US Pharm. 2007;32(6):12-15.
With the advent of warmer weather, seasoned pharmacists anticipate an onslaught of patients seeking assistance with summer-related illnesses, such as sunburn, poison ivy, and insect-related problems. The incidence of insect stings and bites has steadily risen over the past several decades as the earth's climate has warmed. Warmer winters kill fewer insects, allowing their populations to grow and increasing the risk of human–insect contact. While some creatures discussed here are actually arthropods, the lay public popularly describes them all as insects. The term insects will include arthropods for purposes of this article.
The Range of Troublesome Insects
Bothersome
insects fall into several categories. The genus Hymenoptera encompasses
winged stinging insects such as wasps, bees, and yellow jackets, as well as
wingless ants. Biting insects (and arthropods) include blood-dependent
varieties such as ticks, mosquitoes, bedbugs, chiggers, along with spiders,
scorpions, and centipedes.
Minor Reactions
The
consequences of insect stings and bites are as broad as the genera that
produce them. Thus, pharmacists must distinguish between minor reactions that
can be treated with self-care and more serious insect-related problems that
should be referred to a physician or an emergency room. Most insect stings are
of little consequence.1 The discomfort from stings of wasps, bees,
ants, and yellow jackets is transient. Similarly, most insect bites are minor
nuisances, such as those from mosquitoes, non–disease-carrying ticks,
chiggers, and bedbugs.
Treatment of Minor Insect Sting/Bite Reactions: Most minor insect-related reactions can be treated with traditional nonprescription products. Generally, the patient should not use the products more than seven days and should see a physician if the condition clears up but recurs within a few days. Effective ingredients include local anesthetics. However, some (e.g., lidocaine, dibucaine, tetracaine) may cause toxicity, including tremors, convulsions, and cardiac arrest. Thus, pharmacists should choose products containing safer local anesthetics, such as dyclonine, benzyl alcohol, benzocaine, and pramoxine. External analgesics/counterirritants (e.g., menthol, camphor, methyl salicylate) may also provide relief. Many products contain these ingredients, including Dermoplast Hospital Strength Aerosol (20% benzocaine, menthol 0.5%), Americaine Aerosol (20% benzocaine), and Itch-X Spray/Gel (10% benzyl alcohol, 1% pramoxine HCl).
Hydrocortisone (e.g., Cortaid, Cortizone, Lanacort) has antipruritic and anti-inflammatory effects. The patient should stop use if the bite worsens, lasts more than seven days, or clears up but recurs within a few days.
Topical antihistamines such as diphenhydramine carry the risk of toxic psychosis if used on large areas of the body, especially if the patient simultaneously ingests oral diphenhydramine. The FDA proposed label warnings cautioning patients not to use this antihistamine more often than directed, not to take oral diphenhydramine at the same time, to avoid use on chicken pox, poison ivy, sunburn, and on broken, blistered, or oozing skin, and to avoid use on large areas of the body.2 Diphenhydramine can also cause contact dermatitis.3,4 The potential gravity of misuse is an obstacle against recommending topical diphenhydramine.
Treatment of Hives Due to Insect Stings:Insect stings may cause raised lesions known as urticaria, or hives. The only product FDAapproved for hives is Claritin Hives Relief, with 10 mg of loratadine per tablet, appropriate for patients ages 6 and older. It should not be used if the hives are an unusual color or appearance (bruised or blistered), on hives that do not itch, or in patients who are pregnant or breast-feeding, have liver/kidney failure, are allergic to loratadine, or are taking loratadine for any other reason (e.g., allergic rhinitis). It must not be used if the patient experiences symptoms of anaphylaxis, such as trouble swallowing, dizziness, unconsciousness, tongue swelling, perioral or intraoral inflammation, dysphasia, drooling, wheezing, or dyspnea. These patients require immediate emergency care.
Serious Reactions to Insect Stings
Occasionally,
minor local reactions to insect stings become large-scale erythematous
inflammation that lasts several days and can involve an entire limb.3
The patient may also experience unusual problems after insect stings, such as
alopecia, neurologic reactions, renal disease, renal failure, myocardial
infarction, alveolar hemorrhage, rhabdomyolysis, ocular lesions, cataracts,
intravascular coagulation, and thrombocytopenic purpura.5-12 A
patient demonstrating any of these reactions must seek immediate physician
care.
Africanized "Killer Bees" and Fire Ants:
Fire ants and killer bees are increasingly responsible for major problems
throughout large areas of the
Africanized killer bees are an accidental hybrid
created when African bees under investigation by a bee geneticist escaped into
the Brazilian forest and mated with native bees. These aggressive bees entered
the
There are two subspecies of imported red fire ants
(Solenopsis invicta), both native to
Ticks: Although tick bites were once thought to be a minor nuisance, that changed with the advent of two bacterial infections transmitted by them: Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF) and Lyme disease. While repellents containing DEET will reduce the risk of tick bites, they must be used according to labeled directions, as they may otherwise produce adverse reactions. Permethrin is a spray repellent used for ticks and other crawling arthropods but is only applied to clothing, sleeping bags, tents, and mosquito netting.21 A residual remains in the linen after application for many washing cycles. Patients should be urged to inspect themselves thoroughly after entering wooded areas where ticks are known to exist.
RMSF has an incidence of 2.2 cases per million citizens, with 56% of cases occurring in North and South Carolina, Tennessee, Oklahoma, and Arkansas.22,23 RMSF presents with sudden onset of fever, nausea, headache, muscle pain, and a rash, usually on the arms or ankles.22-24 The nonspecific nature of these symptoms may cause patients to ask for advice in choosing a nonprescription product. When any of the cardinal symptoms appear in isolation, nonprescription products may be useful, as they are often harmless. However, the pharmacist must be alert to the symptoms coexisting in the same patient. It is helpful to ask the patient about a recent history of hiking in grass or weeds.
Lyme disease symptoms include fever, chills, muscle and joint aches, headache, fatigue, swollen lymph nodes, and a characteristic bull's eye skin rash known as erythema migrans.25,26 The rash begins at the site of the tick bite, starting three to 30 days postbite. The rash will expand slowly and may eventually be 12 inches in diameter. The center often clears, giving it the appearance of a bull's eye. Lyme disease and RMSF can both produce permanent adverse effects. However, if these infections are recognized early, appropriate treatment can prevent long-lasting morbidity. The pharmacist can be a key player in referring patients with a history of possible tick bite and suspicious symptoms.
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