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bedbugs

Just came across an article titled: Your Bed Bug Questions Answered on Lysol, sleep sacks, water beds, and the development of bed bug spray.

The questions were answered by Dini M. Miller, Ph.D., an associate professor in Urban Pest Management at Virginia Tech’s Department of Entomology.

On Waking Up with Bed Bugs

Question: Why is it that I get bit but my husband does not? — Denise, Indian Trail, N.C.

Answer: Bed bugs tend to aggregate together when they are resting. It is possible that you are on the “bed bug side” of the bed. Bed bugs don’t switch back and forth from one host to another so if they find you first, you may be the only one bitten.

It is also possible that your husband is getting bitten but does not have a significant reaction to the bed bug bites.

On Where Bedbug Bites

Question: Will a bed bug ever bite a reproductive body part? — Tyler P., Brookfield, Conn.

Answer: Yes. They do not discriminate; any body part that is accessible and with good blood flow is fair game to a bed bug.

On Treating Bug Bites

Question: Once a person has been bitten by a bed bug, how does one treat it? Lotions? Creams? — Rachelle Berven, Denver, Colo.

Answer: First, do not scratch it. Just like mosquito bites, scratching makes the reaction much worse. Instead wash the area with warm soapy water and then apply an anti-itch cream like Benadryl Topical Itch Stopping Cream or Hydrocortisone Cream.

On Kinds of Beds

Question: Can you have bed bugs if you have a water bed? — E. Merlino, Rockville Centre, N.Y.

Answer: Absolutely, you can have bed bugs anywhere in a room (behind pictures hanging on the wall or in popcorn ceilings) because the attractant is not the bed itself but the warm blooded person that lays in it quietly for hours at a time.

We have seen bed bugs in many types of beds: egg foam, sleeping bags, or stacks of cardboard on the floor. We have also seen them in a metal frame with a blanket over it, and even a balled up jacket in a corner that someone was using as a pillow. Basically, they can infest anything that people sleep on.

I think the bed bugs might enjoy a water bed. Water bed frame typically have many nooks and crannies where bed bugs can hide and the heater would keep them quite comfortable.

Question: Can mattress covers prevent bed bugs?

Answer: The answer is no. Bed bugs can still get on top of the mattress cover or harbor in the bed frame.

The advantage of the mattress cover is that if you already have bed bugs, you can trap them inside the cover and they cannot bite through. If you don’t have bed bugs the cover saves you from having to throw out the mattress if you ever get bed bugs.

For full article, read here.

Read on How to Keep Lice/Bedbugs off Your Bedsteads.

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How To Keep Bed Bugs Out Of Your Bedsteads?

by Vedis Andes on May 12, 2009 · 0 comments

in Bed Bugs

Waterproof Bed Bug Bedding EncasementAfter being virtually eliminated 50 years ago, bed bug infestations have made a come back.

There has been an enormous resurgence of bedbugs throughout the nation.

According to the National Pest Management Association, complaints about bed bugs have increased 50-fold during the past five years.

As bed bugs are so tiny and their bodies are quite flat, they can hide in so many places including cracks and crevices. The tiny reddish-brown bedbugs love to hide in light sockets, behind pictures framed on the wall, in the edges of walls, under the carpets, where the base boards meet carpets and, of course, in bedsteads, headboards, mattresses and box springs.

One of my buddies had had enough of being bitten at night, so after reading both positive and negative reviews, she decided to give the option of covering her mattress and box spring with a Waterproof Bed Bug Zippered Bedding Encasement a try.

If you don’t want to throw away your mattress, getting a bedding encasement to cover your mattress and box spring is perhaps one of the best foolproof protection ways of keeping bed bugs out of your bedstead.

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