Medical entomology A dog mite that may transiently burrow into a dog owner's skin and evoke pruritus, causing self-resolving papulourticarial lesions. See Dogs, Mites. McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.Want...
Cheyletiellosis (cheyletiella dermatitis) is a dermatitis caused by cheyletiella mites that are seen more commonly in cats, dogs and rabbits all over the world. Cheyletiella blakei, which is naturally hosted by cats, causes infestations in people, especially who are in close contact with ...
Evidence of mites moving among debris, often with adherent scales, has given cheyletiellosis the common name of “walking dandruff.” Combing is a recommended diagnostic technique but fails to confirm mites in 15% of infested dogs and 58% of cats.9,19–21 To examine by combing, the hair...
Twitter Google Share on Facebook Cheyletiella blakei Entomology A mite that may transiently burrow into the skin of humans belonging to a cat, evoking pruritus and innumerable papular urticarial lesions that heal by scabbing. SeeCats, Mites. ...
Mites were detected in stereo microscopic examination of hair and skin scraping samples collected from dogs brought to a private veterinary clinic in Kocaeli province of Turkey. All collected materials were preserved in eppendorf tubes containing 70% ethanol and sent to the parasitology...
MitesZoonosesMite InfestationsCat DiseasesDog DiseasesIn the present paper Cheyletiella yasguri is redescribed for the first time as the causative agent of a kind of mange in dogs, and it is demonstrated in two cases that it infests human-beings 鈥 hitherto not known. Supposedly that mange ...
[Cheyletiella yasguri Smiley, 1965 (Acarina, Cheyletiellidae), a parasite of dogs which may infest men].OvumAnimalsDogsCatsHumansMitesZoonosesMite InfestationsCat DiseasesDog DiseasesIn the present paper Cheyletiella yasguri is redescribed for the first time as the causative agent of a kind of...
MITESARACHNIDAFURDOGSMITES as carriers of diseaseHOST-parasite relationshipsThe stylet-like chelicerae in C. yasguri are modified claws as they articulate due to muscles in the terminal segment (tarsus) of the modified legs forming the biting apparatus. The united anterior parts of the stylets ...