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1 and progressively cause severe skin disease (myiasis).
2 fossil evidence relating to the evolution of myiasis.
3 en increasingly implicated in cases of human myiasis.
4 ew methods for the prevention and control of myiasis.
5 d in association with maggot infestation and myiasis.
6               In this review, the biology of myiasis and the history of maggot therapy are presented,
7 ses possibly pseudomyiasis, rather than true myiasis, and provide recommendations for clinical evalua
8 ogic diagnoses were cutaneous larva migrans, myiasis, and tungiasis.
9 sessment of the evolutionary routes by which myiasis arose.
10           Nevertheless, the insect agents of myiasis can be of societal benefit to forensic science a
11 ature review of published cases of purported myiasis caused by psychodid flies, their identification,
12 h ectoparasitic and endoparasitic species of myiasis-causing Diptera, the evolutionary affinities of
13 h ectoparasitic and endoparasitic species of myiasis-causing Diptera, the evolutionary affinities of
14 arate the evolution of the various groups of myiasis-causing flies from the evolution of the myiasis
15 rose, the evolution of the various groups of myiasis-causing flies must be separated from the evoluti
16      Until recently, evolutionary studies of myiasis-causing flies were little more than discussions
17 ng reassessment of the hypotheses concerning myiasis evolution.
18 role in confusing the overall picture of how myiasis evolved and this simplistic division is further
19 asis-causing flies from the evolution of the myiasis habit per se.
20  must be separated from the evolution of the myiasis habit per se.
21 uced bacterial septicemia secondary to wound myiasis in a deer in Michigan in the United States.
22                                              Myiasis in domestic animals has been studied more extens
23 ossil evidence to elucidate the evolution of myiasis in part II.
24  introduction and global spread of agents of myiasis into nonendemic areas, facilitated by climate ch
25                                              Myiasis, the infestation of live vertebrates with dipter
26                                    Traumatic myiasis, the parasitic infestation by fly larvae in trau
27  or urogenital tract, making true, prolonged myiasis unlikely.
28                                              Myiasis, which is the dipteran parasitism of living vert