Fighting Back, Bedbugs Grow a Thicker Skin
It helps protect against pesticides and may explain why population is growing worldwide, scientists suggest
Bedbugs may be developing thicker "skins" that help them resist common pesticides, a new study suggests.
This might explain why bedbug populations are increasing worldwide, the researchers added.
"If we understand the biological mechanisms bedbugs
use to beat insecticides, we may be able to spot a chink in their armor
that we can exploit with new strategies," study author David Lilly,
from the University of Sydney in Australia, said in a university news
release.
Bedbugs are parasites that feed on the blood of people and animals as they sleep; the insects can produce painful bites in their victims.
The new findings, published April 13 in the journal PLoS ONE, may lead to the development of more effective pesticides to fight bedbugs, the researchers said.
"Bedbugs, like all insects, are covered by an
exoskeleton called a cuticle. Using scanning electron microscopy, we
were able to compare the thickness of cuticle taken from specimens of
bedbugs resistant to insecticides and from those more easily killed by
those same insecticides," Lilly explained.
The thicker their cuticle, the more likely the bedbugs were to survive when exposed to the insecticides, the study found.
WebMD News from HealthDay
By Robert Preidt
HealthDay Report
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