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Bed Bugs I could just cry Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   debmidge 

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Posted 11 October 2009 - 03:19 PM

I am embarrassed to say I believe that I have Bed bugs.
I have not done any traveling to hotels or purchased any new or used furniture
or used clothing or gone anywhere different.
I live in an apartment building and websites on this topic do say that they can
migrate into other units.
I am very, very upset - I am crying constantly and that isn't like me at all. To make matters worse, my husband doesn't want any pest control people up here, he thinks we can tackle this by ourselves....

My questions are :

Has anyone else on the board ever have them?
Can they go away without treating them?
Do they really go away when a licensed pest control person "treats' them?

Does anyone have an advice until I tell my landlord and get the
pest control person in here?

I have one thing against me: the people who live downstairs from me are
overcrowding their 1-bedroom (3 rooms w/bath about 650 sq. apt with 1 older lady, her 40 yr old son, his girlfriend and his son from his prior marriage -- -my husband and I feel cramped in our same sized apt and it's only the two of us). Could their living conditions (the # of people in that small apartment) contribute to bed bugs? - they are not careful about things like taking the garbage out on a timely basis - they let it pile up for the week and then they trot out 3 large black bags full - They are not the kind of people who will vaccum every day or take all their clothing and bedding out to wash and disinfect. Anyway...They threw their furniture (sofa and mattresses) away about 4 months ago and my infestation started about a month ago (to my knowledge but I know in reality it could have been more than a month ago, I just noticed it now in hindsight as I found an actual bug and had mysterious bites on my legs, neck and forearm about a month ago). I am afraid that I'll go to the trouble of getting the pest person up in my flat only to get the bugs again a couple of months down the road due to the neighbors.

How do I "de-bug" stuff like shoes, pocketbooks, electronic equipment?
I understand that I have to change my vaccum cleaner bag after each use - isn't there anything
I can shove into the bag to kill these pests rather than change the bag every day (I was told to vaccum every day).

Should I cover my potentially-infested mattresses now from now? Or wait until I purchase a new mattress?

I am very upset and too old and tired for all the work this is going to take from me.
My husband and I cannot even lift our mattresses up to begin the cleaning. Several of my
old-time friends on this board know my husband's condition and that he's not healthy enough
for this dilemma.

What advice can anyone give me? I do appreciate any responses.

Thank you - D.
Husband has Celiac Disease and
Husband misdiagnosed for 27 yrs -
The misdiagnosis was: IBS or colitis
Mis-diagnosed from 1977 to 2003 by various gastros including one of the largest,
most prestigious medical groups in northern NJ which constantly advertises themselves as
being the "best." This GI told him it was "all in his head."
Serious Depressive state ensued
Finally Diagnosed with celiac disease in 2003
Other food sensitivities: almost all fruits, vegetables, spices, eggs, nuts, yeast, fried foods, roughage, soy.
Needs to gain back at least 25 lbs. of the 40 lbs pounds he lost - lost a great amout of body fat and muscle
Developed neuropathy in 2005
Now has lymphadema 2006
It is my opinion that his subsequent disorders could have been avoided had he been diagnosed sooner by any of the dozen or so doctors he saw between 1977 to 2003
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#2 User is offline   Ahorsesoul 

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Posted 11 October 2009 - 04:22 PM

Bedbugs are coming back very strong. It doesn't matter about the housekeeping style, they just move right in.

Sorry I can't be of more help. There was a news story on them not long ago but I really didn't listen.
1960s-had symptoms-could have been before but don't remember
1970s-told had colitis or nervous stomach-was given phenobarbital, felt great but still had symptoms
Me, dd and ds diagnosed with Lactose Intolerance
2000-osteopenia
2001-had stroke because of medications I was given
June 2003-saw Chiropractor who specialized in nutrition: Celiac Disease not Lactose Intolerance, went gluten free with once in awhile cheating, off soy and dairy for about 6 months
June 2003-found excellent doctor for fibromyalgia (who has found out she has Celiac Disease)
May 2006-went gluten free with NO cheating-excellent! Made all the difference in the world
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#3 User is offline   Jestgar 

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Posted 11 October 2009 - 05:12 PM

When I lived in Armenia we treated bed bugs by putting everything in the sun on a regular basis. In general, Americans have a lot more stuff, but you might start trying sunlight on the things you can't wash, and don't want sprayed.
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#4 User is offline   TrillumHunter 

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Posted 11 October 2009 - 06:06 PM

I don't have any tips, but I wanted to tell you even clean people can get infested. :) This can be especially true in apartments where you're neighbors aren't so clean.

I hope this can get resolved quickly for you!
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#5 User is offline   curlyfries 

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Posted 11 October 2009 - 06:51 PM

I understand what a nightmare this must be for you.
My daughter and her boyfriend (now husband) had bedbugs after moving into an apartment. They didn't see them, however, so when my daughter started getting bites, they thought they were fleas. They bombed the apartment, and when that didn't work, they insisted ther apt. manager call an exterminator, which he did. She still got bites so she went to the dr., who diagnosed her with scabies. Two treatments later, she still has problems, so more tests. Then she was diagnosed with a skin form of lupus.

They didn't know they had bedbugs until they moved and found a nest of them under their mattress (YUCK!). Needless to say, they threw out the mattress AND the sofa, just in case. Bagged up all their clothes, until they could wash every bit of it, and put a plastic cover over their new mattress. They did find a couple bugs after they moved, and vacuumed every day for a while.That was almost 7 months ago, and she's still paranoid.

BTW...through most of this, her husband didn't have any bites.....not until near the end of it all.

I don't think this is something you can fight on your own....not if you're in an apartment.
~~Lisa~~

"The greater the obstacle, the more glory in overcoming it."--Moliere

"I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be."--Douglas Adams


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#6 User is offline   debmidge 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 01:38 AM

View Postcurlyfries, on Oct 11 2009, 09:51 PM, said:

I understand what a nightmare this must be for you.
My daughter and her boyfriend (now husband) had bedbugs after moving into an apartment. They didn't see them, however, so when my daughter started getting bites, they thought they were fleas. They bombed the apartment, and when that didn't work, they insisted ther apt. manager call an exterminator, which he did. She still got bites so she went to the dr., who diagnosed her with scabies. Two treatments later, she still has problems, so more tests. Then she was diagnosed with a skin form of lupus.

They didn't know they had bedbugs until they moved and found a nest of them under their mattress (YUCK!). Needless to say, they threw out the mattress AND the sofa, just in case. Bagged up all their clothes, until they could wash every bit of it, and put a plastic cover over their new mattress. They did find a couple bugs after they moved, and vacuumed every day for a while.That was almost 7 months ago, and she's still paranoid.

BTW...through most of this, her husband didn't have any bites.....not until near the end of it all.

I don't think this is something you can fight on your own....not if you're in an apartment.


Dear Lisa:

Thanks for your response...I want to understand better...your daughter unknowingly moved into an infested apartment and the apt was professionally treated twice, and then she and husband moved again (?) and now they are Ok, but understandably paranoid. Did they move the second time because they just couldn't get rid of the bed bugs? Did the landlord treat any other apartments during the same time their apt was treated?

A Pest control person said to me that bed bugs like to bite women (at first I thought he was joking - then he said he wasn't joking) but they'll bite a man if that is all that is available.

I would welcome any other thoughts or advice, especially what do you do to treat shoes and other
objects like nick-nacks (could I just wash them in warm/hot soapy water and perhaps blow them dry?) , my leather briefcase, Do I have to get rid of stuff in my livingroom other than sofa and upholstered chair, like my file cabinet or my wooden celiac disease cabinet? Did your daughter have to scrub down her wood furniture in her bedroom or throw her headboard away? What type of treatment did your daughter use (something applied to room and she had to be out of the apt. for hours or the new cold treatment)? Did she "heat treatment" or "steam" anything? When your daughter vaccumed, did she have to throw the vaccum cleaner bag out after very vaccum job? (that was something the pest control person told me I had to do..)

View Postcurlyfries, on Oct 11 2009, 09:51 PM, said:

They didn't know they had bedbugs until they moved and found a nest of them under their mattress


Under top mattress or bottom box spring mattress? was the nest in the mattress or on the floor or at the crack of the floor and the wall? (sorry to want so much detail - I really don't know what I am dealing with here so I want to know more). I keep looking but maybe I am not looking in the right places....


I am in an area of the country where from here on in until the late spring I won't get enough sunlight to put my belongings out in the sun as treatment - I won't be hot enough. I am in upper east coast.

Are there professional cleaning services who I can hire who can help me with the bagging of clothes and getting them out of here and help us with the heavy lifting of the mattress and box spring? I am too old for this nonsense....


D
Husband has Celiac Disease and
Husband misdiagnosed for 27 yrs -
The misdiagnosis was: IBS or colitis
Mis-diagnosed from 1977 to 2003 by various gastros including one of the largest,
most prestigious medical groups in northern NJ which constantly advertises themselves as
being the "best." This GI told him it was "all in his head."
Serious Depressive state ensued
Finally Diagnosed with celiac disease in 2003
Other food sensitivities: almost all fruits, vegetables, spices, eggs, nuts, yeast, fried foods, roughage, soy.
Needs to gain back at least 25 lbs. of the 40 lbs pounds he lost - lost a great amout of body fat and muscle
Developed neuropathy in 2005
Now has lymphadema 2006
It is my opinion that his subsequent disorders could have been avoided had he been diagnosed sooner by any of the dozen or so doctors he saw between 1977 to 2003
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#7 User is offline   flourgirl 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 02:23 AM

D, sorry to hear about your situation. I hate to admit I have no advice....I just wanted to wish you the best of luck getting rid of the darn things. I know you'll get some good advice here. Sending a hug and some strength to deal with it.
GOD IS GREAT, GOD IS GOOD, THANK YOU FOR OUR GLUTEN-FREE FOOD!

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#8 User is offline   GFinDC 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 05:19 AM

Hi Deb,

I don't have any personal experience with the bed bugs, but when I had a woofie dog I looked up ways to kill fleas. One thing I found was some websites that say diatomaceous earth can work. The site I read said to sprinkle it in your carpet (for fleas). Some of the sites say it works for bed bugs also. It is supposed to be bad for bugs but ok for people. I don't really kow if this will help, but the stuff is not real expensive so it might be worth a try. Some people even suggest eating a little of it every day. Yummy!

http://www.richsoil....ceous-earth.jsp

At the time I read about it I had got some Frontline (real good flea killer) for the puppies already and that did the trick. So I don't really just know if the DE got rid of the fleas or the Frontline did. Maybe it helped, I don't know for sure.
Proverbs 25:16 "Hast thou found honey? eat so much as is sufficient for thee, lest thou be filled therewith, and vomit it."
Job 30:27 My bowels boiled, and rested not: the days of affliction prevented me.
Thyroid cyst and nodules, Lactose / casein intolerant. Diet positive, gene test pos, symptoms confirmed by Dr-head. My current bad list is: gluten, dairy, sulfites, coffee (the devil's brew), tea, Bug's Bunnies carrots, garbanzo beans of pain, soy- no joy, terrible turnips, tomatoes, peppers, potatoes, and hard work. have a good day! :-) Paul
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#9 User is offline   lovegrov 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 05:41 AM

Nothing to be embarrassed about. Our son brought home bedbugs from a church camp. We were lucky in that we confined them to one room -- his bedroom. We did treat it ourselves, but it's not easy. We ended up having to throw away the mattress and box springs, although we first tried wrapping it in plastic with mothballs. Didn't work.

Spencer moved out of his room for months. We washed all of his clothes, curtains and so on. We wrapped almost all of his stuff in plastic with mothballs for months. We sprayed every corner with bug spray 3 or 4 times, including taking off all the electrical outlet covers. We pried off some of the floor molding and sprayed in there. We might have been overly cautious, but we made his room and stuff a no-living zone for a long time. But we don't have bedbugs now.

BTW, the steps we took were from an exterminator. He told us we could try this OR we could pay him a lot of money -- close to $1,000. He also told us from the start that the mattress and boxsprings were probably a loss.

richard
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#10 User is offline   janetw 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 06:40 AM

View Postdebmidge, on Oct 12 2009, 05:38 AM, said:

I would welcome any other thoughts or advice, especially what do you do to treat shoes and other
objects like nick-nacks (could I just wash them in warm/hot soapy water and perhaps blow them dry?)


I put down pillows and bedding in the freezer for a day or two to kill dust mites - that might work on smaller items like shoes and nick-nacks.
Janet

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#11 User is offline   Mango04 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 07:57 AM

I remember hearing that you can seal stuff in plastic bags and then leave them out in the sun...
"Let food be thy medicine, and let thy medicine be food." - Hippocrates
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#12 User is offline   curlyfries 

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Posted 12 October 2009 - 06:52 PM

View Postdebmidge, on Oct 12 2009, 05:38 AM, said:

Dear Lisa:

Thanks for your response...I want to understand better...your daughter unknowingly moved into an infested apartment and the apt was professionally treated twice, and then she and husband moved again (?)


Did they move the second time because they just couldn't get rid of the bed bugs?


Did the landlord treat any other apartments during the same time their apt was treated?


Did your daughter have to scrub down her wood furniture in her bedroom or throw her headboard away?


What type of treatment did your daughter use (something applied to room and she had to be out of the apt. for hours or the new cold treatment)?


Did she "heat treatment" or "steam" anything? When your daughter vaccumed, did she have to throw the vaccum cleaner bag out after very vaccum job? (that was something the pest control person told me I had to do..)



Under top mattress or bottom box spring mattress? was the nest in the mattress or on the floor or at the crack of the floor and the wall? (sorry to want so much detail - I really don't know what I am dealing with here so I want to know more). I keep looking but maybe I am not looking in the right places....


My DD is certain they got the bed bugs from the apartment....no problems before that.

When my daughter bombed the place, they were still thinking it was fleas...and yes, they did have to leave the house for a few hours.......never heard of the cold treatment.

It was professionally treated only once......still thinking it was fleas at that time.....I'm sure the surrounding apartments were not treated. They did have to leave the apartment for a while for this.

The move was not because of the bedbugs. In fact, that was when they finally realized that bedbugs was the problem.

I don't believe they scrubbed down any funiture. They didn't have much to begin with, and anything upholstered was thrown out (bed and sofa)
They washed everything that could go through the washer and dryer....threw away the pillows.

They were moving anyway, so no vacuuming was done until they were in a different place. They found a couple stray bugs, so started vacuuming every day. They knew they should throw away the bag every time, but they cheated a little and would tape up the hole in the bag between vacuumings to cut down on the cost. Since they had left most of the bugs behind, this was sufficient.

I think the nest was under the box springs....not positive, though

I hope I've answered all your questions. Wish I could be more help.
~~Lisa~~

"The greater the obstacle, the more glory in overcoming it."--Moliere

"I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be."--Douglas Adams


Friends may come and go but Sillies are Forever!!!!!!!--Amanda
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#13 User is offline   debmidge 

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Posted 13 October 2009 - 02:12 AM

View Postjanetw, on Oct 12 2009, 09:40 AM, said:

I put down pillows and bedding in the freezer for a day or two to kill dust mites - that might work on smaller items like shoes and nick-nacks.



I'd like to try that - doesn't the freezer have to be at 0 degrees faraghenheit (spelling is way off!)?
Husband has Celiac Disease and
Husband misdiagnosed for 27 yrs -
The misdiagnosis was: IBS or colitis
Mis-diagnosed from 1977 to 2003 by various gastros including one of the largest,
most prestigious medical groups in northern NJ which constantly advertises themselves as
being the "best." This GI told him it was "all in his head."
Serious Depressive state ensued
Finally Diagnosed with celiac disease in 2003
Other food sensitivities: almost all fruits, vegetables, spices, eggs, nuts, yeast, fried foods, roughage, soy.
Needs to gain back at least 25 lbs. of the 40 lbs pounds he lost - lost a great amout of body fat and muscle
Developed neuropathy in 2005
Now has lymphadema 2006
It is my opinion that his subsequent disorders could have been avoided had he been diagnosed sooner by any of the dozen or so doctors he saw between 1977 to 2003
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#14 User is offline   debmidge 

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Posted 13 October 2009 - 02:16 AM

View Postcurlyfries, on Oct 12 2009, 09:52 PM, said:

My DD is certain they got the bed bugs from the apartment....no problems before that.

When my daughter bombed the place, they were still thinking it was fleas...and yes, they did have to leave the house for a few hours.......never heard of the cold treatment.

It was professionally treated only once......still thinking it was fleas at that time.....I'm sure the surrounding apartments were not treated. They did have to leave the apartment for a while for this.

The move was not because of the bedbugs. In fact, that was when they finally realized that bedbugs was the problem.

I don't believe they scrubbed down any funiture. They didn't have much to begin with, and anything upholstered was thrown out (bed and sofa)
They washed everything that could go through the washer and dryer....threw away the pillows.

They were moving anyway, so no vacuuming was done until they were in a different place. They found a couple stray bugs, so started vacuuming every day. They knew they should throw away the bag every time, but they cheated a little and would tape up the hole in the bag between vacuumings to cut down on the cost. Since they had left most of the bugs behind, this was sufficient.

I think the nest was under the box springs....not positive, though

I hope I've answered all your questions. Wish I could be more help.


Lisa, What did you daughter do about stuff like pantyhose, make up bottles, curlers, books that stay in bedroom (I have a wooden bookcase my brother made for me my hand that I cannot part with).
What about photgraphs and photo albums?

Was the nest right in the box spring itself, like if you opened it up with a knife they'd be in there?

I have started throwing things away in preparation for the professional exterminator to be here.
Husband has Celiac Disease and
Husband misdiagnosed for 27 yrs -
The misdiagnosis was: IBS or colitis
Mis-diagnosed from 1977 to 2003 by various gastros including one of the largest,
most prestigious medical groups in northern NJ which constantly advertises themselves as
being the "best." This GI told him it was "all in his head."
Serious Depressive state ensued
Finally Diagnosed with celiac disease in 2003
Other food sensitivities: almost all fruits, vegetables, spices, eggs, nuts, yeast, fried foods, roughage, soy.
Needs to gain back at least 25 lbs. of the 40 lbs pounds he lost - lost a great amout of body fat and muscle
Developed neuropathy in 2005
Now has lymphadema 2006
It is my opinion that his subsequent disorders could have been avoided had he been diagnosed sooner by any of the dozen or so doctors he saw between 1977 to 2003
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#15 User is offline   lovegrov 

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Posted 13 October 2009 - 06:38 AM

BTW, it's my understanding that bedbugs can survive up to 18 months without eating.

richard
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