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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (
volvulus
)
4,305
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Travelers to West, central and eastern Africa as well as to selected areas of Latin America are at risk for infection with Onchocerca
volvulus
. Infection with this tissue nematode may cause chorioretinitis and keratitis, and it is responsible in endemic areas for blindness in millions.1 In addition to ocular manifestations, it can produce a distressing pruriginous
dermatitis
or subcutaneous nodules. Clinical manifestations vary according to the parasitic load, previous immunity, and duration of infection.1 Infection is initiated by inoculation with larvae during the bite of the Simulium black fly. Once in the connective tissue, larvae mature to filiform adults and may remain in tissues for years, with the clinical manifestations being produced by the inflammatory reaction to dying parasites. Female adults produce large amounts of microfilaria that migrate through skin and connective tissue; once an infected host is bitten, the infectious larvae develop again in the female Simulium black fly and the life cycle is completed. Transmission is from person to person, and may occur even after a relatively short exposure.2 Although infection of travelers with O.
volvulus
is rare, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 46 new cases of onchocerciasis were diagnosed in the United States in 1994 (Dr. David Addis, personal communication, June 1996). We describe the case of an expatriate who became infected with O.
volvulus
and we review the treatment and recommendations for prevention of this parasitic infection.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis in an expatriate living in Cameroon. 981 71
The parasitic helminth Onchocerca
volvulus
causes ocular onchocerciasis (river blindness) and onchocercal skin disease. To understand the immunologic basis for early stage skin disease, we developed a model in which C57B1/6 mice were immunized subcutaneously and injected intradermally (in the ear) with soluble O.
volvulus
antigens (OvAg). We found that ear thickness increased significantly after intradermal injection of OvAg and remained elevated for at least 7 days.
Dermatitis
was dependent on prior immunization, and was associated with an intense cellular infiltrate in the dermis. Neutrophils were the predominant inflammatory cells in the dermis 12 hr after intradermal injection, with only occasional eosinophils present. Conversely, increased ear thickness at later time points was associated with eosinophils, and neutrophils were only rarely detected. Both cell types were present at intermediate time points. These data indicate that recruitment of neutrophils and eosinophils to the skin is temporally regulated.
...
PMID:Temporal recruitment of neutrophils and eosinophils to the skin in a murine model for onchocercal dermatitis. 1043 48
Onchocerciasis, or river blindness, is a parasitic infection caused by the filarial nematode, Onchocerca
volvulus
. It infects 18 million people worldwide, but is rarely seen in the United States. It is one of the leading causes of blindness in the developing world. Although onchocerciasis is also known as river blindness, it is not just a disease of the eyes, but rather a chronic multisystem disease. Clinically, onchocerciasis takes three forms: 1) eye disease; 2) subcutaneous nodules; and 3) a pruritic hypopigmented or hyperpigmented papular
dermatitis
. We present an 18-year-old African female with a 5-year history of asymptomatic, hypopigmented, slightly atrophic macules on her anterior tibiae. Pathology revealed a scant perivascular inflammatory infiltrate with mononuclear cells, eosinophils, and rare microfilariae in the papillary dermis. Ivermectin is the treatment of choice for onchocerciasis and was initiated in this patient. We present this interesting patient with onchocerciasis to expand our differential of hypopigmented macules, especially in the African population. In addition, we discuss both the diagnosis and the treatment of onchocerciasis in expatriate patients living in nonendemic areas.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis presenting with lower extremity, hypopigmented macules. 1082 90
The geophysics of the north Yemen, associating a north-south directed mountainous fish bone (rising in more of 2,000 meters), to numerous rivers or "wadis" is convenient to the development of simulium shelters, main vectors for cutaneous filariasis to Onchocerca sp. Following several missions of bio-clinical and epidemiological evaluations in neighbouring villages of wadis, it has been possible to study different clinical aspects: one reminding the classical african onchocerciasis with generalized and diffused
dermatitis
, and, on an other hand, a hyperreactive
dermatitis
on one side of the body and associated with a collateral lymphatic ganglion. This disease is well known for local populations as "aswad" meaning "black" or "sowda". Clinically whatever the studied focus, coexists the two types of onchodermatitis (uni or bilateral). Yhe sowda patients are proportionally less numerous than those touched by the generalized type. Frequent eye lesions of the West African onchocerciasis are not found in sowda cases. In classical optical microscopy, microfilaria is morphologically indifferenciable between sowda and onchocerciasis clinical aspects. Skin snips were carried out on patients of both groups. Identification of microfilaria by molecular biology through the study of the DNA genome was done out of 5 skin snips. Microfilaria was kept dry between laminas and the DNA extracted from rehydrated microfilaria. DNA was intensified with specific primers of Onchocerca type (O150PCR). This phase was followed by hybridisation of amplification products by PCR to specific stains: OVS-2 for Onchocerca
volvulus
species, OCH for Onchocerca ochengi, PFS1 and PSS1-BT respectively for the forest strain and the savannah strain of Onchocerca
volvulus
as described previously. We can distinguish 2 kinds of answers based on the clinical origin of the snip-tests: the first one concern 3 patients with numerous dermal microfilariae but without any clinical sowda and corresponding to microfilaria O.
volvulus
type but different from the forest or savannah strains found in sub-Saharan Africa. The second one corresponds to 2 patients with less than 5 microfilaria in their snip-test. They show the typical clinical picture of sowda. They are identified as microfilaria type Onchocerca but they do not belong to species
volvulus
, or to species ochengi. It seems quite probable that the clinical picture of sowda be the result of developing onchocerciasis of animal origin and not identified as to day. The ivermectin, therapeutic of choice for African onchocerciasis in annual unique cure seems less effective in the coverage of sowda. In that case rehearsal of cures every 3 months would be necessary for mass campaigns to limit the transmission of this filariasis.
...
PMID:[Human onchocerciasis and "sowda" in the Republic of Yemen]. 1197 66
Onchocerciasis is an infestation caused by the nematode, Onchocerca
volvulus
, and characterized by eye manifestations, skin lesions and troublesome itching. Although partially controlled by international mass treatment programs, onchocerciasis remains a major health hazard in endemic areas in Africa, Arabia, and the Americas. Onchocerciasis is spread by bites from infested blackflies which transmit larvae that subsequently develop into adult filariae. Skin findings are commonly non-specific, and include severe pruritus, acute and chronic
dermatitis
, vitiligo-like hypopigmentation and atrophy. Onchocercal ocular disease has a large spectrum of manifestations and may even lead to blindness. Diagnosis is usually made by direct visualization of the larvae emerging from superficial skin biopsies, "skin snips". In some cases, the microfilariae can also be directly observed with a slit lamp when they migrate into the anterior chamber of the eye. Ivermectin is highly microfilaricidal, and is the current drug of choice for both skin and ocular manifestations.
...
PMID:[Onchocerciasis]. 1275 35
During one academic year, three patients were referred to Parasitology Laboratory from Dermatology Outpatients Clinics in King Abdulaziz University Hospitals. They were diagnosed as Sowda (chronic hyperactive form of onchocerciasis
volvulus
). The patients came from Asir Region in the Southern of the Kingdom. The lesion was characterized by a sever papule
dermatitis
localized to the lower limbs, with marked skin darkening. There was extensive follicular hyperplasia of the regional lymph nodes in two cases only. The skin snips taken from the three patients were positive microfilariae. On the other hand, the urine sample of one patient was positive. Six months after the onset of treatment by the clinicians in the Specialized Hospital, skin snips and urine samples were negative.
...
PMID:Human infection with Onchocerca volvulus in Asir District (Saudi Arabia). 1496 53
Travelers to West Central Africa are at risk for infection with Onchocerca
volvulus
. We describe the case of an adventurous traveler who became infected with O
volvulus
after a 10-day stay in rural Cameroon. Two years after his return, he was diagnosed with a 3-month history of limb swelling with pruritus and fixed edema of the right arm. He was successfully treated by a single dose of ivermectin, with an additional treatment with doxycycline. The patient was followed-up during 1 year after therapy without relapse. Such travelers experiencing unusual
dermatitis
syndromes should prompt evaluation for onchocerciasis.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis-associated limb swelling in a traveler returning from Cameroon. 1641 9
Onchocercosis or riverblindness, caused by the filaria ochnocerca
volvulus
, is endemic in many countries of central and Western Africa. Symptoms of the disease can occur years after the infection, chronic itching
dermatitis
is the first sign, without treatment blindness may develop after years. Onchodermatitis is a hyperreactive course of onchocercosis with massive eosinophilia and elevated IgE, which suppresses a microfilarial spread through the body. Here, we report about the case of an 9-year-old girl who immigrated from the republic of Congo at the age of seven and has been living in Germany for more than two years. Presumably she suffered from onchodermatitis. She presented papular, indurated and itching skin lesions with pigmentary changes, predominantly located at the limbs. Remarkable results of blood tests were 11,000/microl (60 %) eosinophils and IgE 28 000 KU/l, ECP > 200 mg/l, without a history of atopic diseases. HIV, Strongylosis and Loa Loa were excluded. Anti filaria antibodies were detected in a concentration of 51 AKE, microscopy of skin samples failed to detect the parasites. After a single dose of Ivermectin the
dermatitis
improved, after two weeks the itching was absent, results of repeated blood tests tend to normalize in the following months. Due to the long lifespan of filaria in humans, the disease occurs years after infection in endemic areas. The differential diagnosis for itching skin lesions with high eosinophils in children from developing countries should include onchocercosis.
...
PMID:[Dermatitis and eosinophilia in a 9-year-old girl from Congo: putative onchodermatitis]. 1643 76
Onchocerciasis results from infestation by the nematode Onchocerca
volvulus
and is characterized by troublesome itching, skin lesions, and eye manifestations. Although partially controlled by international mass prevention programs, onchocerciasis remains a major health hazard and is endemic in Africa, Arabia, and the Americas. Onchocerciasis is spread by bites from infested black flies, which transmit larvae that subsequently develop into adult filariae. Skin symptoms are commonly nonspecific and include severe pruritus, acute and chronic
dermatitis
, vitiligo-like hypopigmentation, and atrophy. Onchocercal ocular disease covers a large spectrum of manifestations, which in severe cases, may lead to blindness. Diagnosis is usually made by direct visualization of the larvae emerging from superficial skin biopsies, "skin snips." In some cases, the microfilariae can also be directly observed at the slit lamp when migrating into the anterior chamber of the eye. Ivermectin is, at present, the drug of choice for skin and ocular manifestations. Recent research using a chemotherapeutic approach that targets filarial Wolbachia symbionts in the treatment and control of onchocerciasis, however, suggests that 100 mg/d of doxycycline for 6 weeks might be effective in reducing the filarial load and preventing ocular symptoms.
...
PMID:Onchocerciasis--river blindness. 1671 98
The discovery at autopsy or at a death scene of fresh perianal hemorrhage and/or cutaneous excoriation in a young child is always of concern as this raises the possibility of inflicted injury. Three cases are reported where perianal bleeding and excoriation that were initially considered due to possible sexual assault were subsequently found to be of a non-suspicious nature. Case 1: A previously well 18-month-old boy was accidentally hanged. Fresh perianal hemorrhage that had raised the possibility of sexual assault was subsequently shown to be due to perineal streptococcal
dermatitis
. Case 2: A 2-year-old girl vomited and then stopped breathing. Fresh blood at the anus, that was also thought to be patulous, raised suspicions of sexual assault. At autopsy, however, bleeding around the normally configured anus was due to a midgut
volvulus
associated with intestinal malrotation. Case 3: A 21-month-old girl was found dead in her cot. Sexual abuse was suspected when lacerations were allegedly found around her anus. These were, however, due to skin lesions from her previously diagnosed ectodermal dysplasia clefting syndrome. Death was due to upper airway obstruction from acute and chronic inflammation. There was no evidence of anogenital trauma or sexual assault in any of the cases. Although inflicted traumatic causes of perianal hemorrhage and excoriation must be judiciously sought in the young, the current cases demonstrate that organic etiologies must also be considered. Perianal infections, congenital malformations of the mesentery and intestines, and inherited disorders of the skin may all produce findings that may initially suggest that sexual assault has occurred. Careful examination with appropriate photography and/or microbiological testing are required.
...
PMID:Non-traumatic causes of perianal hemorrhage and excoriation in the young. 1929 54
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