|
Head lice are parasites that usually infest the scalps of school
age children, although adults also get them. Lice attach their
eggs to hair shafts near the scalp and lay five to six eggs
a day.
Lice never willingly leave the head; they stay close to the
scalp for food, shelter, warmth and moisture. They are most
often found behind the ears and at the back of the neck. Hatched
eggshells (nits) may be confused with dandruff.
The mature louse is the size of a sesame seed and has six
legs and hook-like claws that grasp the strand of hair tightly,
making it difficult to dislodge. It feeds on the host's blood
every three to six hours, which can cause scalp itching, though
most cases are asymptomatic. The diagnosis of lice infestation
can be made definitively only if living lice are present.
Here's how to remove lice by combing:
- First comb through wet hair with an ordinary comb to get
rid of knots and tangles.
- Apply conditioner to make it easier to comb the hair with
the fine-toothed comb. Alternatively, one can use olive
oil, or better yet essential
oils that have been shown to treat head lice.
- Comb through every bit of hair, pulling the comb from
the scalp to the hair ends. If you find lice, rinse them
off the comb and down the sink. Work through the hair until
you've gone through it at least twice, flushing away any
lice you find. Afterward, rinse the conditioner out (or
shampoo out any oil).
- Do this every three or four days to make sure that you
catch any new lice that have hatched since you last combed
the hair.
- Keep doing the combing until you no longer find any lice
for at least two treatments in a row.
Common
Misconceptions
- There is no evidence to support the cleaning of sheets
and clothing, or the treating of earphones, baseball helmets,
and furniture with insecticide sprays.
- Infection is spread between people only by relatively
prolonged head to head contact; thus it is typically spread
between people who know each other well. Lice seen on chairs,
pillows, and hats are dead, sick, or elderly or are cast
skins of lice--these cannot infect a person.
- School-based "no-nits" policies (banning children
with nits until all nits are removed) do not make sense--less
than 20 percent of school children with nits will go on
to develop infestation within 14 days. About half of children
sent home for head lice don't have them. Many public health
experts believe that "no-nits" policies should
be abandoned.
- Treatment should not be started unless live lice are found.
Nits are not a sign of active infestation with head lice.
- Cutting hair, or tying it back, is not helpful and may
increase the incidence of infestation by making it easier
for lice to move off of and on to the scalp.
- Head lice are probably more common in girls because girls
are more likely to have close contacts during play--not
because they have longer hair.
- Head lice are harmless. If detached from their host they
are vulnerable and effectively dead.
British
Medical Journal June 7, 2003;326:1256-1257 (Free Full
Text Article)
|