Cimex

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Background

Microbiology

  • Cimex species (primarily Cimex lectularius and Cimex hemipterus) cause bed bug infestations
  • Insect with well-developed eyes and head with a flat, round body, that can become engorged and round after feeding

Epidemiology

  • Almost eradicated from developed countries due to widespread use of DDT, but is now reemerging
  • Have never been confirmed to carry infection, though some unconfirmed hypotheses that can transmit hepatitis B and E
  • Night feeding, feeding for 5 to 10 minutes before leaving to digest
  • Can hide essentially anywhere in any dark crevice, even telephones, cracks in walls, drawers, baseboards, etc

Clinical Manifestations

  • Bites are typically on exposed areas, such as face, neck, and hands or arms
  • May have hemorrhagic puncta
  • Sometimes three linear bites ("breakfast, lunch and dinner")

Differential Diagnosis

  • Cimex adjunctus (bat bugs): develops in colonies of roosting bats (e.g. in attics or walls of building), and can transiently infest human areas; bug appears similar, but without the bats they cannot reproduce
  • Oeciacus vicarius (swallow bugs): swallow nests, with bites usually in late winter or early spring where they transiently move into human habitat and bite humans

Diagnosis

  • Diagnosis is made by seeing bedbugs in the environment

Management

  • There is no treatment, except to supportively treat the pruritus (topical corticosteroids, crotamiton, or antihistamines)
  • Environment needs to be decontaminated, so call an exterminator

Prevention

  • Place legs of legs in water or paraffin to prevent bugs from crawling into bed
  • Permethrin-impregnated bednet, which must be carefully tucked under the mattress
  • Environmental insecticides