Literature DB >> 22296896

[Fever, malaise and eosinophilia after consumption of raw fish in Italy: infection by a liver fluke (Opisthorchis felineus)].

Ariel M Vondeling1, Sacha Lobatto, Laetitia M Kortbeek, Hans Naus, J Wendelien Dorigo-Zetsma.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Infection by a liver fluke (trematode) is rare in Western Europe, but recently a few outbreaks caused by this parasite have been described after consumption of raw freshwater fish caught in Italy. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 35-year-old Dutch woman presented with fever, without localising symptoms. Laboratory tests showed pronounced eosinophilia. Microscopy of the faeces showed a liver fluke egg. Upon inquiry, it appeared that she had consumed raw fish (carpaccio of tench) three weeks earlier in a restaurant in Northern Italy. In Italy, 45 people with comparable symptoms were found to be infected by the same parasite. All patients had eaten in the same restaurant. They were treated successfully with praziquantel. The stool egg was from the trematode Opisthorchis felineus.
CONCLUSION: O. felineus lives in the bile ducts of fish-eating mammals. Its life cycle includes freshwater snails and fish. Acute symptoms are fever, malaise and abdominal pain and complications such as liver and bile duct abscesses and cholangitis. Diagnosis is made by microscopic examination of the faeces, confirmed by PCR or by serology.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22296896

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd        ISSN: 0028-2162


  2 in total

1.  Low genetic diversity in wide-spread Eurasian liver fluke Opisthorchis felineus suggests special demographic history of this trematode species.

Authors:  Ilja I Brusentsov; Alexey V Katokhin; Irina V Brusentsova; Sergei V Shekhovtsov; Sergei N Borovikov; Grigoriy G Goncharenko; Lyudmila A Lider; Boris V Romashov; Olga T Rusinek; Samat K Shibitov; Marat M Suleymanov; Andrey V Yevtushenko; Viatcheslav A Mordvinov
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-04-25       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Foodborne trematodiasis and Opisthorchis felineus acquired in Italy.

Authors:  Herman F Wunderink; Wouter Rozemeijer; Wouter Rozemijer; Peter C Wever; Jaco J Verweij; Lisette van Lieshout
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2014-01       Impact factor: 6.883

  2 in total

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