1.Intestinal histopathology and in situ postures of Gymnophalloides seoi in experimentally infected mice.
Jong Yil CHAI ; Hong Soon LEE ; Sung Jong HONG ; Jae Hyung YOO ; Sang Mee GUK ; Min SEO ; Min Ho CHOI ; Soon Hyung LEE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2001;39(1):31-41
The intestinal histopathology and in situ postures of Gymnophalloides seoi (Digenea: Gymnophallidae) were studied using C3H/HeN and C57BL/6 mice as experimental hosts; the effects of immunosuppression were also observed. The metacercariae isolated from naturally infected oysters, 300 or 1,000 in number, were infected orally to each mouse, and the mice were killed at days 3-21 post-infection (PI). In immunocompetent (IC) mice, only a small number of flukes were found in the mucosa of the duodenum and jejunum during days 3-7 PI, with their large oral suckers pinching and sucking the root of villi. The intestinal mucosa showed mild villous atrophy, crypt hyperplasia, and inflammations in the villous stroma and crypt, with remarkable goblet cell hyperplasia. These mucosal changes were almost restored after days 14-21 PI. In immunosuppressed (IS) mice, displacement as well as complete loss of villi adjacent to the flukes was frequently encountered, otherwise the histopathology was generally mild, with minimal goblet cell hyperplasia. In these mice, numerous flukes were found, and it seemed that they were actively moving and rotating in situ. Several flukes were found to have invaded into the submucosa, almost facing the serosa. These results indicate that in IC mice the intestinal histopathology caused by G. seoi is generally mild, and the flukes do not penetrate beyond the mucosa, however, in IS mice, the flukes can cause severe destruction of neighboring villi, and some of them invade into the submucosa.
Animals
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Atrophy
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Immunocompromised Host
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Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic/*parasitology/pathology
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Intestinal Mucosa/parasitology/*pathology
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Male
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Mice
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Mice, Inbred C3H
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Mice, Inbred C57BL
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Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Trematoda/*pathogenicity
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Trematode Infections/*parasitology/pathology
2.Cecal rupture by Anoplocephala perfoliata infection in a thoroughbred horse in Seoul Race Park, South Korea.
Seung Ho RYU ; Ung Bok BAK ; Jun Gyu KIM ; Hee Jeong YOON ; Hun Su SEO ; Jong Tao KIM ; Jong Yeol PARK ; Chang Woo LEE
Journal of Veterinary Science 2001;2(3):189-193
A 7-year-old Thoroughbred horse was admitted to the Equine Hospital, Korea Racing Association with signs of colic. Based on the size of impactions, the clinical signs, the results of abdominal paracentesis and medical treatment, the prognosis was poor. The horse died 3 hours later following hopeless discharge. At necropsy, the caecum and large colon were fully filled with fecal contents and there was a rupture (10 cm in dia) in the latero- ventral caecum. The mucosa of the ileo-caecal and caeco- colic valves appeared to the hyperemic, edematous and ulcerous. There were many tapeworms in the affected mucosa. Histopathologically, lesions included hyperaemia, a deep necrotic inflammatory lesion and ulcers in the mucosa and submucosa of ileo-caecal and caeco-colic valves. One hundred thirty four faecal samples were obtained from 16 stables and submitted to parasitic examination. A total of 4 genera of eggs were recovered: Stongylus spp (82.1%), Anoplocephala perfoliata (10.5%), Bovicola equi (0.7%) and Parascaris equorum (1.5%). The major findings in this study are the presence of A perfoliata and its suspected association with the colic which led into an eventual caecal rupture. This study indicates the needs for an epidemiological survey of colic that is associated with Anoplocephala.
Animals
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Cecal Diseases/etiology/pathology/*veterinary
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Cestoda
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Cestode Infections/complications/pathology/*veterinary
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Colic/etiology/*veterinary
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Fatal Outcome
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Fecal Impaction/complications/parasitology/veterinary
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Feces/parasitology
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Horse Diseases/etiology/*parasitology/pathology
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Horses
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Ileocecal Valve/parasitology/pathology
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Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic/parasitology/pathology/*veterinary
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Intestinal Mucosa/parasitology/pathology
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Korea
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Parasite Egg Count/veterinary
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Prognosis
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Rupture, Spontaneous/pathology/veterinary
3.Anchitrema sanguineum (Digenea: Anchitrematidae) Accidentally Found during Colonoscopy of a Patient with Chronic Abdominal Pain: A Case Report.
Teera KUSOLSUK ; Nantana PAIBOON ; Somchit PUBAMPEN ; Wanna MAIPANICH ; Paron DEKUMYOY ; Jitra WAIKAGUL
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2009;47(2):167-170
In November 2007, a 46-year-old male Thai patient presented with chronic abdominal pain for over 3 years. Colonoscopy revealed a small parasite of about 2 x 1 mm in size attached to the cecum mucosa. The worm was removed endoscopically, fixed, and stained for morphological observations. The specimen was identified as Anchitrema sanguineum (Digenea: Anchitrematidae), a trematode first reported in a reptile, Chamaeleo vulgaris, from Egypt, and then sporadically found in the intestines of insectivorous bats and other mammals. The patient was treated with praziquantel but no more worms were found in his stool. His symptoms improved slightly but not cured completely. It remains unclear whether the chronic abdominal pain of the patient was caused by this trematode infection. Whatever is the pathogenicity of this trematode, this is the first human case of A. sanguineum infection in the literature.
Abdominal Pain/*etiology
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Animals
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Antiprotozoal Agents/therapeutic use
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Cecum/parasitology
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Colonoscopy
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Humans
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Intestinal Mucosa/parasitology
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Praziquantel/therapeutic use
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Thailand
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Trematoda/*isolation & purification
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Trematode Infections/*diagnosis/drug therapy/pathology
4.A Case of Steroid-induced Hyperinfective Strongyloidiasis with Bacterial Meningitis.
Joo Yun CHO ; Joong Goo KWON ; Kyung Ho HA ; Jae Young OH ; Myung In JIN ; Seong Wook HEO ; Geun Ho LEE ; Chang Ho CHO
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology 2012;60(5):330-334
Strongyloides stercoralis is a soil transmitted intestinal nematode that is endemic in the tropical and subtropical regions. In most individuals who are infected, chronic, usually asymptomatic, gastrointestinal infection persists. But, in immunocompromized hosts or in patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy, autoinfection of S. stercoralis may result in the dissemination of larvae, leading to fatal hyperinfection and increased rate of complications. We report a case of hyperinfective strongyloidiasis with bacterial meningitis in a patient receiving steroid therapy. Strongyloidiasis was diagnosed by the presence of filariform larvae of S. stercoralis in the bronchoalveolar lavage cytology and upper gastrointestinal endoscopic biopsy specimen. Her clinical symptoms had progressively aggravated and developed bacterial meningitis during treatment. She died despite aggressive antibiotic and antihelminthic therapy.
Adrenal Insufficiency/drug therapy
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Aged
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Animals
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Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid/parasitology
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Endoscopy, Gastrointestinal
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Enterococcus faecium/isolation & purification
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Female
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Humans
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Immunocompromised Host
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Intestinal Mucosa/pathology
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Larva/physiology
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Magnetic Resonance Imaging
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Meningitis, Bacterial/complications/*diagnosis/microbiology
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Steroids/adverse effects/therapeutic use
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Strongyloides stercoralis/growth & development/isolation & purification
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Strongyloidiasis/complications/*diagnosis/parasitology