Lice infestation

Focus on Head Lice

KIRK BARBER, MD, FRCPC--Series Editor
Alberta Children's Hospital
Dr Barber is a consultant dermatologist at Alberta Children’s Hospital and clinical associate professor of medicine and community health sciences at the University of Calgary in Alberta.

Dermclinic

Lice infestation
This 13-year-old girl comes to your office in tears. Her mother had received a note from school, advising that the nurse had found head lice and nits in her daughter's hair.

The patient's mother wants to cut off her child's hair to eliminate the lice. She is afraid to let her daughter use an insecticide to treat the head lice and asks whether there are any other options.

How will you advise her?

(Answer on next page.)

Dermclinic - Answer

Head lice infestation—pediculosis capitis—is a common problem in schools today. Approximately 3% of school children are affected; this translates into millions of days lost from school every year.

The louse infests only the human head. It simultaneously sucks blood and secretes saliva, which results in an inflammatory reaction and itching. The lice cannot jump or fly, and pets are not a vector. Head-to-head contact is the mode of transmission.

Life cycle of the head louse

The adult female louse (which lives for approximately 1 month) lays from 1 to 6 eggs per day (Figure). When the eggs are laid, they are translucent and attach to the hair shaft at the scalp. The eggs hatch in a week, and the nits (which are empty eggshells) remain attached to the shaft. These eggshells move with the hair as it grows at a rate of about 1 cm per month.

The basic principle I follow is not to diagnose an active head lice infestation unless I can find a living, moving louse. If I cannot find a louse on a careful initial inspection of a child's scalp, I teach the parents to "comb for detection." This involves seating the child with a dark cloth draped about his or her shoulders. A plastic or metal fine-tooth comb is then placed in the hair with the tines touching the scalp. The comb is firmly drawn down the hair from the roots to the tips. This action is repeated circumferentially around the scalp until the first louse is detected—either in the comb or on the drape. I think wet hair increases the yield, but this technique is often effective with dry hair as well.

Once the diagnosis is made, then the decision is whether to use insecticides. If the parents wish to avoid insecticides, it is possible to clear up infestations in more than one third of cases with a "wet combing" technique. The setup and actions are similar to those for the "combing for detection" technique, but the hair is first "slicked" with either a hair conditioner or oil—such as peanut or olive oil. The combing should be performed for 30 minutes once or twice daily and repeated every 3 to 4 days; the combing can stop a week after the last louse is discovered. Patients may use their regular shampoo program during this treatment period.

Insecticides offer more effective treatment; success rates exceed 90%. Permethrin, pyrethrin, and malathion are also safe if used properly. Each of these products has specific directions packaged with it. I recommend that these directions be followed exactly—particularly those that direct parents to wet the child's hair thoroughly with the product. I suggest that medication be reapplied in a week and that personal care hair items (eg, bedding, towels, hats, and clothing that the child has worn) be washed and dried at hot temperatures. I also encourage "wet combing" and the removal of nits during the first week after treatment.

Resistance to insecticides—particularly to permethrin and pyrethrin—is becoming an increasing problem (Box). Advise patients not to use any insecticide treatment more than twice in a single treatment cycle. Also, a different topical insecticide should be used if reinfestation occurs within the first month after treatment.

It can be difficult to determine whether resistance is present or whether the child has been reinfested. I often ask parents to "wet comb" the child's hair: if there are many lice in various stages of development (ie, nymph to adult), then resistance is likely. And if only a few adult lice are found, then it is probable that they represent reinfestation.

Some practical points I share with parents:

•All household members should be checked at home or in the clinic, but I believe that only those who are infested need to be treated.

•I believe that a child may return to school after the first treatment—particularly if an insecticide is used.

•I advise parents that cutting or shaving their child's hair does little, if anything, to improve the success of therapy.

Oral trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and ivermectin have both been used successfully to treat head lice. Neither of these agents is approved for this indication, but either may be useful if all topical therapy fails. *

Treatment: A Pesticide-Free Option
Treatment for head lice is becoming more and more difficult. There is a concern among my patients whose children have become infested about the chemical exposure necessary to kill the lice. To compound this, head lice have become increasingly resistant to chemical neurotoxins.

In 2006, Health Canada approved the use of a pesticide-free preparation for the treatment of head lice in children older than 4 years. The product is marketed in Canada with the name Resultz™.1 It is available without a prescription. The formulation contains 50% isopropyl myristate and 50% ST-cyclomethicone in an odorless, colorless hair rinse. The product is applied and massaged into dry hair until it is saturated. After 10 minutes, the rinse is removed with warm water and the hair may be washed. The treatment is repeated in 1 week.

The efficacy of this product has been shown in 3 small, phase 2 clinical trials in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States that were sponsored by the manufacturer.2 Reports of these trials have been presented at conferences of the Canadian Dermatology Association and the American Academy of Dermatology. The product has been compared with preparations that contain 1% permethrin and another containing 0.33% pyrethrin with 4% piperonyl butoxide and has shown a very significant improvement in the eradication of the lice. The product works by dissolving the waxy louse exoskeleton, which results in dehydration and death of the louse. Isopropyl myristate, a water-insoluble ester, is the active ingredient and cyclomethicone acts as the spreading agent. Both chemicals are widely used in both Canada and the United States in a variety of cosmetic products. The only adverse effects have been a mild scalp irritation and itch in a small number of patients.

This product has made a considerable difference to my practice—and to my patients. I am comfortable explaining to patients that the active ingredients are found in common cosmetics and that the destruction of the lice is by a physical rather than a chemical means.

REFERENCES:
1. Altana Pharma - Press Release. Novel pesticide-free topical head lice treatment introduced as millions of Canadian kids return to school. Available at: http://www.skintherapyletter.com/derm_news/2006/2.html. Accessed October 24, 2007.
2. Evans M. Piedmont Pharma’s lice drug ok’d to move to phase 3 trial. Available at: http://triad.bizjournals.com/triad/stories/2006/03/20/story4.html?jst=s_cn_hl. Accessed October 24, 2007.