How to Be Repellent -- to Bugs
Want to avoid bug bites this year? Get them before they get you.
By Star Lawrence
Reviewed By Michael Smith, MD
WebMD Feature
You're lying in your tent and you hear that high-pitched drilling noise,
tiny at first, then louder, louder. Mosquitoes! Is there anything more
annoying? Well, how about ticks? Or those insane no-see-ums? Sssh, don't
tell, but bugs outnumber humans gazillions to one and are only letting
us live here.
In recent years, however, these aggravating little monsters have become
downright dangerous, spreading serious diseases in many parts of the country.
According to the CDC, more than 20,000 cases of insect-related illnesses
are confirmed each year.
West Nile virus has slowly been making its way across the country since
its arrival in the U.S. in 1999. Unfortunate campers and residents in
many parts of the Northeast trail IV poles as they undergo long-term antibiotic
treatment for tick-borne Lyme disease. Rocky Mountain spotted fever, which
also is tick-borne, has climbed down from the Rockies.
It's war!
Keeping insects at bay is a battle fought on several fronts. First, you
can try to get them before they get you. This is the philosophy behind
community spraying efforts, which often end up bathing humans in insecticide,
killing beneficial insects, and leaving many fertile, harmful insects
left to fight again. At very least, though, you could drain standing water
in your yard so mosquitoes won't breed in it.
People also apply insecticides to themselves or their clothing. One such,
permethrin, is sold in a number of products, including Permanone (check
labels). The CDC recommends applying this to clothing, not skin.
Even the most popular "skin" insecticide, DEET -- used as a
repellent by one-third of the population in the United States -- must
be used with extreme caution. A study done at Duke University and published
in the November 2001 Journal of Experimental Neurology showed that frequent
and prolonged applications of DEET (in an average human dose adjusted
to rat size) caused neurons to die in regions of rat brains that control
muscle movement, learning, memory, and concentration.
"The rats didn't look any different," says lead researcher Mohamed
Abou-Donia, PhD, professor of pharmacology and cancer biology at Duke,
"but when we challenged them with a task, they failed."
Abou-Donia became interested in this subject while studying veterans who
used DEET in concentrations of 70% and in concert with permethrin (not
recommended, by the way). "We think part of the problem experienced
by some vets may be due to DEET," says Abou-Donia, referring to Gulf
War veterans' illness.
If You Must Use DEET
In Canada, DEET concentrations cannot exceed 30%. Here, hundreds of products,
some containing 100% DEET, are on the shelves. Abou-Donia and Ken Holscher,
PhD, an associate professor of entomology at Iowa State University, urge
extreme caution in using DEET.
" Use products containing DEET in low concentrations only (30% or
less for adults, 10% or less for children)
" Never apply DEET products to infants under 2 years old
" Even for older children, be very careful and apply sparingly, if
at all. ("I shudder when I see people having their kid stand there
with his arms out while they spray and spray him," Holscher says.
"You don't want to breathe this stuff, either.")
" Apply it by hand, not spray. Put on your own hands, not the child's,
and wash afterward.
" Don't apply to eyes or lips
" Never apply to wounds
" Don't use DEET or even spray your yard if you are taking medications.
(There are few studies on interactions, Abou-Donia says, and those interactions
can be serious).
Safer Alternatives?
Another approach is to attract bugs to their death. This is the idea behind
zappers. "I tell people to put those in the neighbor's yard,"
laughs Holscher. "After all, (zappers) attract insects before supposedly
killing them."
A fourth approach is to make yourself or your campsite or patio so disgusting
bugs will fly away on their own. After all, how is a mosquito going to
find juicy old you in this vast world without a great sense of smell?
"I would rather go inside than sit next to a big bucket of burning
citronella," Holscher says, "but people use it."
Using the same principle of grossing bugs out rather than killing them,
a skin application newcomer called Repel Lemon Eucalyptus, now on shelves,
claims to be perform as well as DEET and has been registered by the EPA.
Other folks, Holscher says, recommend garlic taken as a pill. "I
wouldn't want to be in a tent with you," laughs Holscher.
What about Skin So Soft, the Avon lotion that some fans consider to be
the best bug repellent going? "Some like it, some don't," Holscher
says. Interestingly, however, Skin So Soft works by putting a barrier
over the skin so bugs can't bite through -- it's not the smell, it's the
goo.
So What's Left to Try?
To avoid gassing yourself or slathering your children with poison, the
best strategy is to keep bugs from getting to bitable areas in the first
place.
" Stay away from places known to be full of ticks or mosquitoes or
during seasons or times of day they are known to be most active (summer,
usually, and dusk and dawn)
" Avoid wearing strong-smelling cologne
" Wear a hat and light-colored, loose clothing (no red)
" Tuck pants into boots, wear long sleeves
" Use mosquito netting on beds in infected areas
" Check for ticks after coming out of the woods
Or you could just go to a movie. The summer ones usually are pretty decent.
Star Hope Lawrence is a medical journalist based in Chandler, Ariz.
Originally published May 17, 2002.
Medically updated May 28, 2004.
© 2002 WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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