By Tanisha Smullen


First-time scabies victims are at a higher risk of spreading the disease to other people than someone who has been infected before. This happens because usually the irritating symptoms won't appear for up to a month after the infestation, but you are contagious anyway. As a result, the person who is now infected can be transferring the mites to other people without his or her knowledge. It will be easy to infect another person simply by contact with their skin for as little as five minutes. Of course, scabies can be spread by other means that do not involve direct skin-to-skin contact for a longer time duration. After reading this article, you will be more knowledgeable on the subject of scabies and related issues.

A person may become infested with scabies, but may not know that they are infected because it is their first time; two weeks must pass before any type of itching may begin. Even if a person is not itching, if they do have scabies, it can still be transmitted to others through physical contact.

As you can see, even if someone is not itching, they can still transmit the scabies very easily. Weeks after the infestation, your immune system will begin to take notice of them on your body. What happens next is an allergic reaction to the scabies in your skin which is experienced as severe itching. Even though a person may have scabies, because they are not detectable the first couple weeks, they can easily spread it to others unknowingly.

The rash and other effects of the scabies mite infection habitually appear on several locations throughout your body. For example, scabies can develop on the underside of the wrists, on the same side as the palm of the hand. The burrows can also be seen in the webbing of your fingers and look like thin pencil lines. The scabies are partial to a moist environment so this makes your armpits and groin area prime territory for a scabies infestation. Around your waist and in your belly button, as well as the buttocks, are places you may experience intense itching from the mites. Males and females also have their own certain areas where the symptoms of scabies can appear.

Men and women alike share a common fate of potentially hosting scabies in the buttocks area. Once you exclude buttocks area, gender differences are clear in regard to where scabies can spread the most. In men, the genital area is a suitable location for scabies to survive. Unlike men, women must worry about the upper portion of the body, particularly their breasts and where the bra makes contact with the skin.

If someone has sensitive skin or has developed a very serious case of scabies, they may end up with what is known as nodular scabies. Nodular scabies manifest as red to brown raised hard lumps on the skin that continue to itch. Once all the mites and eggs are killed off, these small, itchy, brownish-red nodules may manifest in covered areas. Nodules can appear in the armpits, groin area and on the buttocks. It isn't unusual, unfortunately, for these irritating nodules to stick around for weeks or months after the original problem has been cleared up.

The way scabies look on your body does not vary and they can show up in several different places. The area of your body that becomes infested first will be a direct result of from whom or how you acquired the mites. If you have an infestation, the mites can attach to your clothing and other personal items and spread to someone else. The reverse is also true. If this is the case, wash or dry-clean any clothing, towels, blankets or other personal items that you might have transferred mites to so someone else isn't infested.




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