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RESEARCH PRODUCT
An Autochthonous Human Case of Fasciolopsiasis in Nepal
Ranjit SahRafael ToledoMichele Calatrisubject
Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAbdominal painCase ReportTrematode InfectionsGastroenterologyfasciolopsiasisPraziquantelFecesYoung AdultNepalFasciolopsisInternal medicineFasciolopsis buskimedicineAnimalsHumanshepatitisFasciolopsiasisHepatitisAnthelminticsbiologybusiness.industryabdominal painbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasePraziquantelFasciolidaeInfectious Diseasesmedicine.anatomical_structureParasitic diseaseDuodenumParasitologyLiver functionmedicine.symptombusinessmedicine.drugdescription
Fasciolopsiasis is rarely known as the parasitic disease in Nepal. Herein, we report a case of fasciolopsiasis in a 22-year-old man who was admitted in the hospital with abdominal pain, distension and loss of appetite for a month. He had previously diagnosed with acute viral hepatitis but, his abdominal pain was not resolving despite improvement in his liver function and general condition. During endoscopy an adult digenean worm was seen in the first part of the duodenum. After isolation, the worm was identified morphologically as Fasciolopsis buski. Microscogic examination of the patient's stool revealed eggs with a morphology consistent with F. buski. Eggs were yellow-brown, ellipsoidal, unembmbryonated, operculated, filled with yolk cells, with thin shell and ranging 118-130 µm in length and 60-69 µm in width. The abdominal pain of the patient was resolved after treatment with praziquantel. By the present study, it was confirmed for the first time that fasciolopsiasis is indigenously transmitted in Nepal. Accordingly, the epidemiological studies in humans and reservoir host animals should be performed intensively in near future.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-06-01 | The Korean Journal of Parasitology |