Author: Maham Ghani, Medical Student, CUNY School of Medicine, New York City, New York, United States. DermNet New Zealand Editor in Chief: Adjunct A/Prof Amanda Oakley, Dermatologist, Hamilton, New Zealand. Copy edited by Gus Mitchell. October 2019.
Paederus dermatitis is a skin irritation due to contact with certain species of the rove beetle, such as the Nairobi fly. It is also known as rove beetle rash, dermatitis linearis, spider lick, night burn, and Nairobi fly rash.
A blistering rash occurs 24–48 hours after brushing against or crushing the beetle against the skin, and can take several weeks to disappear [1,2].
Who gets paederus dermatitis?
At least 60,000 different species of rove beetle have been identified — the largest group of insects worldwide. These insects are of the family Staphylinidae, in the order Coleoptera (beetles) [2,3]. The beetles have narrow bodies, ranging from 0.5–1.5 cm [4]. They tend to have a shiny black head and thorax, with blue or black elytra (forewing), and an orange-red abdomen [1,4].
Rove beetles can be found in decaying vegetable and animal matter in most environments around the world, except Antarctica [4]. There are more than 1000 different species of rove beetle in New Zealand. They are more prevalent in warmer climates [5]. The beetle breeding period is during the rainy seasons [1,4].
Paederus dermatitis is due to contact with one of more than 622 paederus species of rove beetle, which have a blistering agent in their haemolymph (haemolymph is analogous to blood in vertebrates).
Outbreaks of paederus dermatitis are most commonly reported in Europe and Asia, but outbreaks have occurred in many other countries including:
Australia
Malaysia
Sri Lanka
Kenya
Iran
Central Africa
Uganda
Okinawa
Sierra Leone
Argentina
Brazil
France
Venezuela
Ecuador
India [2,5].
The beetle is attracted to ultraviolet radiation (UVR); epidemics have been reported in warm regions with military units and hospital wards with open windows and fluorescent lights [4].
Paedarus littoralis
What causes paederus dermatitis?
Paederus dermatitis is due to paederin, a toxin produced by pseudomonasbacteria in the haemolymph and released by the female paederus beetle [2,4,7]. Paederin causes a release of epidermalproteases and a loss of intercellular connection, inhibiting proteinsynthesis, DNA synthesis, and mitosis [2,5].
What are the clinical features of paederus dermatitis?
A localised streaky or linearerythema appears 24–48 hours after contact with the beetle and is typically followed by vesicles and pustules after 2–4 days [2,4,8]. Signs take a week or more to disappear [2].
The cutaneous features of paederus dermatitis include:
Erythema [1,4]
Vesicles and pustules [4,8]
A burning sensation [1,4–8]
‘Kissing lesions’ where two adjacentflexural surfaces come together [1,4]
Periocular dermatitis and keratoconjunctivitus (‘Nairobi eye’) [1,2,4,8]
Balanitis (inflammation of the glans of the penis) due to transfer of the toxin on hands [1,2].
What are the complications of paederus dermatitis?
The primary complication of paederus dermatitis is the pain associated with the rash. Secondary complications include:
Infection
Exfoliation and ulceration (sometimes requiring hospitalisation)
Postinflammatoryhyperpigmentation
Scarring [2,5].
How is paederus dermatitis diagnosed?
Paederus dermatitis is diagnosed clinically.
A skin biopsy of an early lesion shows neutrophilicspongiosis, vesiculation, and reticularnecrosis of the epidermis [4]. The inflammatoryinfiltrate in the epidermis contains many neutrophils [4,8].
Later biopsies show irregular acanthosis, pallor of superficial keratinocytes, overlying parakeratosis, confluent epidermal necrosis, and suprabasalacantholysis [7,8].
What is the differential diagnosis for paederus dermatitis?
Paederus dermatitis can be prevented by limiting the chance of exposure to the rove beetle.
Use insect-proof netting at night.
Select light sources that do not emit UV.
Turn lights off when sleeping.
Remove any beetle found on the skin without crushing it.
Wash skin in contact with a rove beetle with soap and water [4,5,7].
What is the outcome for paederus dermatitis?
It can take a few weeks for paederus dermatitis to resolve, and postinflammatory pigmentation may persist for several months [1,2].
References
Nasir S, Akram W, Khan RR, Arshad M, Nasir I. Paederus beetles: the agent of human dermatitis. J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis. 2015; 21: 5. DOI: 10.1186/s40409-015-0004-0. PubMed
Asgar A, Sujitha K, Sivasankaran M, et al. Study on Paederus Dermatitis Outbreak in a Suburban Teaching Research Hospital, Kanchipuram, India. Medicine Science 2013; 2: 764–9. 2013.2.1.10.5455/medscience.2013.02.8076. Journal
Coondoo A, Nandy J. Paederus dermatitis: an outbreak, increasing incidence or changing seasonal pattern? Indian J Dermatol. 2013; 58: 410. doi: 10.4103/0019-5154.117357. PMID: 24082222; PMCID: PMC3778817.PubMed
Karthikeyan K, Kumar A. Paederus dermatitis. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol. 2017; 83: 424–31. doi: 10.4103/0378-6323.198441. PMID: 28584222.PubMed
Singh G, Yousuf Ali S. Paederus dermatitis. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol. 2007; 73: 13–5. doi: 10.4103/0378-6323.30644. PMID: 17314440.PubMed
Mammino J. Paederus dermatitis: an outbreak on a medical mission boat in the Amazon. J Clin Aesthet Dermatol. 2011; 4: 44–6. PMID: 22125660; PMCID: PMC3225135.PubMed