| Literature DB >> 32084134 |
Manuel Calvopina1, Esteban Ortiz-Prado1,2, Byron Castañeda3, Isabel Cueva4, Richar Rodriguez-Hidalgo5,6, Philip J Cooper7,8.
Abstract
We review epidemiological and clinical data on human myiasis from Ecuador, based on data from the Ministry of Public Health (MPH) and a review of the available literature for clinical cases. The larvae of four flies, Dermatobia hominis, Cochliomyia hominivorax, Sarcophaga haemorrhoidalis, and Lucilia eximia, were identified as the causative agents in 39 reported clinical cases. The obligate D. hominis, causing furuncular lesions, caused 17 (43.5%) cases distributed along the tropical Pacific coast and the Amazon regions. The facultative C. hominivorax was identified in 15 (38%) clinical cases, infesting wound and cavitary lesions including orbital, nasal, aural and vaginal, and occurred in both subtropical and Andean regions. C. hominivorax was also identified in a nosocomial hospital-acquired wound. Single infestations were reported for S. haemorrhoidalis and L. eximia. Of the 39 clinical cases, 8 (21%) occurred in tourists. Ivermectin, when it became available, was used to treat furuncular, wound, and cavitary lesions successfully. MPH data for 2013-2015 registered 2,187 cases of which 54% were reported in men; 46% occurred in the tropical Pacific coast, 30% in the temperate Andes, 24% in the tropical Amazon, and 0.2% in the Galapagos Islands. The highest annual incidence was reported in the Amazon (23 cases/100,000 population), followed by Coast (5.1/100,000) and Andes (4.7/100,000). Human myiasis is a neglected and understudied ectoparasitic infestation, being endemic in both temperate and tropical regions of Ecuador. Improved education and awareness among populations living in, visitors to, and health personnel working in high-risk regions, is required for improved epidemiological surveillance, prevention, and correct diagnosis and treatment.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32084134 PMCID: PMC7055958 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Fig 1Map of Ecuador.
Geographical distribution of the Ecuadorian Ministry of Public Health (MPH) registered cases per 100.000 inhabitants between 2013 and 2015. Data source RDACCA-Ecuadorian MPH. Figure made using ArcGIS software.
Summary of clinical case reports of human myiasis originating in Ecuador.
| Reference | Age (years) | Gender | Ethnicity / Country of Origen | Classification: | N° lesions | Anatomical localization | Fly spp. identification | Region | Treatment | Predisposing factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooper Philip. 1991 | 23 | M | White/ North American | Obligatory | 13 (13) | Back | Amazon | Occlusive dressings; surgical incision; antibiotic (cloxacillin) | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Latorre M. et al., 1993 [ | 32 | F | White/Spanish | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Limbs (shoulder) | NI | Surgical incision; antibiotic (cloxacillin) | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Cooper Philip 1993 | 9 | M | Afro-Ecuadorian/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Face | Coast | Occlusive dressings; surgical incision | Lived in rural area | |
| Westenfeld F, 1993 [ | 62 | M | White/North American | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Limbs (elbow) | NI | Surgical incision | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Cooper Philip 1993 | 6 | M | Afro-Ecuadorian/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Face/orbit | Coast | Surgical incision; antibiotic (cloxacillin) | Lived in rural area | |
| Chico M. et al., 1994 [ | 30 | M | Mestizo/EC | Obligatory | 3 (3) | Thorax (back) | Amazon | Surgical incision | Lived in rural area | |
| 7 | F | Indigenous Chachi/EC | Facultative | 1 (41) | Aural | Coast | Manual extraction | Lived in rural area | ||
| 0.9 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative | 2 (3) | Aural orbital external | Coast | Manual extraction | Lived in rural area | ||
| Hosokawa A. et al., 2000 [ | 70 | M | Mestizo/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Limbs (elbow) | Andean | Surgical incision; antibiotics | Lived in rural area (farmer) | |
| 7 | M | Mestizo/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Scalp | Andean | Manual extraction; topical antibiotics | Lived in rural area (farmer) | ||
| Ortega-Rosero J. et al., 2000 [ | 1 | F | Mestizo/EC | Accidental | (1) | intestinal | Coast | Self-elimination | Lived in rural area | |
| Schwartz E. & Gur H. 2002 [ | 22 | M | White/Israeli | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Limbs (leg) | NI | Surgical incision | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Cabrera F. et al., 2002 [ | 21 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative wound | 1 (200) | Face | Coast | Intramuscular ivermectin, antibiotics, cryotherapy spray | Alcoholism, Lived in rural area | |
| 63 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative wound | 1 (400) | Limbs (left leg) | Andean | Intramuscular ivermectin, antibiotics, manual extraction | Gangrenous pyoderma, Lived in rural area | ||
| Vaca-Aguirre P. 2003 [ | 73 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative | 1 (multiple larvae) | Aural | NI | Coast | Antibiotics, surgical extraction | Myringoplasty, Lived in rural area |
| 25 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative, Cavitary | 1 (multiple larvae) | Aural | NI | Coast | Chloroform, antibiotics | Chronic otitis media, Lived in rural area | |
| Guanga I. & Cruz C., 2006 [ | 59 | F | Indigenous/Kichwa/EC | Facultative Cavitary | 1 (40) | Nasal bilateral | Andean | Oral ivermectin, antibiotics, surgical extraction. | Alcoholism (died of CNS infection) | |
| Andrade M. et al., 2007 [ | 2 | F | Indigenous Kichwa/EC | Obligatory Furuncular | 1 (1) | Limbs (Left thigh) | Amazon | Ceftriaxone, manual extraction | Contact with domestic animals | |
| Nagamori K. et al., 2007 [ | 41 | M | Asian/Japanese | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Thorax (left upper back) | NI | Surgical incision; antibiotics (levofloxacin, gentamycin) | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Yerovi C. et al., 2008 [ | 82 | F | NI | Facultative | 1 (multiple larvae) | Vagina | NI | Coast | Manual extraction | Vaginal verrucous carcinoma |
| Muller I. & Vitagliano G. 2011 [ | 30 | M | White/Argentine | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Scrotum | NI | Surgical incision; antibiotic (cephalexin) | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Avendaño A. et al., 2013 [ | 29 | M | NI | Obligatory | 1 (NS) | Limbs (toe) | Coast | Manual extraction; antibiotics (amoxicilin/clavulanic acid, gentamycin) | Lived in rural area (farmer) | |
| Angulo L. et al., 2014 [ | 22 | F | White/Spanish | Obligatory | 11 (11) | Limbs (leg) | NI | Surgical incision | Travelled to endemic area | |
| Cedeño J. et al., 2014 [ | 33 | M | NI | Facultative | 1 (22) | Aural | Andean | Manual extraction; cigarette smoke; topical ivermectin; antibiotic (ciprofloxacin) | Alcoholism, farmer, living in rural area | |
| Pinos VH. et al., 2014 [ | 75 | F | Indigenous (Kichwa)/EC | Facultative | 4 (> 300 larvae) | Nasal, Oral cavity, Aural, Orbital, Face | Andean | Surgical (enucleation both eyes); manual extraction; ivermectin; antibiotics (vancomycin, imipenem) | Burns, alcoholism, undernutrition | |
| Alemán JM & Reinoso S. 2014 [ | 24 | F | Mestizo/EC | Facultative | 3 (multiple larvae) | Oral Cavity | Andean | Surgical Incision; ivermectin | Chronic neurological deficit | |
| Dominguez JP. et al., 2015 [ | 91 | F | Indigenous (Kichwa)/EC | Facultative | 1 (>100 larvae) | Orbital | Andean | Manual extraction; antibiotics (ceftriaxone, metronidazole, tobramycin) | Elderly, mentally retarded, rural, poor hygiene & low socioeconomic status | |
| Coronel AP. et al., 2016 [ | 90 | F | NI | Facultative | 3 (multiple larvae) | Thorax (axillar), Vaginal and Anal | NI | Andean | Manual extraction, antibiotics (amikacin, clindamycin, vancomycin); ivermectin | Senile dementia |
| Piña-Tornés A. et al., 2016 [ | 30 | M | NI | Obligatory | 1 (multiple larvae) | Scalp | Coast | Surgical incision; creolin; antibiotics (ciprofloxacin, metronidazole, ampicillin/sulbactam) | Indigent, schizophrenia | |
| Dueñas O. et al., 2017 [ | 70 | M | Mestizo/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Thorax (left scapula) | NI | Andean | Manual extraction; antibiotic (cephalexin) | Elderly, lived in rural area |
| Ramirez JI. et al., 2017 [ | 0.4 | M | NI | Facultative | 1 (45) | Colostomy | Coast | Surgical incision; antibiotic (oxacillin) | Colostomy, anorectal malformation | |
| Uslu U. et al., 2018 [ | 64 | M | White/German | Obligatory | 2 (2) | Limbs (Forearm) | NI | Manual extraction; antibiotic (levofloxacin) | Travelled to endemic area Non-Hodgkin`s lymphoma | |
| Cueva Isabel 2016 | 49 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative | 1 (multiple larvae) | Limbs (leg) | Coast | Manual extraction; ivermectin; antibiotic (metronidazole) | Elephantiasis, low socio-economic status, lived in rural area | |
| Cueva Isabel 2017 | 73 | M | Mestizo/EC | Facultative | 1 (30) | Nasal, orbita, | Andean | Manual extraction; | Basal cell carcinoma | |
| Castañeda Byron 2015 | 73 | M | Indigenous (Kichwa)/EC | Facultative | 1 (40) | Nasal | Andean | Mechanical aspiration; ivermectin | None | |
| Castañeda Byron 2017 | 75 | F | Indigenous (Kichwa)/EC | Facultative | 1 (15) | Limbs (Left leg) | Andean | Manual extraction | Chronic renal failure | |
| Calvopiña Manuel 2016 | 6 | M | Mestizo/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Face | Amazon | Ivermectin | none | |
| Calvopiña Manuel 2018 | 21 | F | Mestizo/EC | Obligatory | 1 (1) | Neck | Coast | Ivermectin | none | |
| Calvopiña Manuel 2018 | 35 | F | Mestizo/EC | Facultative | 1(41) | Nasal | Amazon | Manual extraction; ivermectin | Pituitary adenoma |
NI, not identified. EC, Ecuador. [], reference numbers
Age group distribution for cases of myiasis reported in the Ecuadorian Ministry of Public Health registry (2013–2015) and for clinical cases identified from the literature search.
| Ministry of Public Health Registry Data | Literature Search Clinical Case Data | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age group | (n) | % | (n) | % |
| 328 | 15 | 2 | 10.3 | |
| 247 | 11 | 3 | 12.8 | |
| 201 | 9 | 0 | 0.0 | |
| 377 | 17 | 11 | 35.9 | |
| 383 | 18 | 4 | 15.4 | |
| 244 | 11 | 9 | 25.6 | |
| 406 | 19 | 0 | 0.0 | |
| 2186 | 100 | 39 | 100 | |
Fig 2Furuncular and cavitary myiasis.
Furuncular myiasis in a 6-years-old boy from the Amazon region showing a clinical lesion with central air pore (A)—a single larva was identified as D. hominis 3rd instar (B). The child was treated with ivermectin (400 μg/kg once). After 48 h, a dead larva was extracted manually. More than 100 C. hominivorax 3rd instar larvae (C) manually extracted from the right eyeball (D) of a 91 year-old indigent indigenous Kichwa woman. Infestation occurred in the Andes region at 2,418 m, 80 km from Quito, the capital.
Clinical type by age group reported between 2013 and 2015 in the Ecuadorian Ministry of Public Health registry by International Classification of Diseases codings (ICD-10).
| 45 | 32 | 19 | 36 | 54 | 33 | |
| 44 | 49 | 75 | 124 | 105 | 78 | |
| 2 | 2 | 0 | 8 | 4 | 0 | |
| 3 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 1 | |
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 13 | 6 | 1 | 7 | 8 | 5 | |
| 289 | 226 | 174 | 269 | 280 | 193 | |
| 396 | 315 | 269 | 446 | 451 | 310 |