Itching Powder
These are fibers collected from inside a rosehip.
Transmitted Off Crossed Circular Polarized Light Illumination
Definition/Function:
Itching powder includes both mechanical and chemical irritants that induce itching when
applied to the human skin. This
may be the result of an attempt at humor (practical joke) or an unexpected exposure to
one of these agents. The fibers
from the inside of rosehips are collected, often by grinding the dried hip, to make a
commercial product that is sold as
an itching powder in novelty shops. This is just one of the types of itching powders
available commercially.
Significance in the Environment:
Any of the mechanical agents that cause contact dermatitis can be collected by taking a
tapelift of the affected area of
skin. A Tapelift of clothing covering that area or of surfaces in the environment of
that individual may also detect the
presence of one of these mechanical agents. If the agent is clearly introduced
artificially then the exposure may be the
result of a practical joke. Rose hip pith and maple seed hair are two agents that
generally indicate a practicle joke.
Glass fiber, carbon fiber, bark fiber, and the like may be the result of an exposure
related to a specific activity or
the degradation of some material in the environment.
Characteristic Features:
The fibers from rose hips tend to have a small basal attachement at one end and
terminate in a stiff, sharp point. They
have moderate birefringence and a large lumen running the length of the fiber. The lumen
is not divided, where as the
maple seed hairs are divided by cell walls at intervals across the length of the fiber.
Associated Particles:
When this material has been used as part of a practical joke it is clearly out of place.
There are no other similarly
elevated plant remains that would suggest an inadvertent exposure.
References:
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itching_powder
2. Rietschel, Robert L. and Joseph F. Fowler, Jr. (eds), FISHER'S CONTACT DERMATITIS,4th
EDITION, Williams & Wilkins, 1995
3. Marks, James G. and Vincent A. DeLeo (eds), CONTACT AND OCCUPATIONAL DERMATOLOGY,
Mosby-Year Book, 1992