1.Successful Treatment of Lupoid Cutaneous Leishmaniasis with Glucantime and Topical Trichloroacetic Acid (A Case Report).
Mohamad Ali NILFOROUSHZADEH ; Giti SADEGHIAN ; Fariba JAFFARY ; Hengameh ZIAEI ; Liela SHIRANI-BIDABAD ; Parvin MAHZONI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2008;46(3):175-177
Lupoid leishmaniasis is a unique form of cutaneous leishmaniasis characterized by unusual clinical features and a chronic relapsing course, mostly caused by infection with Leishmania tropica. In this clinical form, 1-2 yr after healing of the acute lesion, new papules and nodules appear at the margin of the remaining scar. Herein, we describe a case of this clinical form that was resistant to 2 courses of treatments: systemic glucantime and then a combination therapy with allopurinol and systemic glucantime. However, marked improvement was seen after a combination therapy with topical trichloroacetic acid solution (50%) and systemic glucantime, and there were no signs of recurrence after 1 yr of follow-up.
Administration, Topical
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Adult
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Antiprotozoal Agents/administration & dosage/*therapeutic use
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Humans
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Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/*drug therapy/pathology
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Male
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Meglumine/*therapeutic use
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Organometallic Compounds/*therapeutic use
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Trichloroacetic Acid/administration & dosage/*therapeutic use
2.Extracorporeal Worm Extraction of Diphyllobothrium nihonkaiense with Amidotrizoic Acid in a Child.
Hye Kyung SHIN ; Joo Hyung ROH ; Jae Won OH ; Jae Sook RYU ; Youn Kyoung GOO ; Dong Il CHUNG ; Yong Joo KIM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2014;52(6):677-680
Infection cases of diphyllobothriid tapeworms are not much in the below teen-age group. We report a case of Diphyllobothrium nihonkaiense infection in a 13-year-old boy. He presented with severe fatigue, occasional abdominal pain at night time. He also had several episodes of tapeworm segment discharge in his stools. By his past history, he had frequently eaten raw fish including salmon and trout with his families. Numerous eggs of diphyllobothriid tapeworm were detected in the fecal examination. We introduced amidotrizoic acid as a cathartic agent through nasogastroduodenal tube and let nearly whole length (4.75 m) of D. nihonkaiense be excreted through his anus. After a single dose of praziquantel, the child's stool showed no further eggs, and his symptoms disappeared. The evacuated worm was identified as D. nihonkaiense by mitochondrial cox1 gene analysis. Here we report a successful extracorporeal worm extraction from an infection case of D. nihonkaiense by the injection of amidotrizoic acid.
Adolescent
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Animals
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Antiparasitic Agents/*therapeutic use
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Cyclooxygenase 1/genetics
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Diatrizoate Meglumine/*therapeutic use
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Diphyllobothriasis/*drug therapy/parasitology/pathology
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Diphyllobothrium/classification/*drug effects/genetics/*isolation & purification
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Feces/parasitology
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Humans
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Male
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Praziquantel/therapeutic use
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
3.Childhood cutaneous leishmaniasis: report of 117 cases from Iran.
Safar Ali TALARI ; Rezvan TALAEI ; Gholamreza SHAJARI ; Zarichehr VAKILI ; Abbas TAGHAVIARDAKANI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2006;44(4):355-360
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), due to Leishmania major, is endemic in different parts of Iran and has long been recognized in most provinces of Iran. This study was conducted to determine the prevalence of childhood leishmaniasis in 3 areas at the southeast of Kashan. A descriptive study was carried out on all children referred to central laboratories during a 3-year period. Initial information including age, sex, sites of ulcer on the body, number of lesions, address, and the place of the disease was obtained. The study gathered 117 children, and the results showed a prevalence of 7.2% in patients with lesions among the population and 4.2% of people displayed lesion and scar. The ages of subjects were from 6 to 15 years (average 9.75 years). The boy: girl ratio was 1.2. All of our patients lived in an endemic area. The face was affected in 47.0% of cases. The encountered forms of leishmaniasis are as follows: papulonodular 27.4%, ulcer 60.7%, sporotrichoid 6%, impetiginous 2.5%, and erysipeloid 3.4%. Treatment with intramuscular meglumine antimoniate 20-30 mg/kg/day was done for 93 patients. Meglumine antimoniate treatment was tolerated with no side effects. All leishmaniasis lesions healed within an average period of 2-14 months. Hyperpigmented scars were formed in 25.6% of the patients, atrophic scars in 4.3%, and hypopigmented scars were in 3.4%, respectively. The findings of this study indicate increased prevalence of CL in the villages at the area of Kashan and Aran-Bidgol. The clinical finding patterns belonged to different endemic strains of L. major in Isfahan, which indicates the possible transmission of infection from Isfahan to this area.
Prevalence
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Organometallic Compounds/therapeutic use
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Meglumine/therapeutic use
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Male
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Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous/drug therapy/epidemiology/parasitology/physiopathology
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*Leishmania major/drug effects/pathogenicity
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Iran
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Humans
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Female
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*Endemic Diseases
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Child
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Antiprotozoal Agents/therapeutic use
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Animals
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Adolescent
4.Role of the small intestinal decompression tube and Gastrografin in the treatment of early postoperative inflammatory small bowel obstruction.
Wei LI ; Zhixia LI ; Dali AN ; Jing LIU ; Xiaohu ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2014;17(3):275-278
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the role of the small intestinal decompression tube (SIDT) and Gastrografin in the treatment of early postoperative inflammatory small bowel obstruction (EPISBO).
METHODSTwelve patients presented EPISBO after abdominal surgery in our department from April 2011 to July 2012. Initially, nasogastric tube decompression and other conventional conservative treatment were administrated. After 14 days, obstruction symptom improvement was not obvious, then the SIDT was used. At the same time, Gastrografin was injected into the small bowel through the SIDT in order to demonstrate the site of obstruction of small bowel and its efficacy.
RESULTSIn 11 patients after this management, obstruction symptoms disappeared, bowel function recovered within 3 weeks, and oral feeding occurred gradually. Another patient did not pass flatus after 4 weeks and was reoperated. After postoperative follow-up of 6 months, no case relapsed with intestinal obstruction.
CONCLUSIONFor severe and long course of early postoperative inflammatory intestinal obstruction, intestinal decompression tube plus Gastrografin is safe and effective, and can avoid unnecessary reoperation.
Decompression ; Diatrizoate Meglumine ; therapeutic use ; Humans ; Intestinal Obstruction ; drug therapy ; Intestine, Small ; Intubation, Gastrointestinal ; Postoperative Complications ; Postoperative Period ; Prospective Studies ; Reoperation
5.Network Meta-analysis of Chinese medicine injections for activating blood and resolving stasis in adjuvant treatment of acute ischemic stroke.
Shi-Xiong PENG ; Cong WEI ; Jing-Ying LEI ; Teng ZHANG ; Yan-Bing DING
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2023;48(15):4215-4230
Network Meta-analysis was employed to compare the efficacy of Chinese medicine injections for activating blood and resolving stasis combined with conventional western medicine in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke and the effects on platelet aggregation rate, fibrinogen(FIB), and hypersensitive C-reactive protein(hs-CRP), with a view to providing evidence-based medicine reference for clinical medication. CNKI, Wanfang, VIP, SinoMed, PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and EMbase were searched for randomized controlled trial(RCT) on the treatment of acute ischemic stroke with Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection, Danhong Injection, Shuxuetong Injection, Xueshuantong Injection, Shuxuening Injection, Safflower Yellow Pigment Injection, and Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection combined with conventional western medicine. The retrieval time was from database inception to March 18, 2023. The articles were extracted by two researchers and their quality was evaluated. R 4.2.2 was used for network Meta-analysis. A total of 87 RCTs involving 8 580 patients were included. Network Meta-analysis showed that, in terms of reducing National Institutes of Health stroke scale(NIHSS) scores, the surface under the cumulative ranking curve(SUCRA) showed the order of Xueshuantong Injection + conventional western medicine(88.7%) > Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine(73.7%) > Shuxuetong Injection + conventional western medicine(69.7%) > Shuxuening Injection + conventional western medicine(51.8%) > Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine(43.7%) > Safflower Yellow Pigment Injection + conventional western medicine(36.8%) > Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection + conventional western medicine(35.3%) > conventional western medicine(1.7%). In terms of improving clinical total effective rate, SUCRA showed the order of Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine(63.0%) > Shuxuening Injection + conventional western medicine(59.0%) > Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine(58.9%) > Safflower Yellow Pigment Injection + conventional western medicine(57.1%) > Xueshuantong Injection + conventional western medicine(56.8%) > Shuxuetong Injection + conventional western medicine(54.6%) > Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection + conventional western medicine(50.5%) > conventional western medicine(0.03%). In terms of improving Barthel index, SUCRA showed the order of Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine(84.7%) > Shuxuetong Injection + conventional western medicine(72.4%) > Safflower Yellow Pigment Injection + conventional western medicine(61.6%) > Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine(44.6%) > Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection + conventional western medicine(43.2%) > Shuxuening Injection + conventional western medicine(42.2%) > conventional western medicine(1.4%). In terms of reducing platelet aggregation rate, SUCRA showed the order of Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine(82.4%) > Shuxuetong Injection + conventional western medicine(81.6%) > Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection + conventional western medicine(40.7%) > Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine(37.3%) > conventional western medicine(8.0%). In terms of reducing FIB, SUCRA showed the order of Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine(81.0%) > Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine(71.9%) > Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection + conventional western medicine(70.0%) > Shuxuetong Injection + conventional western medicine(46.7%) > Xueshuantong Injection + conventional western medicine(22.6%) > conventional western medicine(8.7%). In terms of reducing hs-CRP, SUCRA showed the order of Shuxuening Injection + conventional western medicine(89.9%) > Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine(78.8%) > Ginkgo Diterpene Lactone Meglumine Injection + conventional western medicine(52.4%) > Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine(47.6%) > Xueshuantong Injection + conventional western medicine(43.5%) > Shuxuetong Injection + conventional Western medicine(35.6%) > conventional western medicine(2.3%). The results indicated that Xueshuantong Injection + conventional western medicine, Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine, and Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine ranked the top three. Xueshuantong Injection + conventional western medicine had the best effect on reducing NIHSS scores. Danhong Injection + conventional western medicine showed the best performance of improving clinical total effective rate, improving Barthel index, and reducing FIB in the blood. Salvia Miltiorrhiza Ligustrazine Injection + conventional western medicine had the best effect on reducing platelet aggregation rate in the blood. Shuxuening Injection + conventional western medicine had the best effect on reducing hs-CRP. However, more high-quality RCTs are needed for verification in the future to provide more reliable evidence-based medical reference.
Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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Ischemic Stroke/drug therapy*
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Network Meta-Analysis
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C-Reactive Protein
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal/therapeutic use*
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Adjuvants, Pharmaceutic
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Diterpenes
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Lactones
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Meglumine
6.Visceral Leishmaniasis without Fever in an 11-Month-Old Infant: a Rare Clinical Feature of Kala-azar.
Shirin SAYYAHFAR ; Shahla ANSARI ; Mehdi MOHEBALI ; Babak BEHNAM
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2014;52(2):189-191
Visceral leishmaniasis or kala-azar is an endemic parasitic disease in some parts of the world which is characterized by fever, splenomegaly, and pancytopenia in most of the cases. Herein we report an 11 month-old male infant with diagnosis of kala-azar who presented with pallor, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to gain weight, and no history of fever. Surprisingly, fever started after beginning of meglumine antimoniate treatment in this patient. As far as we are aware of, this is a rare presentation of visceral leishmaniasis. Therefore, clinicians especially in endemic areas are highly recommended to include kala-azar among differential diagnosis of unexplained anemia without fever to prevent misdiagnosis of this potentially fatal, but treatable condition.
Amphotericin B/therapeutic use
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Anemia/*diagnosis/parasitology
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Antiprotozoal Agents/*therapeutic use
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Deoxycholic Acid/therapeutic use
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Diagnosis, Differential
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Drug Combinations
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Endemic Diseases
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*Fever
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Humans
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Infant
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Iran
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Leishmania infantum/pathogenicity
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Leishmaniasis, Visceral/*diagnosis/*drug therapy/parasitology
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Male
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Meglumine/therapeutic use
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Organometallic Compounds/therapeutic use
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Splenomegaly/parasitology
7.Effects of combined therapy with thalidomide and glucantime on leishmaniasis induced by Leishmania major in BALB/c mice.
Ghassem SOLGI ; Amina KARIMINIA ; Khossro ABDI ; Majid DARABI ; Behnaz GHAREGHOZLOO
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2006;44(1):55-61
For treating Leishmania major infection in BALB/c mice, we used thalidomide in conjunction with glucantime. Groups of mice were challenged with 5 x 10(3) metacyclic promastigotes of L. major subcutaneously. A week after the challenge, drug treatment was started and continued for 12 days. Thalidomide was orally administrated 30 mg/kg/day and glucantime was administrated intraperitoneally (200 mg/kg/day). It was shown that the combined therapy is more effective than single therapies with each one of the drugs since the foot pad swelling in the group of mice received thalidomide and glucantime was significantly decreased (0.9 +/- 0.2 mm) compared to mice treated with either glucantime, thalidomide, or carrier alone (1.2 +/- 0.25, 1.4 +/- 0.3, and 1.7 +/- 0.27 mm, respectively). Cytokine study showed that the effect of thalidomide was not dependent on IL-12; however, it up-regulated IFN-gamma and down-regulated IL-10 production. Conclusively, thalidomide seems promising as a conjunctive therapy with antimony in murine model of visceral leishmaniasis.
Time Factors
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Thalidomide/pharmacology/*therapeutic use
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Organometallic Compounds/pharmacology/*therapeutic use
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Mice, Inbred BALB C
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Mice
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Meglumine/pharmacology/*therapeutic use
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Leishmaniasis, Visceral/*drug therapy/immunology
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Leishmania major/*drug effects
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Interleukin-12/analysis/biosynthesis
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Interleukin-10/analysis/biosynthesis
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Interferon Type II/analysis/biosynthesis/drug effects
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Immunosuppressive Agents/pharmacology/*therapeutic use
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Female
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Drug Therapy, Combination
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Disease Progression
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Disease Models, Animal
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Cells, Cultured
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Antiprotozoal Agents/pharmacology/*therapeutic use
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Animals