Best Malessezia Yeast (the ******* responsible for seborrheic dermatitis and alopecia) killer hands down. !!!!!SEA SALT, SEA SALT, SEA SALT, SEA SALT, SEA SALT, SEA SALT!!!!!! Best Demodex Mite killer hands down. Also need to get healthy so they don't come to you in the future.so it is a multi pronged approac, internal, external, and beginning anew. I plan on leaving everything behind, go into a far infrared sauna, regular one, remove sll hair, hath and showe, coming out to new clothes someone brings. Also going to try tetrasodium edta with ammonium chloride. I'm about to begin a borax food graded mixture with liwuid hydrogen peroxide to kill them inside. Tricky thing is the population is hovering and flying around your home and you and anything that you come within 5-10 feet of sill get reinfected. I finally found a product that is getting them out of head and is non-toxic.Cleans them off body helps heal lesions, sores, infested skin. The reason why this white/black specked flying parasite comes to you is they communicate with each other and are attracted to a head that is already infected. So I shaved my head which made it easier to clean but more sensations too. It is possible that you have myiasis (fly- type parasite living inside your scalp.)I have it and feel something tiny continually hit my head or a crawling sensation. On the internet I have read that apple cider vinegar loosens the hold that lice eggs has on your hair if you find that this is what you have it makes it easier to comb them out, Nix also makes a combo pack that comes with gel to put in so you can easily come out eggs after you use the shampoo. Somewhere to start anyway, since their bodies at this point are 97 to 98 % water, I have gotten rid of them in a test run anyway wish alcohol pads that I had left on with small clips for 10 minutes I plan to use a hair dye bottle 2 coat my scalp in alcohol gel (hand sanitizer) and that should take care of them and creepy eggs that come with them, wish me luck hopefully my hair doesn't fall out, I hope you find out what's happening. You should also,(by doing this) pull a bunch of them loose and usually be able to use a nit comb to comb them out they are sticky white or clear and very tiny. A way to test is to start at the side of your head with a pair of tweezers that have meeting ends like the ones with teeth and grab a few hairs with the tweezers and squeeze right around the base of the hair at the scalp, if you hear a crunching sound instead of what you would hear normally hear at the mid or end of the hair shaft you might have them. I'm not sure exactly what species they are but you might have these. I feel like that guy Job from the Bible at the same time traveling with the lice was pubic lice not where they usually crop up, they first attacked on my head, (yuck!) This sometimes happens as they love to be roommates, now I'm finding (this is what I think you have not lice)if I brush my hair with a nit comb that there are what appear to be nits, but there are also no adult lice I brush my hair for hours looking what I did find was some type of soft-bodied worm-like like insect residing in some of my hair follicles they are very delicate their bodies are so soft that a few minutes out of the hair will dry them up completely leaving them looking like little white or clear goop pieces, ever since I've had them I still get what seems to be nits but I think they're just the type of tiny fly laying a new generation in exactly the same spot as a louse would and it climbs down hair shaft to I don't know,eat oil and dead skin cells or whatever until it climbs up the hair and turns into a different kind of gross. Full-grown louse only lays about 5 to 8 eggs a day. You could have had just one pregnant louse go and lay a truck load of eggs and then you combed them all out, it's very rare actually to see a louse unless you use a shampoo like Nix that has insecticide in it, I went my whole life to 36 without catching lice then caught it I guess I had it for a few days or a week and I only washed out about 10 to 20 full grown dark bodied lice.
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