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Allergens: bees, wasps and other stinging insects

Bees, wasps and other stinging insects

`Know your enemy’ is always a good motto, but particularly for those with insect-sting allergy. Being allergic to wasps or hornets, for example, is enough of a problem without panicking every time you encounter a hoverfly as well. If your reaction to this is ‘What’s a hoverfly?’ then you need a good field guide or a friend who knows a little about natural history. These common insects have yellow-and-black stripes to mimic those of wasps, giving them some protection against predatory birds. They fool a lot of people as well as birds, but it isn’t difficult to tell the two apart — hoverflies are a different shape from wasps, hold their wings differently at rest, and fly in a completely different way (for one thing they hover, unlike wasps). Being able to tell one from the other will make life much more relaxing.
If you did not see the insect that stung you, ask the doctor which skin tests came up positive (see p. 61), and use a field guide to check exactly what the insect(s) looks like.
As well as knowing what your problem insect looks like, you need to know a little about its habits and tastes.
These are the general characteristics of stinging insects that you need to know about:
• The most dangerous thing you can do is to disturb the nest – all stinging insects go into attack mode when this happens. If there is a nest in or around your house, call in a pest control expert to destroy it. Never tackle this job yourself, nor allow anyone else to do it while you are in the vicinity.
• If you think there may be an insect nest in or around your house, call in a pest control expert to do a survey. Regular annual checkups of your property are advisable if insects have nested before.
• Insect repellent works only for biting insects, such as mosquitoes. It does not repel wasps, bees or other stinging insects.
• Insecticide spray can be useful, but make sure the insect is really dead before you touch it. A groggy poisoned insect may well sting.
• A small but thick blanket can be useful for catching bees or wasps that have flown into cars. Don’t try to do this yourself unless there is no alternative. Ask a passer-by to help you if you are alone.
• Always stay as calm as possible.
Wasps and hornets (vespids)
• If you react to one species of vespid, you may well have a cross-reaction to other species in this group, so take care.
• Wasps like sweet foods (e.g. jam, honey, cakes) and you should avoid taking these on picnics. They will also crawl into open cans of beer or soft drinks. Never ever drink from the can, as you can get a mouthful of cross wasp with your drink.
• In spring and early summer, wasps collect protein-rich food for their young, and may be attracted to meat. If eating outdoors, as far as possible keep food covered.
• Wasps come to fallen fruit in the autumn. They get very sluggish and bad-tempered late in the year, and will sting with little provocation. They may crawl into crevices or hollow logs as winter approaches. Be very careful about picking up fruit or dead leaves, or working in the garden –always wear thick gloves.
• Wasps are often on the ground, especially in late summer and autumn. Wear shoes and socks for protection. If working outside where there may be wasps, long trousers and long-sleeved shirts are also advisable.
• Rubbish bins and litter bins are also very attractive to wasps. Make sure your own bin has a tightly fitting lid, and that no rubbish accumulates around it. Ask neighbours to do the same. Keep away from litter bins, and from picnic sites, orchards and tea gardens, all of which are havens for wasps.
Cross-reactions between insect stings
There are cross-reactions between the venoms of wasps, hornets and related insects (vespids), so if you are allergic to one, you may react to another. Cross-reactions are very unlikely between bee and wasp venoms.
Honeybees and bumblebees have very similar venom and these cross-react (but honeybee immunotherapy does not work for bumblebee allergy – see p. 168). Surprisingly, there is some cross-reaction between honeybee venom and snake venom.
The usual suspects
Wasps (yellow-jackets in the United States), hornets and bees are the most common source of allergic reactions worldwide. Locally, there are allergic reactions to various other stinging or biting animals. Fire ants are a particular problem in the southeastern United States. Hopper ants are a cause of anaphylaxis in Australia, and allergy to leech bites has been reported from Tasmania. A few people are allergic to the kissing bugs (Triatoma spp.) – also called cone-noses, ‘big bed bugs’ or ‘Mexican bed bugs’ – that are found in South and Central America, as well as rural areas of North America. These large insects creep into beds and bite painlessly, by night. In urban areas of Italy, where large numbers of pigeons live in some old buildings, pigeon ticks that find their way indoors have sometimes caused anaphylactic shock by biting during the night. Localised reactions to earlier bites had occurred in all cases.
Honeybees and bumblebees
• When it stings, a bee loses part of itself – the stinger and venom sac – and therefore dies. So stinging is very much a last resort. Most honeybees are not aggressive, and only sting if their nest is attacked, or if they are threatened when feeding.
• Bees feed on nectar from flowers. They may be attracted by brightly coloured clothes, especially red, orange and yellow, and flower-prints, mistaking these for flowers. Wearing dull colours is advised.
• Some perfumes, shampoos and scented cosmetics or lotions may also attract bees. If bees do approach you, never swat at them, and don’t panic. The best thing is to brush them away very gently.
• Bees often feed on clover, which grows in lawns and other grassy places, and it is easy to tread on them in this situation. Walking barefoot outside is therefore dangerous.
• Bees are attracted by water, including swimming pools and paddling pools.
• Although large, bumblebees are also very placid and rarely sting.
• Swarming bees are dangerous because they have the queen with them. If you see a swarm, keep well away.
Africanised honeybees
If travelling abroad, you should remember that Africanised honeybees – found in South and Central America, Texas, Arizona and parts of California – will sting with much less provocation than ordinary bees.
They are hybrids between domestic honeybees and an aggressive variety of wild African bee mistakenly introduced to South America. While they are much more pugnacious than ordinary bees, Africanised honeybees are only intent on defending their hive, and do not maliciously hunt people down as some horror movies have implied! They inject slightly less venom with each sting than a normal bee, but multiple stings are more likely because more than one bee is usually involved.

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