Saturday, April 16, 2011
The truth about Leech Bite
Many people are afraid of leech bite because the wound needs up to 24 hours to clot. People are afraid that they may loose a lot of blood and die. Well, in many leech-bite cases, death is never the result. To control the fear of leech bite, there are truths we need to know.
When a jawed leech bites it holds the sucker in place by making its body rigid. Using its semi circular and many toothed jaws like minute saws, it then makes an incision in the skin and excretes a mucous from the nephropores (external openings from the kidney-like organs). This helps the sucker to adhere. A salivary secretion containing the anticoagulant and a histamine floods the wound and the leech relaxes its body to allow the blood to be ingested. This mixture allows the blood to flow and also prevents clotting once inside the leech. A bacterium in the gut of the leech assists the digestion of the blood, and it has been shown that the type of bacterium varies with the type of host on which the leech feeds. The bacterium also prevents growth of other bacteria which may cause the ingested blood to putrefy.
Now you see the results of leech bite, and because of these capabilities, leeches are used for therapy to cure many blood-related diseases in modern medication. You may have heard about leech therapy.
For over 2000 years, leeches were needlessly applied for many ailments as an adjunct to blood letting. Their use in Europe peaked between 1830 and 1850, but subsequent shortages led to a decline in their use. Today there is a real clinical application in that they are of great value to plastic surgeons when venous congestion of skin and muscle flaps is a problem. Leeches are treated in the same way as blood products and are reused only on the same patient. Medical use of leeches also includes treatment of black eyes, and hirudin is used in the treatment of inflammation of the middle ear. Hirudin is also being developed for experimental use as a systemic anticoagulant, and may prove useful in invitro blood sampling.
The presence of hirudin in the wound following a leech bite may cause oozing to continue for several hours. Although inconvenient, blood loss is not significant. Gut bacteria can cause wound infection. In the post-operative use of leeches this is closely monitored and dealt with by use of the appropriate antibiotic. There may also be a delayed irritation and itching after a bite. There appears to be no support for the theory that mouth parts left behind after forced removal of the leech causes this reaction.
So, can leeches transmit disease? There is no evidence to suggest that they do. The presence of trypanosomes (malarial parasites), in the gut of jawless leeches has been noted, but jawed leeches do not appear to be hosts. Allergy to leech bite has been reported. Further medical opinion should be sought, depending on the severity of the reaction. However, experienced therapists are needed to monitor leech therapy.
After knowing the truth about leech bite, it won't be a horror anymore. Indeed, it's a blessing for humankind to find another healing alternative for blood-related diseases. Wanna buy some leeches?
Friday, April 15, 2011
How leeches live their daily life?
If you want to have a pet, you will go to the pet shop and pick one of the animals available there, and of course ask the pet expert how to take care of the pet you choose. How if the pet you want doesn't available at any pet shops, let's say ... leech? Haha... alright, then you need to finish this article to make sure yourself capable of taking good care of your new leech pet.
Any living creatures will have these activities : breathing, sensing, feeding, and reproduction.
1. Breathing or respiration
Respiration takes place through the body wall, and a slow undulating movement observed in some leeches is said to assist gaseous exchange. Aquatic leeches tend to move to the surface when they find themselves in water of low oxygen content. As a fall in atmospheric pressure results in a small decrease in dissolved oxygen concentrations, rising leeches in a jar of water provided nineteenth century weather forecasters with a simple way of predicting bad weather.
2. Sensing through sense organs
Sensory organs on the head and body surface enable a leech to detect changes in light intensity, temperature, and vibration. Chemical receptors on the head provide a sense of smell and there may be one or more pairs of eyes. The number of eyes and their arrangement can be of some use in Identification, however to properly identify a leech, dissection is required. The Rhyncobdellids are capable of dramatic color changes, and although not an attempt at camouflage, the significance of this behavior is unknown.
3. Feeding or hunting for foods
Most leeches are sanguivorous, that is they feed as blood sucking parasites on preferred hosts. If the preferred food is not available most leeches will feed on other classes of host. Some feed on the blood of humans and other mammals, while others parasites fish, frogs, turtles or birds. Some leeches will even take a meal from other sanguivorous leeches which may die after the attack. Sanguivorous leeches can ingest several times their own weight in blood at one meal. After feeding the leech retires to a dark spot to digest its meal. Digestion is slow and this enables the leech to survive during very long fasting periods (up to several months).
A hungry leech is very responsive to light and mechanical stimuli. It tends to change position frequently, and explore by head movement and body waving. It also assumes an alert posture, extending to full length and remaining motionless. This is thought to maximize the function of the sensory structures in the skin. In response to disturbances by an approaching host, the leech will commence "inchworm crawling", continuing in a trial and error way until the anterior sucker touches the host and attaches. Aquatic leeches are more likely to display this "pursuit" behavior, while common land leeches often accidentally attach to a host.
4. Reproduction
As hermaphrodites, leeches have both male and female sex organs. Like the earthworms they also have a clitellum, a region of thickened skin which is only obvious during the reproductive period. Mating involves the intertwining of bodies where each deposits sperm in the others' clitellar area. Rhyncobdellids have no penis but produce sharp packages of sperm which are forced through the body wall. The sperm then make their way to the ovaries where fertilization takes place. The clitellum secretes a tough gelatinous cocoon which contains nutrients, and it is in this that the eggs are deposited. The leech shrugs itself free of the cocoon, sealing it as it passes over the head. The cocoon is either buried or attached to a rock, log or leaf and dries to a foamy crust. After several weeks or months, the young emerge as miniature adults. Studies show that the cocoons are capable of surviving the digestive system of a duck. Leeches die after one or two bouts of reproduction.
Since you've known a lot about leech daily activities, you can go buy leeches and start petting some. Have fun!
Meet the Leech - world's most incredible creature
When you heard people shout "Leech!", what will you do? I bet you'll run away as fast as possible. Yeah, people have had a bad image about leech - a bloodsucker. But lately, leech has become very popular in medical world, as a miraculous healer for many disease. To understand more about this animal, let's see what kind of animal leech is.
Leeches are annelids or segmented worms, and although closely related to the earthworms, are anatomically and behaviorally more specialized. The bodies of all leeches are divided into the same number of segments (34), with a powerful clinging sucker at each end (although the anterior, or front sucker can be very small). Body shape is variable, but to some extent depends on the degree to which their highly muscular bodies are contracted. The mouth is in the anterior sucker and the anus is on the dorsal surface (top) just in front of the rear sucker. Leeches usually have three jaws and make a Y-shaped incision.
Leeches are grouped according to the different ways they feed. One group (the jawed leeches or Gnatbobdellida) have jaws armed with teeth with which they bite the host. The blood is prevented from clotting by production of a non-enzymatic secretion called hirudin. The land leech commonly encountered by bush-walkers is included in this group. A second group (the jawless leeches or Rhyncobdellida) insert a needle-like protrusion called a proboscis into the body of the host and secrete an enzyme, hemetin which dissolves clots once they have formed. Leeches which live on body fluids of worms and small freshwater snails possess such an apparatus. A third group, (the worm leeches or Pharyngobdellida) have no jaws or teeth and swallow the prey whole. Its food consists of small invertebrates.
Most leeches are freshwater animals, but many terrestrial and marine species occur. Land leeches are common on the ground or in low foliage in wet rain forests. In drier forests they may be found on the ground in seepage moistened places. Most do not enter water and cannot swim, but can survive periods of immersion. In dry weather, some species burrow in the soil where they can survive for many months even in a total lack of environmental water. In these conditions the body is contracted dry and rigid, the suckers not distinguishable, and the skin completely dry. Within ten minutes of sprinkling with a few drops of water, these leeches emerge, fully active. Freshwater leeches prefer to live in still or slowly flowing waters, but specimens have been collected from fast flowing streams. Some species are considered amphibious as they have been observed in both terrestrial and aquatic habitats.
Now, you start to know the leeches and they are not that disgusting anyway. The more you know them, the more excited you are going to be. So stay tune at this site and learn more about leech.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)