Mite bites, comet signs and possible mammary prosthesis rejection after returning to a vacation home: a diagnostic challenge

Pyemotes ventricosus is a free-living mite feeding on larvae or nymphs of insects, including moths, beetles, wasps and bees, that are usually found in grain, straw and firewood. When present in great number or when its food is lacking, it could accidentally bite mammals, including humans, causing a...

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Published inTravel medicine and infectious disease Vol. 42; p. 102077
Main Authors Laghi, A., Ongaro, C., Moliterni, E., Malvindi, S., Roberti, V., Iacovino, C., Miraglia, E., Giustini, S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Philadelphia Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2021
Elsevier Limited
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Summary:Pyemotes ventricosus is a free-living mite feeding on larvae or nymphs of insects, including moths, beetles, wasps and bees, that are usually found in grain, straw and firewood. When present in great number or when its food is lacking, it could accidentally bite mammals, including humans, causing a highly pruritic self-limiting dermatitis, sometimes followed by a lymphangitis known as “comet sign”.We present a singular case of mite lymphangitis that surrounds and delimitates breast prosthesis in a 30-year-old Caucasian woman. Other bite in the lower abdomen did not present comet sign. The patient got the infestation in her vacation home in the South of Italy, uninhabited for 10 months since COVID-19 confinement. We hypothesize that the previous surgery made the lymphatic vessels more prone to inflammation and we compare other insect bites that can occur vacationing in a long period uninhabited room.A delayed diagnosis of comet sign implies a retarded fumigation allowing new mite bites and, in this case, extends the patient’s preoccupation about the prosthesis rejection.
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ISSN:1477-8939
1873-0442
DOI:10.1016/j.tmaid.2021.102077