Here is something I received at work:
>BEDBUG RESURGENCE - UK, USA
>************************
>A ProMED-mail post
><
http://www.promedmail.org/>
>ProMED mail is a program of the
>International Society for Infectious Diseases
http://www.isid.org/
>
>Date: 15 Apr 2004
>From: Dr. Alfonso Rodriguez <arodriguezm@SaludFMV.org>
>Source: The Scotsman Newspaper, Scotland 14 Apr 2004 [edited]
><
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/health.cfm?id=419522004>
>
>
>Bed bugs find warm reception on their return to the West
>---------------------------------------------------------
>Bed bugs are staging a big come-back in developed countries around the
>world, including Britain, it was claimed yesterday.
>
>Once common, the blood sucking insects were virtually driven out of
>bedrooms by the 1980s. But since 1995 there has been an unexpected
>increase in reports of bed bug infestation in Britain, the United
>States, and other developed countries. Experts say one theory is that
>the creatures may be developing resistance to pesticides.
>
>The bed bug's return is revealed this month by the Institute of
>Biology.
>
>Clive Boase, of the Haverhill-based company Pest Management
>Consultancy, wrote in the Institute magazine Biologist: "Data from some
>sources indicate that, since the mid-1990s, the numbers of reported
>infestations has almost doubled annually, although numbers are nowhere
>near those of pre-war levels."
>
>Bed bugs, which measure up to 5 mm across, thrive in warm surroundings,
>making their homes around mattress seams, in bed frames, behind
>headboards
or
>skirting boards, and within furniture and electrical fittings. Even
>when deprived of blood, individual bugs can survive a year or more,
>allowing infestations to persist in empty properties or stored
>furniture.
>
>In heated premises with an adequate food supply, a small starting
>population of bed bugs can develop into several thousand within a year.
>
>Various theories have been put forward to explain the return of bed
>bugs in countries which had previously banished them, said Mr Boase. It
>had been suggested that previously bed bugs had suffered "collateral
>damage" caused by broad-spectrum insecticide sprays used against other
>pests such as cockroaches and ants. Now, specific targeting of pests
>using bait products was allowing the bugs to "escape". However, Mr
>Boase said it was unlikely that kitchen-focused spray treatments would
>have ever held bed bugs in check.
>
>An alternative theory was that the bugs were becoming resistant to
>pesticides. Recently, a study from East Africa had shown an
>association between the use of pesticide-treated mosquito nets and the
>growth of resistance in bed bugs. The pesticide involved, a pyrethroid,
>was a type widely used in bed bug sprays in developed countries.
>
>--
>ProMED-mail
><promed@promedmail.org>
>
>[The original article by Clive Boase was published in the Biologist
>(see refs below), a publication of the British Institute of Biology.
>The British media picked up the story and it was aired on the BBC News
>on 14 Apr 2004, and summaries printed on the same day in several
>newspapers including The Times and The Independent as well as in the
>The Scotsman, who incidentally misspelt throughout their report Mr
>Boase's name as Bose.
>
>The 2 common bedbug species that feed on humans are _Cimex
>lectularius_, widely distributed in tropical and non-tropical
>countries, and _Cimex hemipterus_, commonly called the tropical bedbug,
>is essentially a species of Old and New World tropics, although it is
>found in warm areas of some non-tropical countries such as Florida in
>the USA.
>
>It is true that since about 1995 bedbugs seem to have increased not
>just in the UK, but elsewhere in Europe and in the USA.
>
>Several decades ago during slum clearance in inner cities in the UK,
>people who were rehoused in newly built homes were again soon pestered
>by bedbugs, because they took them with them in their beds, mattresses,
>and other furniture, and to a lesser extent in hand-baggage such as
>suitcases.
>
>Although hepatitis B surface antigen can exist for about 6 weeks in
>bedbugs and be passed out with the feces, thereby seemingly posing the
>danger that it may be scratched into skin lesions, there is no evidence
>that such transmission is important, or even occurs. Similarly HIV can
>survive on bedbug mouthparts for about an hour, but there is no
>evidence that HIV is transmitted by the bugs. Nevertheless, repeated
>feeding by large numbers of bedbugs have been reported as causing
>anemia in infants, while their persistent biting can cause sleepless
>nights, and in some people also severe allergic reactions. Bedbugs
>also feed on pigs and poultry; _C. lectularius_ sometimes becomes a
>pest of commercial poultry in North America and Europe, causing anemia
>in the birds
>
>Bedbugs have developed resistance to several insecticides including, as
>reported in the press releases in some areas, to pyrethroid
>insecticides. For example, in Tanzania, there have been reports of
>resistance to alphacypermethrin and permethrin, insecticides commonly
>used for impregnating bed nets for control of anopheline vectors of
>malaria.
>
>References:
>
>Boase, C.J. (2001) Bedbugs - back from the brink. _Pesticide Outlook_,
>12, (4) 159-162.
>
>Boase, C.J. (2004) Bed-bugs - reclaiming our cities. _Biologist_ 54 (1)
1-4.
>
>Myamba, J., Maxwell, C.A. and Curtis, C.F. (2002) Pyrethroid resistance
>in tropical bedbugs (_Cimex hemipterus_) associated with use of treated
bednets.
>_Medical and Veterinary Entomology_, 16, 448-451
>-- Mod.MS]
>
>[see also:
>1996
>----
>Mechanical transmission by mosquitoes (10) 19960417.0736]
>..................ms/pg/jw