Pinworms

I didn’t have time to confirm that the scientific names are the same, but horses are also infected by pinworms. These nasty buggers also cause the horse to rub their tush on any object handy. I recall reading in my horsey quest for knowledge that people should be careful around infected horses due to possible transmission.

The article being discussed is
Does everyone have pinworms? (19-Dec-2000)

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About 20 years ago, when I worked at an adult foster care home, several of the residents were diagnosed with pinworms. They all had medicine, they all got over it, but what sticks in my mind was a factoid that one of the social workers told me. She said, “You can get rid of pinworms by starving yourself of protein for 48 hours. There’s something in digested protein that they need, so if you eat nothing but carbs and veggies for two days, you can starve them out.”

Rather than wade through all of Lynn’s cites, I thought it would be quicker to ask her. Lynn?

(yes, yes, I know, “if I look it up myself, I’ll remember it better next time…” :rolleyes: come on, be a sport)

DDG, I dunno. From my research, I gather that most people are re-infecting themselves by scratching their butts and then not washing their hands well enough to get the sticky eggs off their hands. I don’t recall reading ANYTHING like that. And I’m not about to go wading through my sources again, it was unpleasant enough the FIRST time. However, I did get the impression that if one used good hygiene, a pinworm infection would run its course in about 2 weeks, without medication. Me, I’d rather take the medication and have it over with, unless the medication would cause severe side effects in me.

Budyonni, my research tells me that the pinworms that usually infect people ONLY infect humans and a few other primates. While I don’t doubt that horses get some form of pinworm, this ain’t the same kind as people generally get.

Thank you. :slight_smile: I knew that particular social worker was F.O.S. anyway, but it’s nice to have it officially confirmed.

Pinworms in horses:

http://www.ces.uga.edu/pubcd/b1080-w.html#Pinworms

Pinworms in horses and people.
http://www.vh.org/Providers/CME/CLIA/Microbiology/6Pinworm.html

http://www.biosci.ohio-state.edu/~parasite/enterobius.html

It sounds to me like the Virtual Hospital and Ohio State websites are saying that people can get pinworms from horses. Or am I reading it wrong? The Virtual Hospital says that people and horses can both get enterobius. The Ohio State site seems to be lumping Enterobius and Oxyuris in together, implying that people and horses can get both.

There’s never an epidemiologist around when you need one…

[[There’s never an epidemiologist around when you need one…]]

AIDS epidemiologist here but anyhoo, pinworms of horses and other animals are not transmissible to people.

  • Jill

Now, if that had happened in a movie, I’d be sitting there in my seat, going, “Oh, come ON! Somebody says, ‘There’s never an epidemiologist around when you need one,’ and poof! an epidemiologist appears? Right.”

Thank you, Jill. :slight_smile:

“Uh…honey…I’ve got a really big favor to ask you!”

After remembering the articles from a few months back (sorry to rehash), I’m exhibiting the classic signs. While I disagree with the hygeine aspects (maybe I don’t wash my hands in hot enough water?), it’s now getting out of control. I’ve been woken up in the middle of the night frequently with itching, and I’ve had enough. Two problems with going to the doctor though…

  1. He’s a good 80 miles away.
  2. I’m especially shy of people poking and staring at my asshole.

On the CDC site, they said an over-the-counter version of medication was availible…does anyone have the name? I never self-medicate, but this seems so obvious and relatively harmless that I’d rather not go to the doctor…

There is an OTC product-- IIRC it’s called Antiminth ®.
There is another called PIN-ex ®.