Yale Bulletin and Calendar

June 23, 2000Volume 28, Number 34



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Pediatrician invents shampoo
to light up head lice in children

To combat the prevalent problem of head lice in children, a Yale pediatrician has invented a shampoo that makes the nits visible under ultraviolet lights, making for easier, more effective removal.

The shampoo contains a non-toxic fluorescent dye that binds to the outer shells of the nits, or eggs, which are largely made up of chitin, a strong, flexible, light material. The dye causes the nits to glow brightly on the hairshaft when viewed under ultraviolet light. Dr. Sydney Spiesel, assistant clinical professor of pediatrics at the School of Medicine, invented the shampoo after dealing with an epidemic of head lice at a New Haven day care center.

As the medical adviser to the day care center, Spiesel was charged with the task of examining the children and certifying them bug-free. "Unfortunately, many of them weren't free of nits and I learned what a really difficult job clearing a head is," Spiesel said. "The nits are tightly cemented to the hairs and are tiny -- about the size of a grain of sand -- and are devilishly hard to see, especially in thick hair."

Spiesel found that it took a minimum of 45 minutes to clear a head -- a job that has to be repeated to be effective. He said lice have evolved to become more resistant to virtually all of the old chemical pediculocide-based treatments.

Even though lice carry no diseases and cause no real harm except an itchy scalp, Spiesel said there is still a lot of shame and embarrassment attached to a lice infestation.

"People associate lice with poverty and poor hygiene, probably because in the past, the problem was found among poor people living closely together with little opportunity to bathe and shampoo with hot water," Spiesel said. "These days, head lice seem to especially favor wealthier people, but old prejudices are hard to break down."

Lice are passed from head to head, usually by direct contact. Spiesel said they don't fly or hop and their eggs are tightly bound to the host's hair. The transfer often occurs when two children are playing or napping close together and the louse simply walks from one head to another. The bugs survive for about a day away from their host's head, but they can also be passed by shared combs, brushes, hats or pillows.

Spiesel's shampoo, which he calls Head Lights, isn't really a treatment, but a disclosing agent that helps parents find nits and lice so they can be easily and thoroughly removed. Current treatments include pediculocide shampoos and rinses which are intended to poison the bugs or the nits.

"These no longer work, at least on nits, because they have developed resistance," Spiesel said. "Many parents now resort to drowning the bugs--for instance oiling the scalp with olive oil or mayonnaise overnight under a shower cap, and handpicking the nits to break the cycle of reinfection as the eggs hatch. Because of the high probability of missing some nits, this process has to be repeated several times."

Spiesel said his shampoo, which is completely non-toxic, doesn't kill the eggs at all, it just makes them easy to see to simplify removal. Only ultraviolet or "black light" will cause the stained nits to glow. Sunlight, incandescent light, even candles have been used for centuries to help see nits so they can be picked out by hand or combed out, but the stained nits don't look any different with these.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Janet Yellen joins Yale Corporation as the newest alumni fellow

Center for the study of frontier experience honors Howard Lamar

Editor Claude-Anne Lopez describes her 'life with Benjamin Franklin'

Pediatrician invents shampoo to light up head lice in children

Reunions bring record numbers to campus

Yale SOM taking to the high seas to offer educational seminars for executives

School of Music awards first Simeone scholarship

Rubenfeld named to Law School's Slaughter chair

Events to celebrate the arrival of 'Amistad' ship

MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS


OBITUARIES

SOM Dean Jeffrey Garten assembles panel to explore 'new economy'

Study proposes tax on snack foods to fight obesity

Employees honored at awards dinner for their many years of service to Yale

Holmes is inducted into American Philosophical Society

Ian Shapiro selected as a Carnegie Scholar . . .

Comer lauded as leader in American education

DeVita honored for his research on lymphoma

Yale Athletics joins in venture to lure sports fans

Summer Cabaret season celebrates Yale playwrights

Yale Repertory Theatre marks milestones during its fall season

Diana D. Brooks resigns her post as Yale trustee

David Bromwich earns prestigious award for his literary works

Campus Notes

In the News


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