Gastric Strongyloides Stercoralis in a Patient with Inflammatory Myopathy
Authors
Abstract:
Strongyloides stercoralis is a free living tropical and semitropical soil nematode which its larva penetrates skin. It can complete its life cycle in human body and causes autoinfection. Most patients have no frank symptoms. But respiratory, gastrointestinal and skin manifestation may occur. We report a 76 year old man admitted to emergency room with muscle weakness, dyspnea, nausea, vomiting while receiving prednisolone 60 mg/d plus methotrexate 15 mg intramuscular injections per week for his underlying polymyositis. His upper endoscopy showed an ulcer and microscopic examination revealed S. stercoralis larvae and adult worm in gastric mucosa. He was treated with a combination of parenteral ivermectin and oral albendazole, the disease course ended in complete improvement with clearing of daily stool samples after more than 2 weeks of treatment. It is noteworthy that the pre-steroid stool examinations were negative for parasites.
similar resources
gastric strongyloides stercoralis in a patient with inflammatory myopathy
strongyloides stercoralis is a free living tropical and semitropical soil nematode which its larva penetrates skin. it can complete its life cycle in human body and causes autoinfection. most patients have no frank symptoms. but respiratory, gastrointestinal and skin manifestation may occur. we report a 76 year old man admitted to emergency room with muscle weakness, dyspnea, nausea, vomiting w...
full textAcquired perforating disorder in a patient with Strongyloides stercoralis
Background Strongyloides stercoralis, a geohelminth which affects humans, has a cosmopolitan distribution in the tropical and subtropical areas but is sporadic in temperate countries like Romania. Acquired perforating disorders are a group of uncommon skin conditions characterized by transepidermal extrusion of dermal components, usually occurring in patients with chronic renal failure and/or d...
full textStrongyloides stercoralis hyperinfection in a patient with angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy.
A 29 year old Bengali male patient on chemotherapy for angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy developed Strongyloides hyperinfection syndrome 3 months after being treated with a single 3 day course of thiabendazole. His complicated hospitalization and successful management are described. Prevention of this potentially fatal disease in immunocompromised patients by early diagnosis and proper managem...
full textStrongyloides stercoralis hyperinfection in a post-renal transplant patient
Strongyloides stercoralis is an intestinal nematode that is able to infect the host tissue and persist asymptomatic for many years through autoinfection. It causes life-threatening hyperinfection in immunocompromised hosts. This report describes a rare case of strongyloidiasis in a 40-year-old male following renal transplant, which was diagnosed by colonoscopic biopsy. The literature on the sub...
full textHyperinfection syndrome with Strongyloides stercoralis.
A case is reported of hyperinfection syndrome with Strongyloides stercoralis, with symptoms, signs and radiological appearances which led to a diagnosis of duodenal ulcer.
full textGastric perforation caused by Strongyloides stercoralis: a case report.
Strongyloidiasis is a parasitosis caused by the female nematode of the Strongyloides stercoralis. S. stercoralis causes a chronic infection that is asymptomatic in 50% of chronically infected patients, and it can also affect the stomach. Gastric involvement causes symptoms mostly mimicking gastritis. We report herein a case of gastric perforation in a 37-year-old woman, which was thought to be ...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 8 issue 3
pages 184- 188
publication date 2013-07-01
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023