Homemade Remedies for Head Lice
Homemade Remedies for Head Lice
The problem with head lice is that they are a surprisingly common phenomenon, and many people are averse to using the many chemically formulated, insecticide based shampoos that are prescribed for the condition. It is often the case that parents search for homemade remedies for head lice, and a quick internet search will show you just how many of these there are.
They range from the logical – regular attention with a nit comb and the application of natural herbal remedies that are known to have combative properties – to the absurd – coating the head in mayonnaise to smother the head lice! The question is, however, do these home remedies work? Will they kill the head louse population?
It is so that the methods all have their basis in actual fact, so let’s have a closer look at the different sorts of home remedy for head lice, how they work, and whether they should be considered valid.
First, the combing: as head lice live and lay their eggs – nits – close to the scalp a conventional comb is unlikely to be effective against them, hence the invention of the head lice comb. This device is smaller than a standard comb but has very closely ranged, and longer, teeth and is specifically designed to remove the lice and the eggs, too. Regular combing after washing can be very successful indeed, and is recommended in conjunction with all other home based remedies.
Next, the natural remedies: many different substances are used to combat head lice – Tea Tree oil is popular, an essential oil distilled from the leaves of the Tea Tree plant native to Australia, and used by the Aborigines as a remedy for many things – and it can be added to shampoos for extra effect. There are special shampoos available that already contain the substance, specially formulated for head lice treatment.
The smothering method is perhaps the most bizarre, but it does have claims based on fact: the head louse breathes through holes in its side, and coating the head in substances such as Olive Oil, Vinegar or the aforementioned Mayonnaise can serve to block the breathing holes of the louse, effectively suffocating it in a couple of hours.
Finding and choosing a home remedy for head lice is something that involves trial and error – what works for you may not work for others – but the sheer amount of information available on the internet, and in publications, should enable you to find a successful method.
Head Lice Nit – a Guide
Head Lice Nit Treatment
Millions of people, primarily children, will suffer from head lice during their lifetime, and it is an irritating experience that makes one feel as though they have become dirty. In fact, having head lice is not necessarily a sign of inefficient hygiene, as the louse will happily live on the cleanest of hair, and as they are so easily spread and difficult to detect, it can be the case that a population has become established before the host notices. Indeed, with the symptomatic itching taking weeks in some cases to manifest, it is easy to see how an infestation of itchy head lice can be easily overlooked.
Nevertheless, there is one important factor that is essential to treating the problem, and that is that the head lice nit is central to the eradication of a colony; the nit is the egg of the louse, as distinct from the head louse itself, and it is a very minute egg that is laid attached to the lower part of a hair, near the scalp, and it is attached by a notoriously strong ‘glue’.
The traditional, and very successful plus highly recommended, method of dealing with head lice is to wet comb the hair with a special head lice comb; indeed every method of treatment will include this routine at some point. The problem is that, while the comb is likely to remove most, if not all, of the live lice, it is also likely it will leave some unnoticed nits behind.
Dealing with Head Lice Nit
A nit remains in that state for a week before it emerges as a young, very tiny, louse, and just another week down the line it has feasted on enough of your blood to reach adulthood; the problem is clear – if nits are remaining, they must be caught before they hatch and, if not, before they reach breeding age. This is why any routine involves paying extra attention to removing the nits.
One method of making nit removal easier is to apply vinegar – common household vinegar, preferably white – to the scalp, as the acid in the vinegar dissolves the adhesive that holds the nit in place, making it far easier to drag the nit from the hair with the comb.
Nits are so small that even the most in depth examination is unlikely to see them all, so if you do find yourself dealing with a louse infestation, make sure you repeat the process once the lice have been removed.
Best Head Lice Nit Treatment
Liceadex One Step Lice & Nit Removal Gel is a special, one of a kind, natural formula that provides a safe effective way to kill lice and their eggs, without traditional and potentially harmful pesticide ingredients like permethrin or pyrethrum found in many over the counter solutions or expensive, multiple-step, essential oil-based solutions. Our formulation is one of the fastest-acting and most
effective products you will find today.
- Kills all lice and eggs naturally in minutes
- Contains no pesticides
- Allows for easy pain-free, tangle-free nit and debris removal
- Rinses completely clean without oily residue
- Can be used multiple times safely
- Can be used safely after “other” treatments have been done
-Head Lice Nit – a Guide-
Dealing with a Head Lice Infestation
Dealing with a Head Lice Infestation
The problems with head lice are many and one of the main ones is the speed at which they spread. It is a common misconception that head lice fly – they are, in fact, wingless – but they can only move between hosts by walking from hair to hair; this is why they spread very fast among young children – think of the playground and the physical contact.
It is also a myth that a head lice infestation can only occur where the child suffers from less than satisfactory hygiene; a head louse is not choosy about who it lives on, and all it seeks is head from which it can feed upon its staple diet – our blood.
Head lice multiply at an alarming rate: the female adult louse lays up to eight eggs – the famous nits – every day of her thirty day life, and a quick calculation gives you easily over 200 eggs. Each nit stays attached to a hair follicle for approximately one week then hatches as a nymph or young louse. In just a week to two weeks time it becomes a breeding adult, and begins the cycle once more. From that description it is simple to see just how quickly an infestation can spread, and how important it is that it is treated correctly.
Treating head lice is a subject that raises many arguments: there are many insecticide lotions – using Malathion, Permethrin or Lindane in the main – that are available by prescription, and these are widely proven to be successful in many cases, and there are natural shampoos such as those including Tea Tree oil, and essential oil that is used in many herbal medicines, and the choice is a very personal one that is left to the individual.
There also exist some more unusual ways of tackling head lice and nits – including the odd practice of smothering the hair, and the lice, in mayonnaise – that are known to be successful if somewhat messy, and the tried and tested head lice comb is an essential tool in all of this, whether in traditional close toothed form or in the shape of the new style of electric combs that shock the lice to death.
What is important to understand is that the first treatment will almost certainly not rid the head completely of nits, and the patient will need to be closely observed over the next two weeks in order that any emerging head lice nymphs are caught before they can begin to breed.
