147
References
1. Roberts RJ. “Head lice.” NEJM. 2002 346(21): 1645–50.
2. Maunder JW. “An appreciation of lice.” Proceedings of the Royal Institute. 1983 55:1–31.
3. Mumcuoglu KY, et al. “Clinical observations related to head lice infestation.” Journal of the American Academy of
Dermatology. 1991 25:248–51.
4. Cartwright FF. Diseases and History. Dorset Press, New York, 1972.
5. Wade N. “As mammals supplanted dinosaurs, lice kept pace.” New York Times, 6 April 2011.
6. Pennisi E. “Louse DNA suggests close contact between early humans.” Science. 2004 306:210.
7. Balter M. “Did feathered dinos spread lice?” Science Now. 6 April 2011.
8. Op cit 6.
9. HeadLice.Org. The Anatomy of Pediculus Humanus. (http://headlice.org/news/research/anatomy.htm.)
Accessed 21 April 11.
10. Frankowski BL, et al. “Head lice.” Pediatrics. 2010 126:392–403.
11. Op cit 1.
12. Lang JD. Biology and control of the head louse. PhD thesis. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1975.
13. Chunge RN, et al. “A pilot study to investigate transmission of head lice.” Canadian Journal of Public Health.
1991 82:207–8.
14. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Parasites— Lice—Body Lice. (http://cdc.gov/parasites/lice/
body/index.html). Accessed 27 April 11.
15. Stewart A. Wicked Bugs. Algonquin Books. Chapel Hill, NC 2011.
16. Zinsser H. Rats, Lice and History. Transaction Publishers. New Brunswick, CT 2008 (originally published in
1935).
17. Ibid.
18. Op cit 4.
19. Montana State University. Insects, Disease and History. (http://scarab.msu.montana.edu/historybug)
Accessed 21 April 11.
20. Op cit 10.
21. Merck Research Laboratories. The Merck Manual. Seventeenth Edition. Whitehouse Station, NJ 1999.
22. Op cit 16.
Published in Regulatory Focus, August 2011. Copyright © 2011 Regulatory Affairs Professionals Society.
To a Louse, Typhus and More
Previous Page Next Page