Background: Intestinal trematodes are common parasites in man and many mammals. Infection is often asymptomatic and unrecognised.
Case Presentation: A woman in her twenties presented with loose stools of variable intensity over six months. Additionally, she had experienced considerable fatigue during this period. There was no weight loss and initial blood tests were normal. Further testing at the second visit included stool microscopy, and small trematode eggs consistent with H. heterophyes infection were found. A more thorough anamnesis revealed the onset of symptoms on the day she returned from a week's holiday, and the probable exposure occurred from eating sushi twice during this holiday. After one day of treatment with praziquantel 40 mg/kg administered in three doses, the patient recovered completely within two to four weeks. Her asymptomatic partner had consumed the same food and had the same eggs in his stool sample. He was successfully treated with the same treatment dose.
Interpretation: A detailed travel history may provide important information relating to the diagnosis of diarrhoea and fatigue. Symptoms of H. heterophyes infection are variable. A single day's dose of 40 mg/kg of praziquantel was sufficient to eradicate infection in the two cases presented.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4045/tidsskr.13.0070 | DOI Listing |
Vet Res Commun
January 2025
Department of Clinical Sciences and Translational Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Via Montpellier 1, Rome, 001 33, Italy.
In our study, fancy southern platyfish Xiphophorus maculatus (Cyprinodontiformes, Poeciliidae) were examined due to breathing disorders and mortality. Fish came from Vietnam farm and were redistributed by international wholesaler. In fish, loss of appetite and gasping near the water surface was observed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasitol Res
October 2024
Department of Biodiversity of Animals, Universität Hamburg, and Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change (LIB), Zoological Museum, Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3, 20146, Hamburg, Germany.
BMC Vet Res
August 2024
Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Cairo University, Giza, 12211, Egypt.
Heterophyiasis is a highly endemic disease in the Nile Delta, Egypt, where people consume raw or undercooked Oreochromis niloticus and Mugil cephalus. Birds and rats play a crucial role in fish-borne zoonotic trematode transmission since they serve as natural and experimental hosts. This study aimed to update the epidemiological information, morphological description, molecular identification and gene expression of two distinct heterophyid metacercariae in Giza, Wadi Al-Rayan, and Lake Manzala, Egypt, whereas various heterophyid infections could be expected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Waterborne Parasitol
September 2024
HUN-REN Veterinary Medical Research Institute, Budapest, Hungary.
Digenean (Heterophyidae) trematodes include several zoonotic species such as the genus (Katsurada, 1912). (Ciurea, 1915) is a species widely distributed in Europe, whose metacercariae can be found on cyprinoids from the River Danube in Hungary. The aim of the study was to measure the viability of metacercariae by physical (freezing, heating, desiccation) and chemical (acetic acid and NaCl solutions) treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasitol Int
December 2024
Meguro Parasitological Museum, Tokyo, Japan. Electronic address:
Galactosomum nagasakiense n. sp. (Digenea: Heterophyidae), the causative parasite of trematode whirling disease of marine fish, is described, based on the specimens collected from the black-tailed gull, Larus crassirostris in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan.
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