1.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
2.Evaluation of Rhophilin Associated Tail Protein (ROPN1L) in the Human Liver Fluke Opisthorchis viverrini for Diagnostic Approach
Amornrat GEADKAEW-KRENC ; Rudi GRAMS ; Wansika PHADUNGSIL ; Wanlapa CHAIBANGYANG ; Nanthawat KOSA ; Poom ADISAKWATTANA ; Paron DEKUMYOY
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2020;58(4):475-479
Tegumental and excretory-secretory proteins are reported as diagnostic antigens for human opisthorchiasis. Rhophilin associated tail protein1-like (OvROPN1L) protein of Opisthorchis viverrini sperm tail showed potential as a diagnostic antigen. The OvROPN1L recombinant fragments were assayed for diagnostic antigenicity for human opisthorchiasis using indirect ELISA. The strongest antigenic region was a N-terminus peptide of M1 - P56. One synthetic peptide (P1, L3-Q13) of this region showed the highest antigenicity to opisthorchiasis. Sera from other parasitic infections including Strongyloides stercoralis, hookworm, Taenia spp, minute intestinal flukes, Paragonimus spp showed lower reactivity to P1. Peptide P1 is located in the disordered N-terminus of ROPN1L supporting its suitability as linear epitope. In the Platyhelminthes the N-terminal sequence of ROPN1L is diverging with taxonomic distance further suggesting that peptide P1 has potential as diagnostic tool in the genus Opisthorchis/Clonorchis. It should be further evaluated in combination with peptides derived from other O. viverrini antigens to increase its diagnostic power.