Woman starts sneezing out bugs after developing an infection

The unusual ailment, which terrified those who witnessed it, was caused by a parasitic fly’s larvae.

Woman starts sneezing out bugs after developing an infection
Woman starts sneezing out bugs after developing an infection Photo: Metro UK

Look away now if you’re squeamish.

A Greek woman had to seek medical attention after sneezing bugs out of her nose.

The unusual ailment, which terrified those who witnessed it, was caused by a parasitic fly’s larvae.

Doctors removed an entire larval colony from her nose and she has since recovered.

They believe she became infected with the bug – Oestrus ovis (Diptera: Oestridae) or the sheep bot fly – due to her close proximity to sheep.

It is a cosmopolitan parasite in hot and dry regions, including countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea.

Accidental human infestations are rare to unheard of but not impossible.

‘The patient was a 58-year-old woman in Greece who worked outdoors on a Greek island, adjacent to a field with grazing sheep,’ Dr Ilias Kioulos, a medical entomologist at the Laboratory of Pesticide Science, Agricultural University of Athens writes.’It was September, during hot and dry weather , and she noticed numerous flies swarming around her face.

‘Approximately one week later, she had onset of progressive maxillary pain, followed over the next two to three weeks by severe coughing.

She reported no other symptoms.

‘On October 15, she sought medical attention after she sneezed and ‘worms’ started coming out of her nose.’
Kioulos and his team say other than bugs coming out of your nose there is little to worry about in terms of the long-term effects of the parasitical infection.

‘An otolaryngologist surgically removed 10 larvae of various stages and one pupa from her maxillary sinusm,’ he added.

‘She was treated with nasal decongestants and made a complete recovery.

None of her co-workers reported similar symptoms.’ While the unpleasant condition is rare in humans, it is fairly common in livestock that go unchecked.

‘The O.

ovis life cycle within its natural hosts, sheep and goats, is well-documented,’ the team said.

‘O.

ovis bot flies infrequently affect humans, most often depositing larvae in the conjunctival sac and rarely into the nostrils, mouth, or external auditory meatus.

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‘The most common clinical manifestation is acute catarrhal conjunctivitis, typically preceded by the sudden sensation of a foreign body.’
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‘The patient we report had a severely deviated nasal septum and appears to have been inoculated with a large larval burden.’ Dr Kioulos said.

‘From a purely anatomic perspective, we hypothesise that the combination of high larval numbers and septum deviation impeded normal egress from the nasal passages, permitting progression to pupation.’
The situation was unusual, as normally temperature and climatic requirements do not allow for pupation.

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Source: This article was originally published by Metro UK

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