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Oct 21, 2007, 07:28 AM
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Galaxy-hopper
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Originally Posted by nurz2be
It was in grossest most interesting thing I have witnessed as of yet.
....
It was creepy and interesting at the same time.
Sounds like nursing.
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Oct 21, 2007, 11:21 AM
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The Black Sheep
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Originally Posted by meimeiy
Okay. I could stomach the others but the one with trach is just disgusting.
I don't get sick from much, but THAT probably would have made me ralph.
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Oct 21, 2007, 12:08 PM
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Staff
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I remember when I was young that one of my cats disappeared for weeks,when it came home it had chewed off its leg,having been caught in a trap,my dad stuck the leg in a bucket of sheep dip because it was covered in maggots and then took the cat to the vet.The vet said the maggots had saved the cats life by eating the infection.The cat lived till it was 16 none the wordt for having 3 1/2 legs.
There is a place in Wales? where medicinal maggots are bred,they are used all over the country for cleaning up bad wounds etc.
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Oct 21, 2007, 12:32 PM
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you pick them out with forceps. It is gross but they help keep the wound cleaner than it would have been without maggots.
It usually smells like the bottom of a garbage can that has been sitting out in the sun fermenting.
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Oct 21, 2007, 02:38 PM
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Maggots can be benificial, but not all maggots are the same.
It is true that some maggots eat only dead tissue, but some eat live tissue as well, and it's hard to tell the difference between the kinds of fly maggots.
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Oct 21, 2007, 04:42 PM
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Senior Member
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Maggots can be a good thing, they do say. My first maggoty patient was
a street person in our ICU. I was told that he had dry gangrene, right foot, and the maggots. No one had really dealt with the maggot situation. They do not
stay put, you know...
I was getting freaked out because they were crawling out of the wound,
and into the bed, etc.
We were told to use, some kind of oil, mineral oil, I think, on the wound.
And that is what we did. In retrospect, it was not the best way to deal
with it. Whirlpool would have been better or showering them out.
Later, when I was supervising in a large inner city LTC, I got a panicked
call from staff, that maggots were crawling out from a wound. Same
scenario as above...
And the last I have seen of these critters was when a little feral cat that I
took in, had a wound that would not heal. I even consulted with a human
wound care nurse. Nothing worked, and then she got maggots in her
wound. It might have helped, but she could not tolerant them crawling
on her. I had her put to sleep rather than see her try to endure this
final indignity.
Last edited by indigo girl : Oct 22, 2007 at 12:48 PM.
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Oct 21, 2007, 05:30 PM
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Senior Member
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Originally Posted by nightmare
There is a place in Wales? where medicinal maggots are bred,they are used all over the country for cleaning up bad wounds etc.
Yes, you're quite correct. I used to be a Community Nurse in the UK and we got our "supplies" from there for treating those nasty sloughy wounds. They come in a little plastic bottle and don't look as bad as you'd expect. In fact, first time I saw them, I thought they looked just like grains of rice.
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Oct 22, 2007, 12:33 PM
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I have used medicinal leeches on a skin graft patient before and it was interesting but no big deal. This was on a post surgical skin graft patient.
Since I am new to the ER I have heard stories of homeless people coming in with maggots in wounds. I really don't think I would do well with this and I hope my new co-workers will support me if it ever comes my way.
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Oct 22, 2007, 12:55 PM
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In FL back in the late 80's I had a pt come in with bilat LE cellulitis. He had been d/c'd as an inpt 2 weeks prior, and for the intervening time had been living under a picnic table. When he came in, he had two of the nastiest, rankest-looking LE dressings I have EVER seen. I was amazed that they were still in place. The ERP said to cut them off, and that is what I did. As the flesh became exposed, it was a healthy pink, but entirely covered with maggots that looked like grains of rice. I went and got a more experienced nurse (one who'd seen maggots on a human before) and she had me soak 4x4s in Betadine and lay them across the leg. The Betadine must have stunned them, because it was then easy to remove them with saline-soaked 4x4s. The worst part was the removal of the nasty dressings. The wounds themselves looked marvelous, thanks to the work of the maggots!
Since then, I have heard that during the Civil War, and in a Japanese Concentration Camp on Bataan during WW II, maggots were used to help control infected wounds in American soldiers when there were no antibiotics available.
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Oct 22, 2007, 02:30 PM
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Senior Member
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The maggots used therepeutically are lab grown. THe ones that the patients come in are not and could possibly vector infection, (besides the one the patient already has)
I have seen them come in with the little buggers and was appropriately horrified.
You just got to pick the little buggers out. Usually there is a surgical debridement involved.
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