1.Subconjuctival Loa loa with Calabar Swelling.
Hee Yoon CHO ; Yoon Jung LEE ; Sun Young SHIN ; Hyun Ouk SONG ; Myoung Hee AHN ; Jae Sook RYU
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2008;23(4):731-733
Loa loa is unique among the human filariae in that adult worms are occasionally visible during subconjuntival migration. A 29-yr-old African female student, living in Korea for the past 5 yr without ever visiting her home country, presented with acute eyelid swelling and a sensation of motion on the left eyeball. Her symptoms started one day earlier and became worse over time. Examination revealed a threadlike worm beneath the left upper bulbar conjunctiva with mild eyelid swelling as well as painless swelling of the right forearm. Upon exposure to slit-lamp illumination, a sudden movement of the worm toward the fornix was noted. After surgical extraction, parasitologic analysis confirmed the worm to be a female adult Loa loa with the vulva at the extreme anterior end. On blood smear, the microfilariae had characteristic features of Loa loa, including sheath and body nuclei up to the tip of the tail. The patient also showed eosinophilia (37%) measuring 4,100/microliter. She took ivermectin (200 microgram/kg) as a single dose and suffered from a mild fever and chills for one day. This patient, to the best of our knowledge, is the first case of subconjunctival loiasis with Calabar swelling in Korea.
Adult
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Animals
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Conjunctiva/parasitology
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Conjunctival Diseases/*parasitology
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Eye Infections, Parasitic/*parasitology
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Female
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Humans
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Loa/isolation & purification
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Loiasis/*parasitology
2.External Ophthalmomyiasis Caused by Oestrus ovis: A Rare Case Report from India.
Anita PANDEY ; Molly MADAN ; Ashish K ASTHANA ; Anupam DAS ; Sandeep KUMAR ; Kirti JAIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2009;47(1):57-59
Myiasis of different organs has been reported off and on from various regions in the world. We report a human case of external ophthalmomyiasis caused by the larvae of a sheep nasal botfly, Oestrus ovis, for the first time from Meerut city in Western Uttar Pradesh, India. A 25-year-old farmer presented with severe symptoms of conjunctivitis. The larvae, 3 in number, were observed in the bulbar conjunctiva, and following removal the symptoms of eye inflammation improved within a few hours.
Adult
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Animals
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Conjunctiva/parasitology
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Conjunctivitis/*parasitology
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*Diptera/growth & development
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Eye Infections, Parasitic/*parasitology
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Humans
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India
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Larva
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Myiasis/*parasitology
3.Studies on bovine besnoitiosis in Korea II. A survey on incidence in the enzootic region.
Hi Suk LEE ; Ung Bok BAK ; Mu Hong MOON ; Jong Uk SHIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 1970;8(3):76-80
The 4,725 cattle in the enzootic region, 6 counties of southern Korea, were surveyed for besnoitiosis epidemiologically by examining the scleral conjunctiva for the cysts and the following results were obtained. The survey showed that 285 cattle, representing 6 per cent of a total of 4,725 cattle examined had S.C. cysts. Only 49 (14 per cent) of them showed clinical sclerodermatitis and the ratio between clinical and inapparent cases was 1:5.8. On age distribution of the S.C. positive cases the highest incidence(10-12 per cent) was seen in amimals that were from 5 to 8 years of age, but clinically apparent cases occurred much more in younger age of animal. In local incidence of S.C. cysts positive cases the prevalence was higher in the secluded districts such as Koheung and Sancheoung counties(9 per cent).
parasitology-besnoitiosis
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epidemiology
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prevalence rate
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scleral conjunctiva cyst