1. Neem oil. Armed with a pungent smell and antibacterial properties, neem oil is one of the most effective home remedies to remove lice eggs from hair. Its strong smell repels lice, and some compounds in neem oil disrupt the life cycle of lice.
Washing, soaking, or drying items at a temperature greater than 130°F can kill both head lice and nits.
Most OTC head lice treatments don't kill nits, so a second application may be necessary to kill the nymphs once they hatch. Some OTC head lice treatments use pyrethrins as the active ingredient.
Wash your hair with vinegar
Vinegar contains properties that kill and get rid of nits and lice. This mixture should be applied directly to the whole scalp. Mix 1 cup of vinegar with 1 cup of warm water.
Vinegar has no negative effect on the lice eggs. What it will do is sting like crazy if there is any kind of cut on the scalp. You are much better off removing the lice eggs using a detangler or conditioner and nit combing them thoroughly out of the hair.
If you spot nits, but do not see any lice, it is possible that they are hiding and scurrying from the light as you search the hair and scalp; they can move quite quickly! Focus your search to their preferred hideouts, behind the ears and at the nape of the neck.
An adult female head louse lays nits about a quarter of an inch from the base of the hair shaft. It takes about 8 to 9 days for a nit to hatch. After they hatch, the empty egg will remain on the hair follicle and grow out with the hair.
The lice themselves take 7 to 11 days to hatch, so after that what is attached to the hair is the empty eggshell or the dead nit. These will stay attached to the hair and as the hair grows you will find them further and further down the hair shaft. They can stay there to the very end.
Then use a fine toothed “lice comb” to systematically work through the hair and remove adult lice. Regularly wiping the comb on tissues or paper towel will reveal the dispatched lice. This approach works but must be repeated twice, about a week apart, to break the life cycle of the head lice.
Rinsing the hair with white vinegar before washing may help dissolve the glue that holds the nits to the hair shafts.
After every hair is soaked, let it sit for 2-3 minutes and then comb out as much of the excess cleanser as you can. Blow dry their hair completely. This will take a long time but it helps “seal in” and suffocate the live lice.
New eggs are attached to the hair shaft very close to the scalp. Eggs that still contain a louse embryo are brownish in color, while the empty egg shells are white to grey.
Head lice sometimes go away on their own because there are not enough insects to maintain the infestation, or they may persist for an indefinite period without treatment. With proper treatment, the infestation usually goes away within about two weeks.
If nits are yellow, tan, or brown, it means the lice haven't hatched yet. If the nits are white or clear, the lice have hatched and just the egg remains. Lice eggs hatch within 1 to 2 weeks after they're laid.
Dehydration: Applying hot air with a special machine operated by a professional can cause dehydration, possibly killing the eggs and lice. Household cleaning: Lice usually can't live more than a day without feeding off a human scalp, and the eggs can't survive if they aren't incubated at the temperature in the scalp.
First off, here's what not to do: don't shave your or your child's head, or coat it with petroleum jelly or mayonnaise or anything else designed to "suffocate" the parasite. You'll probably end up with greasy, smelly, lice-infested hair.
Yes it does. It works by coating the hair follicles and scalp which kills the head lice and soothes the irritated scalp. Studies have been carried out on tea tree oil as an alternative to medical ingredients used for treating head lice.
Olive oil doesn't kill the lice but rather acts as a suffocating agent that can help drown them. It may take up to 2 to 3 weeks to get rid of lice and nits completely.
After the application of vinegar, the nits either fall out of your hair or become much easier to remove with a fine-toothed comb. Although vinegar can't kill adult lice, they may be able to kill newly hatched lice called nymphs.
Vinegar receives an “honorable mention,” because it has been touted as an aid in the removal of nits, but it doesn't kill adult lice. The acidic makeup of vinegar breaks down the glue-like substance that adheres the nits to the hair shaft. Mix 50 milliliters of vinegar with 50 milliliters of water and use as a rinse.