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Pubic Lice (crabs)

by Unknown Author

(The Gender Centre advise that this article may not be current and as such certain content, including but not limited to persons, contact details and dates may not apply. Where legal authority or medical related matters are cited, responsibility lies with the reader to obtain the most current relevant legal authority and/or medical publication.)

Also called "Crabs" pubic lice are parasitic insects found in the genital area of humans. Infection is common and found worldwide.

Pubic lice are usually spread through sexual contact. Rarely, infestation can be spread through contact with an infested person's bed linen, towels or clothes. A common misbelief is that infestation can be spread by sitting on a toilet seat. This isn't likely. since lice cannot live long away from a warm human body. Also, lice do not have feet designed to walk or hold onto smooth surfaces such as toilet seats.

Pubic lice are generally found in the genital area on pubic hair; but may occasionally be found on other coarse body hair, such as hair on the legs, armpit, mustache, beard, eyebrows and eyelashes. Infestations of young children are usually on the eyebrows or eyelashes. Lice found on the head are not pubic lice; they are head lice. Animals do not get or spread pubic lice.

Itching in the genital area. Nits (lice eggs) or crawling lice may be seen.

There are three stages in the life of a pubic louse; the nit, the nymph, and the adult. Nits are pubic lice eggs, they are hard to see and are found firmly attached to the hair shaft. They are oval and usually yellow to white. Nits take about one week to hatch. The nit hatches into a baby louse called a nymph. It looks like an adult pubic louse, but is smaller.

Nymphs mature into adults about seven days after hatching. To live, the nymph must feed on blood. The adult pubic louse resembles a miniature crab when viewed through a strong magnifying glass. Pubic lice have six legs, but their two front legs are very large and look like the claws of a crab which is why they got the nickname "crabs". Pubic lice are tan to greyish-white in color. Females nits are usually larger than males. To live, adult lice need to feed on blood. If the louse falls off a person it dies within one or two days

Pubic lice infestations are diagnosed by looking closely through pubic hair for nits, nymphs, or adults. Finding a nymph or adult may be difficult, there are usually few of them and they can move quickly away from the light. If crawling lice are not seen, finding nits confirms that a person is infested and should be treated. Diagnosis should be made by a health care provider if you are unsure about infestation or if treatment is not successful.

Pubic lice are treated by a 1% permethrin or pyrethrin lice shampoo, also called pediculicide (peh-DICK-you-luh-side).

To treat pubic lice infestations, follow these steps: (medications described in this section should not be used near the eyes)

  1. Wash the infested area; towel dry
  2. Thoroughly saturate hair with lice medication. If using permethrin or pyrethrins, leave medication on for 10 minutes; if using Lindane, shampoo should only be left on for four minutes. Thoroughly rinse off medication with water.
  3. Dry off with a clean towel.
  4. Following treatment most nits will still be attached to hair shafts. Nits may be removed with fingernails
  5. Put on clean underwear and clothing after treatment.
  6. To kill any lice and nits that may be left on clothing or bedding, machine wash those washable items that the infested person used during the two to three days before treatment. Use the hot water cycle (at least 130 degrees Fehrenheit) of the washing machine to wash clothes. Use the hot cycle of the dryer for at least 20 minutes to dry clothes.
  7. Dry-clean clothing that is not washable.
  8. Inform any sexual partners that they are at risk of infestation.
  9. Avoid any sexual activity until partners have been treated and infestation has been cured.
  10. Repeat in seven to ten days if lice are still found.

Polare is published in Australia by The Gender Centre Inc. which is funded by the Department of Community Services under the S.A.A.P. Program and supported by the N.S.W. Health Department through the AIDS and Infectious Diseases Branch. Polare provides a forum for discussion and debate on gender issues. Advertisers are advised that all advertising is their responsibility under the Trade Practices Act. Unsolicited contributions are welcome, though no guarantee is made by the Editor that they will be published, nor any discussion entered into. The editor reserves the right to edit such contributions without notification. Any submission which appears in Polare may be published on our internet site. Opinions expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of the Editor, The Gender Centre Inc.I, the Department of Community Services or the N.S.W. Department of Health.