Nancy Adams, DVM, Texas Animal Health Commission Epidemiology Department
Kathy Simmons, DVM, chief veterinarian, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association
Moisés Vargas-Terán, DVM, international animal health expert consultant for OMSA, FAO, IAEA, WHO, and the IDB
The myiasis caused by New World Screwworm, Cochliomyia hominivorax, is a parasitic fly whose larvae infest and feed on the living tissue of warm-blooded animals, including humans. In his presentation, Dr. Egnor emphasized that, unlike other flies, NWS maggots feed exclusively on living tissue. Female flies lay 200-300 eggs around wounds or natural orifices like the eyes, ears, nose, anus, umbilicus, and genitalia. These eggs hatch within 12 to 24 hours, and the emerging larvae burrow deep into the flesh, tearing at tissue with hook-like mouth parts, leading to severe inflammation and secondary infections. The entire life cycle can be as short as 21 days in tropical climates.
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