Wire worms in the countryside don t get around broken fingers, so why do the old people say they can

Updated on Three rural 2024-07-04
27 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Wire worms. Distributed in tropical and temperate regions, it lives freely in water, occasionally infects the human body, and parasitizes the digestive tract. The adults are linear, dioecious, and the females lay their eggs at the water's edge to grasshoppers.

    Insects such as cockroaches and beetles serve as intermediate hosts. The key to the prevention and treatment of this disease is not to drink unclean water, not to eat raw foods such as insects, fish, snails, etc., and to avoid direct contact between the lower body and unclean water bodies when entering the water. Suspected infected.

    Anthelmintic drugs can be taken to promote the excretion of helminths, and intratissue parasites should be surgically removed.

    Wire worms usually live in places with a lot of water. Rivers, ditches, ponds, and other places where water is stored, there are many nematodes. Generally, females lay their eggs near water.

    Cockroaches, beetles, grasshoppers, and other insects can become hosts for nematodes. Ponds and rivers are more common in the south of China, and the living conditions of the nematode are larger than those in the north, and they are generally more common in the south. Iron worms become very hard when they leave the water source, so they are called iron worms, copper nematodes, etc. in some places.

    If you accidentally wrap it around your upper finger, it will get tighter and tighter after leaving the water, and it may cause bleeding over time. The water doesn't flow smoothly, but it may not break your fingers. If you accidentally wrap your finger in a wire, don't panic.

    Immediately put your hand in the water and it will detach on its own. Iron worms are very soft in water. When it comes into contact with water, it hardens, and once you understand its habits, you will have a way to deal with it.

    If people drink water that contains nematode eggs, or shellfish.

    Snails and even fish, if not handled properly, may remain in the human body after eating, and can easily cause urinary tract infections.

    or other diseases. Infect. Therefore, do not drink raw water in the wild, pay attention to hygiene, and drink cooked water.

    Shellfish caught from ponds must be washed and cooked before consumption. The best way to stay away from ferroworm is to avoid raw food, fish, and snails, which are unhygienic foods. Be careful when eating and drinking to see if there are any conditions associated with unclean water.

    Moreover, it can be seen from the clinical data that there are far more women who are entangled in iron worms than men, and I hope that the majority of women can pay attention to it.

    Wire worms are very hard, but they break when gently pulled in water. Once the ironworm leaves the water source, it becomes very hard. Wire nematodes are widely distributed. Nematodes are very elongated, reaching a length of more than 1 meter, and nematode larvae mainly parasitize arthropods.

    In the body, such as praying mantises, grasshoppers, etc.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    It is a kind of feudal and backward thinking, because without systematic education, the knowledge of these sciences cannot be explained, and these phenomena can only be explained by some feudal superstitious thoughts.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    It may be a rumor that the nematode was a terrible parasite for people in the past, and that medical conditions in the past were limited, and this is to warn other people.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Although this insect does not break its fingers, it is also very dangerous to know this worm, it is parasitic in the human body, and it can infect all parts of the body.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Wire worms cannot get their fingers entangled.

    Elegans belong to the phylum Nematodes and are a general term for worms of the class Nematode. Moreover, the nematode is a soft parasite, but the appearance resembles "iron wire", so the nematode cannot entangle human fingers.

    Adult nematodes inhabit rivers, ponds, and ditches, and the eggs laid by females hatch larvae in the water, which are eaten by insects or humans, and live as parasitists. When this insect is swallowed by large arthropods such as praying mantises, locusts, etc., the larvae continue to develop in these arthropods and will gradually control the behavior of the host, and when the larvae grow into adults, they will control the host to find water source and drown the host and burrow out of the host.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Wire worms do not wrench a person's hand.

    The nematode is just like wire, and the nematode is soft, not really hard like wire. Seen in tropical and temperate zones, nematodes live freely in water, occasionally infect humans, and parasitize the digestive tract. Adults are linear, dioecious, and females lay eggs at the water's edge, with insects such as grasshoppers, cockroaches, and beetles as intermediate hosts.

    Morphological characteristics of iron worms: large individuals. The body length is 300 to 1000 mm, and the body shape resembles a thin rope.

    Similar to the nematode species of Roundworms, but without the dorsal, ventral, or lateral lines. The anterior end is obtuse and rounded, the body surface is, the end of the male is bifurcated, in an inverted V-shape, and the anterior ventral surface of the bifurcated part is a cloaca foramen. The larval stage of the digestive tube is present, while the adult stage is degenerate.

    Males have a large number of sperm nests and females have ovaries arranged in pairs on both sides of the body. It has a dark brown body when it lives.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The nematode has an example of twisting the horns, it is not because of the strength or anything, just like you tie a rubber band to your arm, and then forget, if you don't take it off, the hand will die because of the lack of blood circulation, so it will break the finger because, children do not know its harm, it is easy to be injured. As long as you are on guard, you can trample it to death with your feet.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The nematode can really cut off your finger because it's a parasite, and if he gets into your finger, he'll suck your blood like crazy, which is a terrible thing.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The power of the nematodes is very great, they can not only break their fingers, but even harder things, and the appearance of this insect is very terrifying.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    When I was a child, I caught one in the blister, thinking it was a spiritual branch, and I was so happy, and then I took it home and put it with the crab, but when I came home from school in the evening, I found that it had been neatly cut into sections by the crab and stacked there...

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    No, it's just a rumor, the nematode is called a nematode but it looks like a wire, in fact, it is very soft, and it is impossible to twist people's fingers, smash and pinch constantly just because it is elastic and tough, not because it is hard.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    If it is parasitic on the joint of the finger and entangles around the joint, the vascular nerve is compressed, and the finger dies naturally, not with much strength.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    This is impossible, at most, because of the necrosis of the end of the finger caused by blocking the flow of blood, and even the small wooden stick can be twisted and broken.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Said you can be strangled, have you ever stayed in a suburban village or town? Isn't it that the Korean horror film Han Jiang has watched too much, ridiculous. The small creatures in the water that were common when I was a child were rendered as threatened.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    Nonsense. Most people in the modern city lack life experience and only know what they are engaged in. There should be many kinds of nematodes, and I divide what I have seen into two, one parasitic and one non-parasitic.

    Parasitic can parasitize in silkworms, grasshoppers, grasshoppers and other insects. Non-parasitic ones can survive in river water, in shallow soil layers, and the body in shallow soil layers is smaller. No nematode has the ability to bite off a finger, nor can it wring, and their strength does not cause harm to a person.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Wire worms do not wrench a person's hand. Echinodea is a general term for worms of the class Elegans. Also known as capillary nematodes, they are widely distributed around the world and can infect humans through water sources, causing nematoasis. In scientific research, it can also be used as experimental material for zoology.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    There are so many people who think that a parasite can cut off a person's finger ......I can tell you clearly that this thing has very little strength and its body is also very fragile, and it will break when you pull it!

    Moreover, the parasitic objects of nematodes are insects, locusts, praying mantises, and other insects, which is destined to make them impossible to grow particularly thick!

    Why? My family lives by the river, and I can see a bunch of them every year when I go down to the net to catch fish, and this thing is hung on the fishing net every winter!

    The local people call it "swimming hair", and the legend is that the hair that falls when the fairy washes her hair, and the children often catch some bottles and raise them to play.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Wire worms can struggle their fingers This statement is categorically spreading rumors It's just a parasite The hand is lightly pulled and broken, and it doesn't cause any harm to the human body But once the mantis is infected, it is doomed to the end of its fate By the way, even if the mantis has a nematode in its stomach, it is not afraid to throw it directly into the fish tank The Arowana likes it very much, and it is divided into five horses.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Yes, there are parasites on the nematode, with a very hard shell, which is jagged on the nematode's body, and when the nematode swims quickly in a circle on your fingers, the damage is very huge, this is only relatively speaking, if you have heard the allusion of the drop stone through the rope sawing wood is very easy to understand, if you want to cut off your fingers there are several necessary conditions, one, the nematode always swims around a location, two, the nematode must have continuous physical strength during the wandering time, and the life span of the nematode is long enough, conclusion, Clematodes will not have their fingers sawed off during their lifetime because of the thickness of your skin.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    I don't know what you mean by a nematode, but I've seen a kind of insect that is as soft as a locust, more than 20 centimeters long, and its head is like a digger that picks out its ears, and we call it a nematode, and it can break the tail of a cow.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    It is possible to smash fingers. As the name suggests, a nematode must be as hard as iron to take that name! If you keep twisting, use a vise to help the nematode bite harder!

    It's always going to work, but if it's still going on, it's the wrong way! But don't be suspicious of the nematode.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    Wire worms get their name because of their dark and slender appearance. It is a worm in itself, parasitic for life. Infection occurs by eating raw larvae-containing water, snails, small fish, or swimming naked in water rich in insect bodies.

    What bites through ** and gets into it, that's mentally retarded. Symptoms of urethritis should be present after infection, but adult worms will live in the body for several years. Then, a worm, small in size, lives on parasitism, its own strength and toughness can be imagined, you can't pinch your fingers off, let alone this little worm.

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    In winter, the skin is more brittle, it's really hard to say, I advise the subject not to try it easily, the wireworm wrapped around your fingers will make your blood flow poor, and the knot will be broken! It's dangerous.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Depending on the quality of the nematode, if it is a good nematode, it can break the finger, but if the quality is not very good, there is no way to break the finger.

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Anyway, the oxtail can be twisted, as for the fingers, I don't know, but you can see the hardness of the fingers and the oxtail, and the thinner the thing can break the thing, too thick but can't.

  26. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    Because the nematode is like a wire, it is easy to get entangled in the fingers with the hand, which may lead to serious consequences, so it is generally not recommended to catch the nematode with the hand. It is generally recommended to kill it with pesticides, pick it up with a stick and put it in a fire, or burn it with hot water.

    Adult nematodes generally live in seawater or freshwater, while larvae parasitize arthropods and control the behavior of their hosts.

    The length of the iron wire is 3000-1000 mm, it is thin rope-shaped, without dorsal line, ventral line, lateral line, and there is a digestive tract in the larval stage, and it gradually degenerates in the adult stage.

    Wire worms will also parasitize the human body through water sources, so do not drink unclean water, do not eat raw insects, fish and snails and other foods, and avoid direct contact between the mouth and unclean water bodies when entering the water, so as to prevent Hu from coming into contact with this insect.

  27. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    Hello, let me take a look at this question.

    In fact, it is very easy to break it, and it is false to say that the nematode is hard, not hard.

    Extension of knowledge: Nematomorpha Vejdovsky, 1886, Gordioidea.

    Adult worms live alone in water and occasionally infect humans, causing nematomorphiasis. The route of infection is extremely specific. Infection through drinking water.

    Because the adult nematodes need to grow and mate in water. The larvae in the arthropod will induce the parasite to find the water source, so when the water source has arthropod carcasses. Hope!

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