wound myiasis - definizione. Che cos'è wound myiasis
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Cosa (chi) è wound myiasis - definizione

PARASITIC ECTOPARASITIC INFECTIOUS DISEASE THAT IS CAUSED BY PARASITIC DIPTEROUS FLY LARVAE (MAGGOTS) FEEDING ON THE HOST'S NECROTIC OR LIVING TISSUE
Fly-blown; Fly strike; Flystrike; Fly-strike; Subcutaneous myiasis; Myiasis of skin; Creeping myiasis; Myiasis of wound; Wound myiasis; Ophthalmomyiasis; Blowfly strike; Furunculous myiasis; Myasis; Cutaneous myiasis; Draft:Nosocomial myiasis; Miasis; Myaisis; Miyasis; Pseudomyiasis
  • Myiasis in a dog's flesh
  • Myiasis in a cat's flesh
  • Wound myiasis in the scalp

fly strike         
¦ noun infestation of an animal with blowfly maggots.
Million-dollar wound         
Blighty wound; Million-Dollar Wound; Million dollar wound
"Million-dollar wound" (American English) or "Blighty wound" (British English) is military slang for a type of wound received in combat which is serious enough to get the soldier sent away from the fighting, but neither fatal nor permanently crippling.
History of wound care         
  • [[Achilles]] tending [[Patroclus]] wounded by an arrow
(Attic red-figure kylix, c. 500 BC)
  • A glass container containing tubocurarine chloride. Tubocurarine was used in ancient times as a poison, but was used in the 20th century as a muscle relaxant.
  • This is a portrait of [[Joseph Lister]], who was the first doctor to begin to sterilize his surgical gauze.
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Wound treatment; Wound care; Wound doctor
The history of wound care spans from prehistory to modern medicine. Wounds naturally heal by themselves, but hunter-gatherers would have noticed several factors and certain herbal remedies would speed up or assist the process, especially if it was grievous.

Wikipedia

Myiasis

Myiasis is the parasitic infestation of the body of a live animal by fly larvae (maggots) that grow inside the host while feeding on its tissue. Although flies are most commonly attracted to open wounds and urine- or feces-soaked fur, some species (including the most common myiatic flies—the botfly, blowfly, and screwfly) can create an infestation even on unbroken skin and have been known to use moist soil and non-myiatic flies (such as the common housefly) as vector agents for their parasitic larvae.

Because some animals (particularly non-native domestic animals) cannot react as effectively as humans to the causes and effects of myiasis, such infestations present a severe and continuing problem for livestock industries worldwide, causing severe economic losses where they are not mitigated by human action. Although typically a far greater issue for animals, myiasis is also a relatively frequent disease for humans in rural tropical regions where myiatic flies thrive, and often may require medical attention to surgically remove the parasites.

Myiasis varies widely in the forms it takes and its effects on those affected. Such variations depend largely on the fly species and where the larvae are located. Some flies lay eggs in open wounds, other larvae may invade unbroken skin or enter the body through the nose or ears, and still others may be swallowed if the eggs are deposited on the lips or on food. There can also be accidental myiasis that E. tenax can cause in humans via water containing the larvae or in contaminated uncooked food. The name of the condition derives from ancient Greek μυῖα (myia), meaning "fly".