CHARLOTTE, N.C. (WBTV) – After the 13-year brood of cicadas quieted down for the summer, Charlotte residents started having an extra case of the itches.
Oak leaf mites feast on eggs the cicadas left behind, and they cause problems for people.
“These mites are here all the time, but they have become a there have increased their numbers because there have been more food for them,” explained Carolina Pediatrics & Piedmont Medical Center pediatrician Dr. Carlos Paxtor.
Female cicadas leave hundreds of eggs that a microscopic mite, oak leaf itch mites, feast on.
“These tiny spiders that are about less than a quarter of a millimeter — so tiny that it is not perceptible to our normal vision,” Paxtor said.
In a region where trees are unavoidable, underneath them is where Paxtor says someone is most likely to be bit. Unfortunately, “they can also fly with the air and go in other places,” Paxtor said.
Because they are so small, it’s important to close windows and doors, because they can blow into your home with the wind. While their bite may present like a mosquito bite does on your skin, the mite bite itches more than a mosquito’s would.
“The major problem with this is how we respond to these bites,” Paxtor said. “[When you] start scratching with dirty hands, you can also bring germs inside and cause infections.”
Dr. Natasha Pyfrom from Atrium Health Primary Care Shiland Family Medicine gave a few tips for treating bug bites:
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