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1/42. A case of gastric pseudoterranoviasis in a 43-year-old man in korea.

    A case of Pseudoterranova decipiens infection was found in a 43-year-old man by gastroendoscopic examination on August 20, 1996. On August 6, 1996, he visited a local clinic, complaining of epigastric pain two days after eating raw marine fishes. Although the symptoms were relieved soon, endoscopic examination was done for differential diagnosis. A white, live nematode larva was removed from the fundus of the stomach. The larva was 38.3 x 1.0 mm in size and had a cecum reaching to the mid-level of the ventriculus. A lot of transverse striations were regularly arranged on the cuticle of its body surface, but the boring tooth and mucron were not observed at both ends of the worm. The worm was identified as the 4th stage larva of P. decipiens.
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2/42. An incidental case of human Heterophyes nocens infection diagnosed by sectional morphology in a biopsy specimen of the small intestine.

    A case of human infection with Heterophyes nocens (heterophyidae) was incidentally found in a biopsy specimen of the Meckel's diverticulum at the upper part of the small intestine. The patient was a 58-year-old man living in a rural area of Talsonggun, Kyongsangbuk-do. He had gastrointestinal symptoms such as epigastric pain, indigestion, and abdominal discomfort for 3 months, and severe diarrhea, abdominal pain, and vomiting for about 1 month before hospitalization. endoscopy of the upper part of the small intestine revealed a Meckel's diverticulum, and it was excised and histopathologically examined. Three adult flukes were incidentally found sectioned in the mucosa, and they were identified as H. nocens. The patient had a history of eating raw mullets at a fish market in Pusan 6 months ago, and the mullets were presumed to be the source of infection. This case brings a considerable interest in that specific diagnosis of heterophyid infections could be done by sectional morphology of the worms.
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keywords = abdominal pain, pain, upper
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3/42. capillaria philippinensis: an emerging parasite causing severe diarrhoea in egypt.

    Four cases with capillaria philippinensis have been reported from egypt during 1989-1992. The authors report here four other cases of severe diarrhoea caused by this parasite. A male and three female patients aged 12-45 years presented with severe diarrhoea of 1-7 months duration associated with vomiting and central abdominal colics. Stools were yellowish or greenish and voluminous. anorexia was profound with loss of weight. Bilateral painless ankle oedema developed early in the course of the disease and two cases had ascites and bilateral pleural effusion at presentation. There was hyponatraemia, hypocalcaemia and marked hypokalaemia and hypoalbulinaemia. Small bowel series showed a rapid transit time in 3 cases and malabsorption pattern in one. Duodenal biopsies showed non-specific chronic inflammation while jejunal biopsies from one case revealed grade II villous atrophy with moderate cellular infiltration of lamina propria. The infection was diagnosed by finding the eggs, larvae and adult worms of C. philippinensis in stool. patients were treated with mebendazole 400 mg/day in two divided doses for 28 days in addition to high protein diet and correction of electrolyte disturbance. vomiting stopped on the second day of treatment, appetite improved and diarrhoea regressed by the fourth day. Unfortunately, one case died two days after admission due to marked hypokalaemia. Clinico-pathological and epidemiological aspects of this infection in egypt are discussed.
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4/42. Multilocular pyogenic hepatic abscess complicating ascaris lumbricoides infestation.

    A 74-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with frequent right flank pain. The multiple multilocular hepatic abscesses were revealed by computed tomography. Radiographs following a barium meal showed a linear filling defect in the ileum consistent with ascariasis. One day after treatment with pyrantel pamoate, an Ascaris was passed in the stool. The pyogenic hepatic abscesses gradually healed with both antibiotics and continuous drainage. After 2 months, he was discharged. In this case, the pyogenic hepatic abscesses were thus considered to have been caused by an inflammation which spread through the portal vein.
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5/42. Ultrasound diagnosis of oesophagostomiasis.

    Human infection with oesophagostomum bifurcum, a parasitic intestinal helminth, is endemic in parts of West africa. oesophagostomum bifurcum juveniles develop in the colonic wall, causing pus-filled granulomas. The pathology has two distinct forms. Multinodular oesophagostomiasis comprises hundreds of small nodules within a thickened, oedematous wall of the large intestine. Uninodular oesophagostomiasis, called the Dapaong tumour, presents as a painful 30-60 mm granulomatous mass in the abdominal wall or within the abdominal cavity. diagnosis of oesophagostomiasis on clinical grounds alone is difficult. We describe cases illustrating the ultrasound appearance of these two presentations. Multinodular disease shows nodular "target" and "pseudokidney" colonic lesions. The Dapaong tumour is an echo-free ovoid lumen enveloped within a well defined poorly reflective wall.
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6/42. Ultrasonographic appearance of colon taeniasis.

    We present the case of a 50-year-old woman with abdominal pain, nausea, loss of appetite, and frequent stools in whom the routine ultrasonographic examination demonstrated a double-reflective, ribbon-like structure in the lumen of the initial segment of the ascending colon, which suggested colon taeniasis. Because the initial parasitologic analysis yielded negative results and application of albendazol did not have any therapeutic effect, the diagnosis was confirmed by barium enema and subsequently by parasitologic examination of proglottids passed in the stool after application of niclosamide. The double-reflective, ribbon-like structure in the lumen of the intestine seems to be specific to the ultrasonographic appearance of intestinal taeniasis. Transcutaneous ultrasonography of the gastrointestinal tract, performed as a screening method before conventional radiologic or endoscopic examination, can point to the ultimate diagnosis of colon taeniasis.
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keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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7/42. Hepatobiliary and pancreatic complications of ascariasis in children: a study of seven cases.

    OBJECTIVES: This study presents seven cases of severe hepatobiliary and pancreatic complications of ascariasis in children. The authors describe the clinical, laboratory, and imaging findings, as well as the patients' clinical evolution. methods: These cases were studied within a period of approximately 1 year and included children younger than 11 years (mean age, 4.4 years). The authors reviewed their medical history and evaluated the results of their main diagnostic examinations. RESULTS: All of the patients had vomiting, abdominal pain, pallor, and abdominal distension at presentation. Passage of ascaris lumbricoides in stool occurred in five cases, emesis with worms in three, fever in three, and hepatomegaly in two. Five patients had pancreatitis, of which two were necrohemorrhagic and one had pseudocyst of the pancreas. In three patients, A. lumbricoides was present in the pancreatic duct. Two patients had hepatic abscess (28.6%), and one of them also had cholangitis. One of the patients with pancreatitis also had signs of cholecystitis at presentation. CONCLUSIONS: ultrasonography was the imaging diagnostic method of choice and demonstrated the presence of A. lumbricoides in the biliary and the pancreatic ducts, as well as signs of pancreatitis, cholecystitis, and hepatic abscess. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, used to confirm the diagnosis, was a fundamental procedure in the treatment, allowing the removal of worms from the biliary duct in four of seven patients.
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ranking = 20.046697393472
keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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8/42. The endoscopic diagnosis of intestinal capillariasis in a child: a case report.

    A 13-year-old boy was diagnosed as having intestinal capillariasis by gastroduodenoscopy. He presented with a 10-month history of chronic abdominal pain and diarrhea. The boy had stayed in central thailand and had eaten uncooked fish and raw shellfish. Gastroduodenoscopy showed normal jejunal mucosa although histology revealed flattened villi, crypt proliferation, acute inflammation, and eosinophilic granulomata. An egg of capillaria philippinensis was also seen. The child was treated with mebendazole for 30 days. He had gained six kilograms by the time of his last follow-up.
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keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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9/42. Human intestinal anisakiosis due to consumption of raw salmon.

    Anisakiosis is a parasitic infection that follows consumption of raw or insufficiently pickled, salted, smoked, or cooked wild marine fish infected with anisakis sp. larvae. We report a case of intestinal anisakiosis in a 50-year-old man from quebec who presented with abdominal pain and peripheral eosinophilia after eating raw wild-caught salmon from the pacific ocean off canada. Abdominal CT scan showed bowel distension proximal to a segmental jejunal wall thickening, which was resected. The jejunum segment showed a localized area of serositis with mucosal edema and a submucosal abscess rich in eosinophils surrounding a parasite consistent with the third larval stage of anisakis sp. Diagnostic morphologic characteristics included an unpaired excretory gland (renette cell), Y-shaped lateral epidermal cords, no apparent reproductive system, and a ventriculus (glandular esophagus). These features and the absence of lateral alae excluded Ascaris sp. The absence of ventricular appendage and intestinal cecum excluded other anisakids of the genera Pseudoterranova and Contracaecum. As the popularity of eating raw fish is growing in north america, anisakiosis may be diagnosed more frequently in surgical specimens. This parasitic infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute abdominal syndromes and eosinophilic infiltrates of the stomach, small intestine, colon, omentum, and mesentery, especially with a history of raw marine fish consumption.
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ranking = 20.046697393472
keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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10/42. oesophagostomiasis in man: report of the first Malaysian case with emphasis on its pathology.

    This paper describes the first Malaysian case of oesophagostomiasis. The patient was an 8-year-old Malay boy who presented to Ipoh General Hospital, Perak with abdominal pain and weight loss. Examination revealed multiple cavitated pseudotumours of the colon. A hemicolectomy was performed. Examination of the lesions revealed oesophagostomum worms in the necrotic centres. The differential diagnoses and the pathology caused by oesophagostomum are discussed. A brief review of the available literature is presented.
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ranking = 20.046697393472
keywords = abdominal pain, pain
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