... articulating with this framework. The larva burrows its way into the tissue on which it feeds by repeated extension and contraction of the hooks, alternately piercing and tearing. These movements explain the agonizing pain which patients experience... The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine - Page 781883Full view - About this book
| Daniel Bennett St. John Roosa - 1876 - 570 pages
...the agonizing pain which patients experience when the larvae appear from the eggs. These hooks are very large in proportion to the size of the body of the larvae. Dr. Blake says that the instincts of the animal lead it to bury itself beneath the surface,... | |
| C. E. Shoemaker - Ear - 1879 - 388 pages
...the agonizing pain which patients experience when the larvae appear from the eggs. These hooks are very large in proportion to the size of the body of the larvae. Dr. Blake says that the instincts of the animal lead it to bury itself beneath the surface,... | |
| Entomology - 1882 - 746 pages
...bodies of these insects. As far as my experience goes, they are scarce, except on the TypUocylidce, but on some species of them they are common, each...Curtis says of his Aphrodes craticula (= Athysanus subfiisculus, Fall., sec. Puton) : " It) is infested in the different stages with a large black parasite... | |
| Daniel Bennett St. John Roosa, Beaman Douglass - Ear - 1905 - 650 pages
...the agonizing pain which patients experience when the larvae appear from the eggs. These hooks are very large in proportion to the size of the body of the larvae. Blake says that the instincts of the animal lead it to bury itself beneath the surface, and... | |
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