| Literature DB >> 25031469 |
Woon Tae Jung1, Kyeong Ju Lee1, Hong Jun Kim1, Tae Hyo Kim1, Byoung-Kuk Na2, Woon-Mok Sohn2.
Abstract
Human cases of echinostomiasis have been sporadically diagnosed by extracting worms in the endoscopy in Korea and Japan. Most of these were caused by Echinostoma hortense infection. However, in the present study, we detected 2 live worms of Echinostoma cinetorchis in the ascending colon of a Korean man (68-year old) admitted to the Gyeongsang National University Hospital with complaint of intermittent right lower quadrant abdominal pain for 5 days. Under colonoscopy, 1 worm was found attached on the edematous and hyperemic mucosal surface of the proximal ascending colon and the other was detected on the mid-ascending colon. Both worms were removed from the mucosal surface with a grasping forceps, and morphologically identified as E. cinetorchis by the characteristic head crown with total 37 collar spines including 5 end-group ones on both sides, disappearance of testes, and eggs of 108×60 µm with abopercular wrinkles. The infection source of this case seems to be the raw frogs eaten 2 months ago. This is the first case of endoscopy-diagnosed E. cinetorchis infection in Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Echinostoma cinetorchis; ascending colon; colonoscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25031469 PMCID: PMC4096640 DOI: 10.3347/kjp.2014.52.3.287
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Parasitol ISSN: 0023-4001 Impact factor: 1.341
Fig. 1Colonoscopic views of the patient. (A) A bending worm (arrow) is attached to the hyperemic, edematous mucosal surface of the proximal ascending colon. (B) Another elongated worm (arrow) is seen on the mid-ascending colon. They were wriggling and moving in the manner of elongation and shortening by the stimuli of the grasping forceps.
Fig. 2Two adult Echinostoma cinetorchis recovered in the colon of the present case. (A) An unstained worm fixed in 10% formalin showing the complete feature after removing with a grasping forceps. (B) Another worm stained with Semichon's acetocarmine, which was broken in the posterior middle portion during the extracting process, but reveals the typical morphologies, i.e., a reniform head crown (arrows) around the oral sucker (OS), muscular pharynx (P), well-developed ventral sucker (VS), oval-shaped cirrus sac (CS), transversely elliptical ovary (O), and conspicuous Mehlis' gland (MG), but no testes in the postovarian region. The worms were characterized by the head crown equipped with 37 collar spines including 5 end-group spines on each side, and no testis in the postovarian and the posterior middle portion of worms. Scale bar is 1,000 µm.