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