www.nbc11.com/topic/Jill+Burgin), a registered nurse at Stiles Point Elementary in Charleston. "She had been battling it throughout the summer and wanted advice on where to go from there."
Burgin and other nurses are hoping that potential new solutions - from faster-acting, more effective insecticides to gels that smother the lice to hot air treatments that desiccate them - will come to the rescue.
Itchy condition most common in schoolkids
Infestations of head lice - or pediculosis - long have been common in day care centers and elementary schools, mostly because the close contact among young children is suited to spreading the tiny insects, about the size of a sesame seed, that crawl from head to head and latch onto hair follicles so they can feed on tiny droplets of blood.
Adult lice can live for up to a month on a person's head, but they need to feed several times a day. Without nutrition, lice will die within one to two days of leaving the host.
Exactly how common the critters have become is a subject of much debate. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that between 6 million and 12 million children aged 3 to 11 are infested each year. In a letter in this month's edition of the Journal of Emerging Infectious Diseases, researchers in Greece summarized studies on the prevalence of head lice around the world, reporting that it ranged from 1.6 percent in schoolchildren in the United States (http://www.nbc11.com/topic/United+States) to 30 percent of kids in Turkey and nearly 60 percent among those in Egypt.
However, those figures are questionable at best, said Richard J. Pollack (http://www.nbc11.com/topic/Richard+Pollack), a public health entomologist at the Harvard School of Public Health who has studied lice for decades. Underdiagnosis of head lice is very common among parents and health workers who miss the signs of the tan-colored lice and their tiny, opalescent eggs, called nits. But over-diagnosis is also a problem when it contributes to hysteria that keeps perfectly healthy children out of school. Pollack said he once pursued reports of lice outbreaks the way some weather-watchers chase tornadoes, but stopped when many proved to be parental worry run amok.
"Real as well as imagined infestations are over-treated, often multiple times," Pollack said.
By his calculations, about 1 percent of kids actually are infested at any single moment in time, which would amount to about 400,000 cases in the U.S. each year.
Head lice aren't dangerous and don't spread disease, said Pollack, who scoffs at the notion of "super" lice and considers the bugs more a nuisance than a public health menace. But that argument is a hard sell among parents who encounter the crawly creatures on a child's head.
"I have literally had parents scream on the other end of the phone," said Burgin, the South Carolina school nurse.
Stigma about the bugs still lingers
In Eagan, Minn., some parents blamed the local high school for not monitoring certain students last year when a lice outbreak forced screening of 250 kids and sent 69 home in a single day, said Kathleen Hook, the school nurse. "We live in an affluent area and there's still that stigma," Hook said.
Health officials are quick to emphasize that while lice are most common in children, particularly girls, they're also found in adults and in all kinds of households.
"It has nothing to do with the cleanliness of the home or the socioeconomic status of the parent," noted Amy Garcia, executive director of the National Association of School Nurses.
The shame surrounding head lice has eased a bit in recent years, particularly as more schools have overturned so-called "no-nit" policies that keep kids out of class until all lice eggs have been removed. Under that scenario, too many children missed too much school, losing valuable learning time and suffering psychological damage from being shunned, said Gordon, the researcher at Florida Atlantic University.
In one study she conducted, some children missed up to 54 days of school out of a 180-day school year, nearly a third of classroom time.
Getting kids back to class and families back to normal is the goal of head lice treatment, which still depends largely on the medications whose effectiveness is waning. Sales of lice shampoos and crème rinses accounted for more than $57 million in sales last year, according to IMS, a health care information and consulting company.
Ovide, a malathion lotion, is the only treatment that consistently continues to kill lice in the U.S., even though the bugs have become largely resistant elsewhere in the world, said Terri L. Meinking, a longtime University of Miami lice expert who now runs a private research company.
Is 'Lice Asphyxiator' the answer?
Meinking said several promising products are awaiting approval by the federal Food and Drug Administration in coming months that work in 30 minutes instead of up to 12 hours, as well as a product that prevents lice from closing their spiracles, or breathing tunnels, effectively smothering them. Sciele Pharma Inc. has such a product, dubbed the "Lice Asphyxiator."
Gordon said she's also interested in pending FDA approval of a product created by University of Utah researchers. Called the Louse Buster, it uses a high-volume air dryer that uses hot air to desiccate lice.
Until more effective treatments are found, parents will continue to be forced to experiment with available medications and to resort to old-fashioned treatments such as removing nits with a fine-toothed comb.
That's how Brittany Ratcliff spent most of Monday, painstakingly poring over Maddie's head. She had tried an over-the-counter package of RID after detecting the bugs on Sunday and was stunned to find live lice on Monday morning.
She hadn't considered home remedies that largely have been debunked by scientists, such as coating kids' heads in olive oil or soaking their scalps with Listerine. But, faced with stubborn bugs and an itchy child, Ratcliff is thinking again.
"I called my pediatrician and they really didn't want me to bring her in," Ratcliff said. "The nurse suggested that I saturate her head in mayonnaise, but I haven't brought myself to do that."

rb.
09-11-2008, 05:58 AM
Oh, for goodness sake. We've had lice on one or the other of the kids three times. We've never not been able to get rid of them after the first try. Yes, it takes a gargantuan effort...cleaning/vacuuming everything, packing up stuffed animals, laundry up the wazoo, and up to 1 or 2 am picking nits. Never have we not been able to get rid of them. No, the shampoos DON'T get rid of them all the time, you still have to pick the nits, one by one, from the hair. It says that on every shampoo I've ever used, you can't just rely on the shampoo to take care of the situation with one, relatively quick, wash. It's a hell of a lot of work.

Susie
09-11-2008, 06:51 AM
The mayo clinic.

Slap on mayonnaise, rub it in, and comb it out. It suffocates the critters, the lemon/vinegar in the mayonnaise loosens the glue on the nits, they can't hold on when being combed out due to the slippery oil, AND the egg and oil treatment will make the hair soft, shiny, and supple.

Even the teeniest baby lice get combed out.

Do this every three days for a time or two, and don't forget to change the sheets and pillowcases in between. Cheap and guaranteed to work.

Mousehound
09-11-2008, 07:25 AM
I'm with rb on this one. The % of sucess is = to the % of effort you put into it. There is just no quick cure. We have had them 3 times over the years. My husband never got them, but with 3 females with very long hair, it was horrible. I picked over the bedding every day, and then washed it. Bagged all stuffed animals for 2 months except for 1 that got to stay in the freezer for a week or until the all clear was given. We rotated different lice shampoos and vineger. My weapon of choice was my prized Nisska. That is a steel comb with very long tines about the size of nails. The tines touch each other so that you can't see through this comb. I combed us at least twice a day and checked through the hair strand for strand. Couches, chairs, beds and floors were vacuumed every day. It is exhausting, but it works fast.

ukmum
09-11-2008, 07:58 AM
I agree no quick cure, the mayo trick or conditioner and combing through is the only way...repeating every couple of days....

kaneohegirl
09-11-2008, 08:05 AM
one of the reasons I love having boys.... LICE=BALD....LOL:yes: yep you heard it out come the clippers and baldness ensues

rb.
09-11-2008, 08:13 AM
Oh, I wish I had boys. :lol: Of course, that only works as long as that's an accepted hairstyle. ;)

Yeah, that smother 'em with cheap conditioner is something I've come across, and will use if there's a next time. I've yet to find a nit comb, even the metal ones around here, that will remove nits from both my kids' hair. They have exceptionally fine hair, like my own, and the only thing that's worked for us is for me to run my thumb and index finger along each and every strand of hair, feeling for a nit, then remove it with my nails. Long process, but the nits are EXACTLY the same colour as my kids' LONG hair. ARGH!!

I do have to admit, it's a lot easier dealing with lice, than when DD#1 got ringworm of the scalp from the dog last summer. Count your lice blessings that at least you don't have to treat the pets, too. :lol: For months. Damned fungus.

ukmum
09-11-2008, 08:19 AM
Just reading this thread makes my head itch!

Ter
09-11-2008, 08:23 AM
One treatment never works because you don't get the eggs. A second treatment five to seven days after the first one is required.

Our boys had it several times. The school should alert all parents otherwise some kids will re-infect the other ones.

Combing my boy's hair is not possible because one has curly hair and the other one let his hair grow to girl-like proportions and he has a short temper. So it is shampoo with insecticide and my wife picking out the nits.

Ter

flourbug
09-11-2008, 09:08 AM
I had three daughters who all had fine blond hair that hung down to their waist, they were constantly bringing home notes saying kids in their class had lice, they had sleepovers with kids that were later found to have lice, and we NEVER got lice. People would ask me what I did to prevent it and the answer was - nothing. But now I know. Conditioner. The girls washed their hair every night. After shampooing they would pile on the conditioner and let it sit as they did all the other girly things (the oldest is known for her 'two hour shower' and the other two weren't far behind. I swear tub time was a recreational sport in our house). That had to smother anything before it got started.

SarahS
09-11-2008, 09:36 AM
The mayo and conditioner treatments should be first-line, with lots of combing and cleaning of the house and bedding. But as a last resort, oral Bactrim actually has an 83% success rate.

Susie
09-11-2008, 09:36 AM
Just reading this thread makes my head itch!

Me, too.

Olive (or ordinary) oil or conditioner works fine, but mayonnaise really suffocates the little headmonsters.

rb.
09-11-2008, 09:44 AM
flourbug, I've been told that, like fleas, lice don't like some people's blood, and don't stick around, which would explain why sometimes kids in contact don't have them. Also, from what I've read, it's the conditioner (or other leave-on hair products like mousse, gel and hairspray) that keeps the lice from being able to attach the nits to the hair shaft. That's why they say the cleaner the hair, the more the lice like it. Maybe you had a double dose of the luckies. I've made my youngest, who's had them twice in the last 5 years, shampoo with Pert which has a conditioner in it. And until this last year, I added tea tree oil to the shampoo as well. I cut that out when I started reading about hormone issues with boys and tea tree oil.

rb.
09-11-2008, 09:47 AM
Susie, I used to mayo my hair as a teen in the 80s when I'd damaged it too much from perms and dyes. Nice thing about mayo is that it doesn't run and drip in your eyes. I would think that actually would be an advantage over using a runny oil like olive oil or a cheapie conditioner. They just can't match mayo's consistency.

flourbug
09-11-2008, 09:50 AM
It had to be the luckies (and maybe the conditioner) with lice, rb. because my kids brought home just about everything else.

spitting alpaca
09-11-2008, 10:51 AM
I agree that most failures have to do with lack of follow-through from the families.

In our clinic we have switched to Lice Cure (http://www.americarx.com/Products/7314.html) which has done a much better job of reducing "treatment failures". I suspect that it works better since it comes with a nice lice comb, magnifying glass, and a lot of instructions.

The problem with mayo is that it is really hard to wash out of the hair and I always worry about salmonella since the mayo is supposed to stay on the hair for a long period of time to work and young children cannot be trusted to not get any of it into their mouths.

Susie
09-11-2008, 10:58 AM
No, mayo isn't at all difficult to rinse out....just rinse, shampoo, rinse, shampoo again, and then rinse and shampoo one more time. One more cycle than usual is all. Really.

rb.
09-11-2008, 11:08 AM
The problem with mayo is that it is really hard to wash out of the hair and I always worry about salmonella since the mayo is supposed to stay on the hair for a long period of time to work and young children cannot be trusted to not get any of it into their mouths.

If you're using a mayo, that's not a true mayo, then there should be no concerns about samonella, I believe. We have, in Canada, a product called Miracle Whip that is mayo with vinegar, and is commonly used in place of true mayo, having the same consistency. From food safety people I have heard it said that salads made with this aren't subject to the temp issues like real mayo.

I never had any trouble getting it out of my hair with two washings as a teen.

Potemkin
09-11-2008, 11:21 AM
I would guess it is some kind of eradication error.

Lack of correct application or something was missed.

You have to do every head in the house, every hat, every pillow case, every sheet, every plush toy, vacuum everything.

You may have to do it a couple of times.

BTW, there is a 100% way of making sure you get them all on someone's head. Shave them all. :D

A.T. Hagan
09-11-2008, 11:35 AM
Back when I worked for a county health department in their school health program head lice were a nearly every day occurence if we visited more than one school in a day. I've seen more than one child come in with their heads shaved smelling faintly of kerosene.

It is vital to rewash the child's hair with the lice shampoo again within seven days to kill the next generation of lice that will hatching. And as Pot says you've got to wash or otherwise sanitize everything that comes into contact with the child's head. If they have siblings you'd do well to go ahead and wash their hair as well.

.....Alan.

rb.
09-11-2008, 01:21 PM
BTW, there is a 100% way of making sure you get them all on someone's head. Shave them all. :D

That doesn't work quite so well on pre-teen and teen girls. Emotionally scarring. :lol:

Ugh. Kerosene. My brother got them one summer, and my mother lost her ever lovin' mind. Called her MIL, what do I do? Bring 'em on over and we'll kerosene 'em. I didn't have them, but as I was starting high school in a week, I allowed them to kerosene me up. Baaaaaaad move. I'm really not fond of kerosene now. Nothing like breathing it in for a few hours. :puke:

Potemkin
09-11-2008, 02:36 PM
That doesn't work quite so well on pre-teen and teen girls. Emotionally scarring. :lol:

Call it the "Sinead O'Conner" look. :laugh:

http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/06.22.00/gifs/sinead-0025.jpg

rb.
09-11-2008, 09:24 PM
That would actually work for one DD, as it does for Sinead. The other one? Not so much. :lol:

Thing is, I can't imagine going through, hair by hair, with short hair. At least with long hair I can part it, and move it aside while checking. Short hair would just fall right back. So I guess if I had boys I WOULD shave them.

Mama Alanna
09-11-2008, 09:42 PM
You have to do every head in the house, every hat, every pillow case, every sheet, every plush toy, vacuum everything.Yep, every head in the house, whether or not they seem to be infested. We fought a constant battle with them about 10 years ago -- 2 different OTC shampoos, vaseline on the hair, flea bombing, washing everything washable at the laundromat and using the big HOT commercial dryers, putting plastic covers over all the pillows and mattresses -- and they kept cropping up. Until finally we held the menfolks down and shampooed them too, over their loud protests. ("But I don't have enough hair for them to hide in!" wailed DH. :lol: ) No, we never found any lice on them -- but getting EVERYBODY appeared to make the difference.

LvDemWings
09-11-2008, 09:53 PM
A good lice/nit comb to use on those with very very fine hair is a flea comb designed for cats. One of the kids here had a sleepover and someone brought lice into the house. Unfortunatly we all got them. Those plastic combs broke in minutes and the pharmacy didn't have anything else. The pharmacist make the recomendation of metal flea combs from the pet store and that worked like a charm.

Susie
09-11-2008, 10:37 PM
The best comb I have found is called 'NitFree'. Long, close-together teeth, and guaranteed to last a lifetime.

We once had a problem with the entire family being infested after I made a nifty couch from a couple of mattresses and lots of throw pillows...the headmonsters used the pillows as a transportation system to go from head to head when we were all lazing around on the couch together.

Some kids never seem to get them and some kids seem to be breeding farms for them.

Arianwen
09-12-2008, 12:19 AM
*scratch* *scratch*

:eek: