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Ectoparasiticide

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An ectoparasiticide is an antiparasitic drug used in the treatment of ectoparasitic infestations.[1] These drugs are used to kill the parasites that live on the body surface. Permethrin, sulfur, lindane, dicophane, benzyl benzoate, ivermectin and crotamiton are well known ectoparasiticides.[2] Additionally, ectoparasiticides have been used to safely contaminate rhinoceros horns with hopes of it deterring the demand for these horns on the black market.[3]

Variants

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Permethrin

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Broad-spectrum and potent pyrethroid insecticide and is most convenient for both scabies and lice. First choice drug. 100% cure rate. Causes neurological paralysis in insects probably by delaying depolarisation.[citation needed]

Crotamiton

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Second choice drug. Effective scabicide, pediculocide and antipruritic. Cure rate 60-88%.[citation needed]

Benzyl benzoate

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2nd line drug for scabies and is seldom used for pediculosis. Cure rate 76-100%[citation needed]

Lindane

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Effective in treating head lice (67-92%cure) and scabies (84-92% cure) with a single treatment. Penetrates through chitinous covers and affecting the nervous system.[citation needed]

Sulfur

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Oldest scabicide and weak pediculocide, antiseptic, fungicide and keratolytic. Applied to skin, it is slowly reduced to H2S and oxidized to SO2 and pentathionic acid, which dissolve the cuticle of itch mites and kill it.[citation needed]

Ivermectin

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Antihelminthic drug found highly effective in scabies and pediculosis. Acts through a glutamate-gated Cl ion channel found only in invertebrates.[citation needed]

Dicophan

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Insecticide for mosquito, flies and other pests. Penetrates through the exoskeleton and acts as a neurotoxin.[citation needed]

Other Applications

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Possible Poaching Deterrent

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Ectoparasiticides have seen use as chemical agents in South Africa with the aim of devaluing rhinoceros horns and combating illegal poaching. Lorinda Hern, founder of the Rhino Rescue Project, devised a plan to infuse rhino horns with ectoparasiticides and mark the outer surface with a bright pink dye. This innovative approach seeks to deter poachers by creating health concerns amongst potential buyer communities. The procedure involves drilling into the rhinoceros horn, injecting it with an ectoparasiticide compound, and tagging it with a distinctive pink dye. The drill and inject procedure is considered harmless to the rhinoceros species due to the horn being isolated from both the nervous system and the bloodstream.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Taylor MA (May 2001). "Recent developments in ectoparasiticides". Vet. J. 161 (3): 253–68. doi:10.1053/tvjl.2000.0549. PMID 11352483.
  2. ^ Tripathi, J.D (2010). Textbook of Pharmacology. Jeypee Publications. pp. 862–863. ISBN 978-81-8448-085-6.
  3. ^ Henriques2016-01-13T00:00:00+00:00, Martha. "Ectoparasiticides". Chemistry World. Retrieved 2024-05-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Poisoning rhino horns doesn't hurt the rhinos, but it may keep poachers away". The World from PRX. Retrieved 2024-05-01.