Preservation of viable tissue is important in wound management. It is achieved by small, incremental removal of devitalised, necrotic and infected tissues. Maggot debridement therapy (MDT) is used in septic necrotic wounds that fail to respond to conventional modalities. MDT has relied on Lucilia cuprina, which consumes only necrotic tissues, as opposed to Lucilia cuprina, which devours both flesh and necrotic tissues. Recent findings have shown that L. cuprina consumes mainly necrotic and very small amounts of viable tissues and may be used in MDT where L. sericata is very rare or absent. Here we describe wound healing in a patient from rural South Africa with cutaneous myiasis. Our findings agree with workers who indicated that L. cuprina could be used in MDT.
Invasion of mammalian tissues or organs by dipteran larvae (maggots) is referred to as myiasis [
We describe a case of cutaneous myiasis affecting a septic gangrenous foot in an adult male living in a rural area in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa, and the fly species associated with this myiasis.
A 51-year-old male from Ncambendlana location in Mthatha presented at Mthatha General Hospital on 24th February, 2011 with a two-week history of injury to the dorsum of his right foot by a fencing wire. No pain or discomfort followed the injury. However, four days prior to presentation he noted that his foot had started to swell and develop blisters. Soon afterwards, pus started oozing from the site. His past medical history revealed that in 2001 he had undergone 7 months of anti-tuberculosis treatment for spinal tuberculosis and had rib resection for right empyema thoraces in 2002. There was no history of diabetes mellitus or hypertension. He indicated that he was a chronic smoker but there was no history to suggest whether he had suffered from intermittent claudications before.
Medical examination revealed a gentleman in fair general health. His vital signs were: pulse 88/min, BP = 110/70 mm·Hg, respiratory rate 20/min and temperature 36.6˚C. There was finger clubbing but no anaemia, jaundice, dehydration or generalised lymphadenopathy.
On local examination, the right leg was swollen and blistered, with a 9 × 4 cm, ovoid eschar lesion involving the right dorsum of the foot that was swarming with maggots. These maggots were removed and allowed to complete development in the laboratory. There was also a resolving abscess over the right malleolus. The overlying skin was shiny and there was no atrophic changes characteristic of peripheral vascular disease. The foot was warm, tender over the lesion, and with no crepitus. The dorsalis pedis, posterior tibial, popliteal and femoral pulses were palpable and normal in both lower limbs. There was no sensory deficit and motor function was normal in both lower limbs. No kypho-scoliosis was noted on spinal examination.
Other systems revealed no abnormality except the respiratory system. The trachea was central, and the chest moved symmetrically with respiration. A 5 cm healed scar was seen over the right 5th rib at the lateral axillary line. The right hemithorax was dull on percussion. On the same side, air entry was reduced but no bronchial breathing or crepitations were heard on auscultation. The provisional diagnosis was made of severe cellulitis of the right leg with necrosis involving the dorsum of foot.
Bedside investigations revealed a normal urinalysis and a random blood glucose level of 5.5 mmol/l. On laboratory investigations, the full blood count showed Haemoglobin of 13.7 g/dl. The white blood cell count was 22.3 × 109/l with a differential cell count of 84.4% Neutrophils, 7% Monocytes, 7.9% Lymphocytes, 0.5% Eosinophils and 0.2% Basophils. The Platelets were 473 × 109/l.
Serum Creatinine was 171 mmol/l and Urea 9.9 mmol/l. Total Protein, Albumin, Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP), γ- Glutamyl Transferase (GGT), and Aspartate Transaminase (AST) were 80 g/dl, 31 g/dl, 232 U/l, 337 U/l, and 49 U/l respectively. Chest X-ray revealed mid zone fibrosis of the right lung, X-ray of the right foot showed no osteomyelitis and Doppler studies confirmed normal arterial and venous flow in both lower limbs.
The maggots were kept in plastic containers in the laboratory and fed chicken liver until they pupated. The adult flies started emerging three weeks after pupation. They were collected and later identified as Lucilia cuprina.
The patient’s wound was cleaned with hydrogen peroxide followed by normal saline on admission and repeated every other day. All visible maggots were removed (
By the 28th February 2011, leg oedema and cellulitis had settled, eschar demarcated and a few maggots were still visible under the eschar. The polymorphonuclear leukocytosis had dropped to 9; renal function had improved to 71 mmol/l Creatinine and 7.1 mmol/l Urea. Wound swab cultured Pseudomonas aeruginosa sensitive to amikacin only and resistant to ampicillin, amoxicillin, gentamicin and cotrimoxazole. Five days post admission the patient was taken to theatre for surgical debridement of the wound.
Literature review revealed immobilization, advanced age, poor social conditions, mental retardation, diabetes mellitus, alcoholism, vascular occlusive disease, and infected dermatitis as predisposing factors for cutaneous myiasis [
Numerous complications may also occur following infestation with larvae of certain dipteran species, including erosion of bones and teeth, cellulitis, bacteraemia and death [
Allowing maggots of certain species of blow flies to consume necrotic tissue in the wound and produce antibiotic substances that kill the pathogenic bacteria can promote tissue healing [2,5]. Recent articles suggested that L. cuprina was safely and successfully used for MDT
[4,6]. In this case study, L. cuprina was identified as the fly species involved. More research is necessary on the suitability of L. cuprina maggots for MDT in Eastern Cape in South Africa. (From the authors’ unpublished data, L. cuprina is more prevalent in the warmer parts of the province than L. sericata.)
The study was funded by a research grant from Walter Sisulu University through Directorate of Research and Development.