Literature DB >> 19488424

Anchitrema sanguineum (Digenea: Anchitrematidae) accidentally found during colonoscopy of a patient with chronic abdominal pain: a case report.

Teera Kusolsuk1, Nantana Paiboon, Somchit Pubampen, Wanna Maipanich, Paron Dekumyoy, Jitra Waikagul.   

Abstract

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.

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Keywords:  Anchitrema sanguineum; Thailand; colonoscopy; human

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19488424      PMCID: PMC2688799          DOI: 10.3347/kjp.2009.47.2.167

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Korean J Parasitol        ISSN: 0023-4001            Impact factor:   1.341


  2 in total

1.  Studies on the trematode parasites of reptiles found in Hyderabad State.

Authors:  S S SIMHA
Journal:  Z Parasitenkd       Date:  1958

2.  An unusual case of biliary obstruction caused by Dicrocoelium dentriticum.

Authors:  Berrin Karadag; Ahmet Bilici; Alper Doventas; Fatih Kantarci; Dogan Selcuk; Nilgun Dincer; Y Ali Oner; Deniz Suna Erdincler
Journal:  Scand J Infect Dis       Date:  2005
  2 in total

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