1.A Case of Gastritis Associated with Gastric Capillariasis.
Jin KIM ; Hyun Soo JOO ; Saera JUNG ; Hyung Seok KIM ; Min Young LEE ; Jong Jae JEONG ; Hyung Seok KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2009;24(5):963-966
This report is about the case of gastritis associated with capillariasis. The patient was a 52-yr-old Korean woman who occasionally ate raw fish and chicken. She complained of mild abdominal pain and nausea, but not diarrhea. An endoscopic examination revealed an exudative flat erosive change on the gastric mucosa of the antrum. She was microscopically diagnosed as chronic gastritis with numerous eosinophil infiltrations. The sectioned worms and eggs in mucosa were morphologically regarded as belonging to the genus Capillaria. This is the first case of gastric capillariasis reported in the Republic of Korea.
Albendazole/therapeutic use
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Animals
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Antiprotozoal Agents/therapeutic use
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*Capillaria
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Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal
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Enoplida Infections/*diagnosis/drug therapy
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Female
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Gastric Mucosa/parasitology/*pathology
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Gastritis/*diagnosis
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Humans
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Middle Aged
2.An Indigenous Case of Intestinal Capillariasis with Protein-Losing Enteropathy in Korea.
Woon Tae JUNG ; Hyun Jin KIM ; Hyun Ju MIN ; Chang Yoon HA ; Hong Jun KIM ; Gyung Hyuck KO ; Byoung Kuk NA ; Woon Mok SOHN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2012;50(4):333-337
We encountered an indigenous case of intestinal capillariasis with protein-losing enteropathy in the Republic of Korea. A 37-year-old man, residing in Sacheon-si, Gyeongsangnam-do, admitted to the Gyeongsang National University Hospital (GNUH) due to long-lasting diarrhea, abdominal pain, anasarca, and weight loss. He recalled that he frequently ate raw fish, especially the common blackish goby (Acanthogobius flavimanus) and has never been abroad. Under the suspicion of protein-losing enteropathy, he received various kinds of medical examinations, and was diagnosed as intestinal capillariasis based on characteristic sectional findings of nematode worms in the biopsied small intestine. Adults, juvenile worms, and eggs were also detected in the diarrheic stools collected before and after medication. The clinical symptoms became much better after treatment with albendazole 400 mg daily for 3 days, and all findings were in normal range in laboratory examinations performed after 1 month. The present study is the 6th Korean case of intestinal capillariasis and the 3rd indigenous one in the Republic of Korea.
Adult
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Albendazole/administration & dosage
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Animals
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Anthelmintics/administration & dosage
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Biopsy
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Capillaria/cytology/drug effects/*isolation & purification
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Diarrhea
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Enoplida Infections/drug therapy/parasitology/*pathology
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Feces/parasitology
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Female
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Helminthiasis/drug therapy/parasitology/*pathology
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Humans
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Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic/drug therapy/parasitology/*pathology
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Intestines/parasitology/pathology
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Male
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Protein-Losing Enteropathies/drug therapy/parasitology/*pathology
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Republic of Korea
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Treatment Outcome