Showing posts with label Virginia Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virginia Tech. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2011

US researchers study bed bugs' resistance

Posted: 20 October 2011

A bed bug.
WASHINGTON: US researchers have uncovered the genetic mechanism that bed bugs use to resist powerful insecticides, according to a study published Wednesday, leading to the hope of more effective ways to combat the pests.

Bed bugs, which have been largely absent from the United States since the 1950s, have returned in force in the last decade in the US, and notably other Western countries in Europe.

They have, in this time, developed unique resistance to the insecticides that are mainly used against them -- deltamethrin and beta-cyfluthrin, both leading pyrethroids.

The genetic research released Wednesday in the journal PLoS One, published by the Public Library, offers new hope to understand their resistance and find new ways to eradicate the blood-sucking bugs.

"Different bed bug populations within the US and throughout the world may differ in their levels of resistance and resistance strategies, so there is the need for continuous surveillance," said lead author Zach Adelman, associate professor of entomology at Virginia Tech.

Adelman and the other researchers in the study assessed two populations of bed bugs -- "a robust, resistant population" found in 2008, and a "non-resistant population" that has been raised in a lab since 1973.

The study determined how each strain succumbed to the pyrethroids, if at all, and determined that over a 24 hour period it required "5,200 times more deltamethrin or 111 times more beta-cyfulthrin" to kill the modern bed bugs compared to the older specimens.

The bed bug's bite is a little painful rather than dangerous, but many people are scared because the creature mainly attacks when people are asleep.

-AFP/pn



Taken from ChannelNewsAsia.com; source article is below:
US researchers study bed bugs' resistance

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Saturday, April 18, 2009

US looks for ways to not let the bed bugs bite

WASHINGTON — The federal government is waking up to what has become a growing nightmare in many parts of the country — a bed bug outbreak.

The tiny reddish-brown insects, last seen in great numbers prior to World War II, are on the rebound, feeding on human blood in college dormitories, hospital wings, homeless shelters and swanky hotels from New York City to Washington.

Faced with rising numbers of complaints to city information lines and increasingly frustrated landlords, hotel chains and housing authorities, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) hosted its first-ever bed bug summit yesterday.

One of the problems is that there are few chemicals on the market approved for use on mattresses that are effective at reducing bed bugs.

Increasing international travel has also increased the chances for the bugs to hitchhike from developing countries which never eradicated them completely.

“I can’t tell you how many people have spent the night in their bath tubs because they are so freaked out by bed bugs,” said entomologist Dini Miller at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. “I get these people over the phone that have lost their marbles.”

Bed bugs are not known to transmit any diseases. But people have had an allergic reaction to their bites. The insects release an anticoagulant to get blood flowing, and they also excrete a numbing agent so their bites do not often stir a victim’s slumber.

The pesticide industry will be pushing at the summit for federal funding for research into alternative solutions, such as heating, freezing or steaming the bugs out of bedrooms. AP

From TODAY, World – Wednesday, 15-April-2009