1.An Overview of Fish-borne Nematodiases among Returned Travelers for Recent 25 Years– Unexpected Diseases Sometimes Far Away from the Origin
Jorge Costa EIRAS ; Gilberto Cezar PAVANELLI ; Ricardo Massato TAKEMOTO ; Yukifumi NAWA
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2018;56(3):215-227
Along with globalization of traveling and trading, fish-borne nematodiases seems to be increasing in number. However, apart from occasional and sporadic case reports or mini-reviews of particular diseases in particular countries, an overview of fish-borne nematodiasis among travelers have never been performed. In this review, we gathered fish-borne nematodiasis among travelers for recent 25 years by an extensive global literature survey using appropriate keywords, e.g. travelers diseases, human infection, anisakiasis, gnathostomiasis, capillariasis, sushi, sashimi, ceviche, Gnathostoma, Pseudoterranova, Anisakis, Capillaria, etc., as well as various combinations of these key words. The Internet search engines PubMed, Medline, Google and Googler Scholar were used as much as possible, and the references of every paper were checked in order to identify useful and reliable publications. The results showed unexpectedly high incidence of gnathostomiasis and low incidence of anisakidosis. The different incidence values of the infection with several fish-borne zoonotic nematode species are discussed, as well as some epidemiological aspects of the infections. The difficulties of differential diagnosis in non-endemic countries are emphasized. It is concluded that travelers must avoid risky behaviors which can lead to infection and that physicians and health authorities must advice travelers on the risks of eating behaviors during travel.
Anisakiasis
;
Anisakis
;
Capillaria
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Feeding Behavior
;
Gnathostoma
;
Gnathostomiasis
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Internationality
;
Internet
;
Public Health
;
Search Engine
2.Larval Gnathostoma spinigerum Detected in Asian Swamp Eels, Monopterus albus, Purchased from a Local Market in Yangon, Myanmar.
Jong Yil CHAI ; Woon Mok SOHN ; Byoung Kuk NA ; Jong Bok PARK ; Hoo Gn JEOUNG ; Eui Hyug HOANG ; Thi Thi HTOON ; Htay Htay TIN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2015;53(5):619-625
The present study was performed to determine the infection status of swamp eels with Gnathostoma sp. larvae in Myanmar. We purchased total 37 Asian swamp eels, Monopterus albus, from a local market in Yangon in June and December 2013 and 2014. All collected eels were transferred with ice to our laboratory and each of them was examined by the artificial digestion technique. A total of 401 larval gnathostomes (1-96 larvae/eel) were detected in 33 (89.2%) swamp eels. Most of the larvae (n=383; 95.5%) were found in the muscle. The remaining 18 larvae were detected in the viscera. The advanced third-stage larvae (AdL3) were 2.3-4.4 mm long and 0.25-0.425 mm wide. The characteristic head bulb (0.093 x 0.221 mm in average size) with 4 rows of hooklets, muscular long esophagus (1.025 mm), and 2 pairs of cervical sacs (0.574 mm) were observed by light microscopy. The average number of hooklets in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th rows was 41, 45, 48, and 51, respectively. As scanning electron microscopic findings, the characteristic 4-5 rows of hooklets on the head bulb, a cervical papilla, tegumental spines regularly arranged in the transverse striations, and an anus were well observed. Based on these morphological characters, they were identified as the AdL3 of Gnathostoma spinigerum. By the present study, it has been confirmed for the first time that Asian swamp eels, M. albus, from Yangon, Myanmar are heavily infected with G. spinigerum larvae.
Animal Structures/parasitology
;
Animals
;
Fish Diseases/*parasitology
;
Gnathostoma/anatomy & histology/classification/*isolation & purification
;
Gnathostomiasis/parasitology/*veterinary
;
Microscopy
;
Myanmar
;
Smegmamorpha/*parasitology
3.Cutaneous Gnathostomiasis with Recurrent Migratory Nodule and Persistent Eosinophilia: a Case Report from China.
Jing CUI ; Ye WANG ; Zhong Quan WANG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(4):467-470
The present study reports a human case of cutaneous gnathostomiasis with recurrent migratory nodule and persistent eosinophilia in China. A 52-year-old woman from Henan Province, central China, presented with recurrent migratory reddish swelling and subcutaneous nodule in the left upper arm and on the back for 3 months. Blood examination showed eosinophila (21.2%), and anti-sparganum antibodies were positive. Skin biopsy of the lesion and histopathological examinations revealed dermal infiltrates of eosinophils but did not show any parasites. Thus, the patient was first diagnosed as sparganosis; however, new migratory swellings occurred after treatment with praziquantel for 3 days. On further inquiring, she recalled having eaten undercooked eels and specific antibodies to the larvae of Gnathostoma spinigerum were detected. The patient was definitely diagnosed as cutaneous gnathostomiasis caused by Gnathostoma sp. and treated with albendazole (1,000 mg/day) for 15 days, and the subsequent papule and blister developed after the treatment. After 1 month, laboratory findings indicated a reduced eosinophil count (3.3%). At her final follow-up 18 months later, the patient had no further symptoms and anti-Gnathostoma antibodies became negative. Conclusively, the present study is the first report on a human case of cutaneous gnathostomiasis in Henan Province, China, based on the past history (eating undercooked eels), clinical manifestations (migratory subcutaneous nodule and persistent eosinophilia), and a serological finding (positive for specific anti-Gnathostoma antibodies).
Animals
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Anthelmintics/therapeutic use
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Antibodies, Helminth/immunology
;
China
;
Eosinophilia/diagnosis/drug therapy/immunology/*parasitology
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Female
;
Gnathostoma/immunology/*isolation & purification
;
Gnathostomiasis/diagnosis/drug therapy/immunology/*parasitology
;
Humans
;
Middle Aged
;
Skin Diseases, Parasitic/diagnosis/drug therapy/immunology/*parasitology
4.Detection of Gnathostoma spinigerum Antibodies in Sera of Non-Traumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Patients in Thailand.
Amnat KITKHUANDEE ; Waranon MUNKONG ; Kittisak SAWANYAWISUTH ; Penchom JANWAN ; Wanchai MALEEWONG ; Pewpan M INTAPAN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(6):755-757
Gnathostoma spinigerum can cause subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The detection of specific antibodies in serum against G. spinigerum antigen is helpful for diagnosis of neurognathostomiasis. There is limited data on the frequency of G. spinigerum infection in non-traumatic SAH. A series of patients diagnosed as non-traumatic SAH at the Srinagarind Hospital, Khon Kaen University, Thailand between January 2011 and January 2013 were studied. CT or MR imaging of the brain was used for diagnosis of SAH. Patients were categorized as aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (A-SAH) or non-aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (NA-SAH) according to the results of cerebral angiograms. The presence of specific antibodies in serum against 21- or 24-kDa G. spinigerum antigen was determined using the immunoblot technique. The detection rate of antibodies was compared between the 2 groups. Of the 118 non-traumatic SAH patients for whom cerebral angiogram and immunoblot data were available, 80 (67.8%) patients had A-SAH, whereas 38 (32.2%) had NA-SAH. Overall, 23.7% were positive for specific antibodies against 21- and/or 24-kDa G. spinigerum antigen. No significant differences were found in the positive rate of specific antibodies against G. spinigerum in both groups (P-value=0.350).
Adult
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Aged
;
Animals
;
Antibodies, Helminth/*blood
;
Antigens, Helminth/diagnostic use
;
Brain/radiography
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Female
;
Gnathostoma/immunology/*isolation & purification
;
Gnathostomiasis/*diagnosis/*parasitology
;
Humans
;
Immunoblotting
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Male
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Middle Aged
;
Serum/immunology
;
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage/*diagnosis/*etiology
;
Thailand
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
5.A Recombinant Matrix Metalloproteinase Protein from Gnathostoma spinigerum for Serodiagnosis of Neurognathostomiasis.
Penchom JANWAN ; Pewpan M INTAPAN ; Hiroshi YAMASAKI ; Porntip LAUMMAUNWAI ; Kittisak SAWANYAWISUTH ; Chaisiri WONGKHAM ; Chatchai TAYAPIWATANA ; Amnat KITKHUANDEE ; Viraphong LULITANOND ; Yukifumi NAWA ; Wanchai MALEEWONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(6):751-754
Neurognathostomiasis is a severe form of human gnathostomiasis which can lead to disease and death. Diagnosis of neurognathostomiasis is made presumptively by using clinical manifestations. Immunoblotting, which recognizes antigenic components of molecular mass 21 kDa and 24 kDa in larval extracts of Gnathostoma spinigerum (Gs 21/24), has high sensitivity and specificity for diagnosis of neurognathostomiasis. However, only very small amounts of the Gs 21/24 antigens can be prepared from parasites harvested from natural or experimental animals. To overcome this problem, we recently produced a recombinant matrix metalloproteinase (rMMP) protein from G. spinigerum. In this study, we evaluated this rMMP alongside the Gs 21/24 antigens for serodiagnosis of human neurognathostomiasis. We studied sera from 40 patients from Srinagarind Hospital, Khon Kaen University, Thailand, with clinical criteria consistent with those of neurognathostomiasis, and sera from 30 healthy control adults from Thailand. All sera were tested for specific IgG antibodies against both G. spinigerum crude larval extract and rMMP protein using immunoblot analysis. The sensitivity and specificity for both antigenic preparations were all 100%. These results show that G. spinigerum rMMP protein can be used as an alternative diagnostic antigen, in place of larval extract, for serodiagnosis of neurognathostomiasis.
Adult
;
Animals
;
Antibodies, Helminth/blood
;
Antigens, Helminth/*diagnostic use/genetics/isolation & purification
;
Central Nervous System Parasitic Infections/*diagnosis/parasitology
;
Gnathostoma/enzymology/immunology/*isolation & purification
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Gnathostomiasis/*diagnosis/parasitology
;
Healthy Volunteers
;
Humans
;
Immunoblotting/methods
;
Immunoglobulin G/blood
;
Matrix Metalloproteinases/*diagnostic use/genetics/isolation & purification
;
Parasitology/*methods
;
Prospective Studies
;
Recombinant Proteins/diagnostic use/genetics/isolation & purification
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Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Serologic Tests/methods
;
Thailand
6.Gnathostoma spinigerum Infection in the Upper Lip of a Korean Woman: An Autochthonous Case in Korea.
Jae Hee KIM ; Hyemi LIM ; Young Sang HWANG ; Tae Yeon KIM ; Eun Mee HAN ; Eun Hee SHIN ; Jong Yil CHAI
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(3):343-347
Autochthonous human gnathostomiasis had never been reported in the Republic of Korea. We report here a case of Gnathostoma spinigerum infection in a 32-year-old Korean woman, presumed to have been infected via an indigenous route. The patient had experienced a painful migratory swelling near the left nasolabial fold area of the face for a year, with movement of the swelling to the mucosal area of the upper lip 2 weeks before surgical removal of the lesion. Histopathological examinations of the extracted tissue revealed inflammation with heavy eosinophilic infiltrations and sections of a nematode suggestive of a Gnathostoma sp. larva. The larva characteristically revealed about 25 intestinal cells with multiple (3-6) nuclei in each intestinal cell consistent with the 3rd-stage larva of G. spinigerum. The patient did not have any special history of travel abroad except a recent trip, 4 months before surgery, to China where she ate only cooked food. The patient is the first recorded autochthonous case of G. spinigerum infection in Korea.
Adult
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Animals
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Female
;
Gnathostoma/*classification
;
Gnathostomiasis/epidemiology/parasitology/*pathology/surgery
;
Humans
;
Republic of Korea/epidemiology
7.Modulation of Antibody Responses against Gnathostoma spinigerum in Mice Immunized with Crude Antigen Formulated in CpG Oligonucleotide and Montanide ISA720.
Pewpan M INTAPAN ; Chakrit HIRUNPETCHARAT ; Churairat KULARBKAEW ; Wiboonchai YUTANAWIBOONCHAI ; Penchom JANWAN ; Wanchai MALEEWONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2013;51(6):637-644
This study aimed to investigate the antibody responses in mice immunized with Gnathostoma spinigerum crude antigen (GsAg) incorporated with the combined adjuvant, a synthetic oligonucleotide containing unmethylated CpG motif (CpG ODN 1826) and a stable water in oil emulsion (Montanide ISA720). Mice immunized with GsAg and combined adjuvant produced all antibody classes and subclasses to GsAg except IgA. IgG2a/2b/3 but not IgG1 subclasses were enhanced by immunization with CpG ODN 1826 when compared with the control groups immunized with non-CpG ODN and Montanide ISA or only with Montanide ISA, suggesting a biased induction of a Th1-type response by CpG ODN. After challenge infection with live G. spinigerum larvae, the levels of IgG2a/2b/3 antibody subclasses decreased immediately and continuously, while the IgG1 subclass remained at high levels. This also corresponded to a continuous decrease of the IgG2a/IgG1 ratio after infection. Only IgM and IgG1 antibodies, but not IgG2a/2b/3, were significantly produced in adjuvant control groups after infection. These findings suggest that G. spinigerum infection potently induces a Th2-type biased response.
Adjuvants, Immunologic/*administration & dosage
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Animals
;
Antibodies, Helminth/*blood
;
Antigens, Helminth/*administration & dosage/*immunology
;
Gnathostoma/*immunology
;
Immunoglobulin G/blood
;
Immunoglobulin M/blood
;
Male
;
Mannitol/administration & dosage/*analogs & derivatives
;
Mice
;
Oleic Acids/*administration & dosage
;
Oligodeoxyribonucleotides/*administration & dosage
;
Th1 Cells/immunology
;
Th2 Cells/immunology
8.Positivity and Intensity of Gnathostoma spinigerum Infective Larvae in Farmed and Wild-Caught Swamp Eels in Thailand.
Wilai SAKSIRISAMPANT ; Benjamas Wongsatayanon THANOMSUB
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2012;50(2):113-118
From July 2008 to June 2009, livers of the swamp eels (Monopterus alba) were investigated for advanced third-stage larvae (AL3) of Gnathostoma spinigerum. Results revealed that 10.2% (106/1,037) and 20.4% (78/383) of farmed eels from Aranyaprathet District, Sa Kaeo Province and those of wild-caught eels obtained from a market in Min Buri District of Bangkok, Thailand were infected, respectively. The prevalence was high during the rainy and winter seasons. The infection rate abruptly decreased in the beginning of summer. The highest infection rate (13.7%) was observed in September and absence of infection (0%) in March-April in the farmed eels. Whereas, in the wild-caught eels, the highest rate (30.7%) was observed in November, and the rate decreased to the lowest at 6.3% in March. The average no. (mean+/-SE) of AL3 per investigated liver in farmed eels (1.1+/-0.2) was significantly lower (P=0.040) than those in the caught eels (0.2+/-0.03). In addition, the intensity of AL3 recovered from each infected liver varied from 1 to 18 (2.3+/-0.3) in the farmed eels and from 1 to 47 (6.3+/-1.2) in the caught eels, respectively. The AL3 intensity showed significant difference (P=0.011) between these 2 different sources of eels. This is the first observation that farmed eels showed positive findings of G. spinigerum infective larvae. This may affect the standard farming of the culture farm and also present a risk of consuming undercooked eels from the wild-caught and farmed eels.
Animals
;
Aquaculture
;
Fish Diseases/*epidemiology/*parasitology
;
Gnathostoma/*isolation & purification
;
Gnathostomiasis/epidemiology/parasitology/*veterinary
;
Larva
;
Liver/parasitology
;
Parasite Load
;
Prevalence
;
Seasons
;
Smegmamorpha/*parasitology
;
Thailand/epidemiology
9.Imported Intraocular Gnathostomiasis with Subretinal Tracks Confirmed by Western Blot Assay.
Ji Ho YANG ; Moosang KIM ; Eung Suk KIM ; Byoung Kuk NA ; Seung Young YU ; Hyung Woo KWAK
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2012;50(1):73-78
We report a case of intraocular gnathostomiasis diagnosed by western blot assay in a patient with subretinal tracks. A 15-year-old male patient complained of blurred vision in the right eye, lasting for 2 weeks. Eight months earlier, he had traveled to Vietnam for 1 week and ate raw wild boar meat and lobster. His best-corrected visual acuity was 20/20 in both eyes and anterior chamber examination revealed no abnormalities. Fundus examination showed subretinal tracks in the right eye. Fluorescein angiography and indocyanine green angiography showed linear hyperfluorescence of the subretinal lesion observed on fundus in the right eye. Ultrasound examination revealed no abnormalities. Blood tests indicated mild eosinophilia (7.5%), and there was no abnormality found by systemic examinations. Two years later, the patient visited our department again for ophthalmologic evaluation. Visual acuity remained 20/20 in both eyes and the subretinal tracks in the right eye had not changed since the previous examination. Serologic examination was performed to provide a more accurate diagnosis, and the patient's serum reacted strongly to the Gnathostoma nipponicum antigen by western blot assay, which led to a diagnosis of intraocular gnathostomiasis. This is the first reported case of intraocular gnathostomiasis with subretinal tracks confirmed serologically using western blot in Korea.
Adolescent
;
Animals
;
Blotting, Western
;
Fundus Oculi
;
Gnathostoma/*isolation & purification
;
Gnathostomiasis/*diagnosis/parasitology
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Retinal Diseases/*diagnosis/parasitology
;
Travel
;
Vietnam
10.The Jeju Weasel, Mustela sibilica quelpartis, A New Definitive Host for Gnathostoma nipponicum Yamaguti, 1941.
Ho Choon WOO ; Hong Shik OH ; Shin Hyeong CHO ; Byoung Kuk NA ; Woon Mok SOHN
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(3):317-321
Adult gnathostomes were discovered in the stomach of the Jeju weasel, Mustela sibilica quelpartis, road-killed in Jeju-do (Province). Their morphological characters were examined to identify the species. Total 50 gnathostome adults were collected from 6 out of 10 weasels examined. In infected weasels, 4-6 worms were grouped and embedded in each granulomatous gastric tumor, except 1 weasel. Male worms were 25.0x1.4 mm in average size, and had a tail with pedunculate papillae, a spicule, and minute tegumental spines. Females were 40.0x2.5 mm in average size, and had a tail without tegumental spines. Pointed and posteriorly curved hooklets were arranged in 8-10 rows on the head bulb. Tegumental spines were distributed from behind the head bulb to the middle portion of the body. The spines were different in size and shape by the distribution level of the body surface. Fertilized eggs were 65.5x38.9 microm in average size, and had a mucoid plug at 1 pole. These gnathostomes from Jeju weasels were identified as Gnathostoma nipponicum Yamaguti, 1941. By the present study, it was confirmed for the first time that G. nipponicum is distributed in Jeju-do, the Republic of Korea, and the Jeju weasel, M. sibilica quelpartis, plays a crucial role for its definitive host.
Animals
;
Female
;
Gnathostoma/anatomy & histology/classification/*isolation & purification/*pathogenicity
;
Male
;
Mustelidae/*parasitology
;
Republic of Korea
;
Stomach/parasitology

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