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July 28, 2004 Federal Investigators Arrest Mold Company President   Volume 1 Issue 121  
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Flick, Don't Squash, Mozzies
by news.com.au



news.com.au

FLICKING away pesky mosquitoes may be better than swatting the insects, which can cause infection if their body parts are smashed into human skin, according to US researchers.

The issue is reviewed in an article published this month in the New England Journal of Medicine that focuses on a 57-year-old Pennsylvania woman who died in 2002 of a fungal infection in her muscles called Brachiola algerae.
Doctors were puzzled because the fungus was thought to be found only in mosquitoes and other insects.

However, they said it was not found in mosquito saliva like West Nile virus and malaria, so a simple mosquito bite could not have caused the infection.

The article's authors concluded that the woman must have smashed a mosquito on her skin, smearing its body parts into a bite.

"I think if a mosquito was in mid-bite, it would be wiser to flick the mosquito off rather than squashing it," said one of the authors, Christina Coyle, of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

Many people already take similar advice when removing ticks. Doctors had long cautioned that squashing a tick on skin could put a person at greater risk of Lyme disease, said Dawn Wesson, a tropical medicine specialist at Tulane University.

Despite the Pennsylvania woman's case, Roger Nasci, a mosquito expert at the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention facility in Fort Collins, Colorado, said there was no scientific basis for switching to flicking.
He also pointed out that flicking the bugs off was not a permanent solution.

"Unfortunately, then the mosquito often goes on to bite another person, or bites you again."

The Associated Press
This report appears on NEWS.com.au.
 

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