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Acanthoparyphium Tyosenense: The Discovery of Human Infection and Identification of its Source
43
Citations
20
References
2001
Year
Parasitic DiseaseTyphoid FeverAcanthoparyphium Tyosenense YamagutiParasite InteractionsMedicinePathogenesisHelminthologyPathologyMicrobiologyHuman InfectionAcanthoparyphium TyosenenseA. TyosenenseMagnesium SaltsHelminth InfectionClinical MicrobiologyParasitologyHost-parasite Relationship
Acanthoparyphium tyosenense Yamaguti, 1939 (Digenea: Echinostomatidae), was originally reported as an avian intestinal parasite; here, its presence is reported in 10 humans in the Republic of Korea. The patients were 9 adults aged 35–66 yr (males and females) and a young girl aged 7 yr residing in 2 coastal villages in Puan-gun, Chollabuk-do. The worms were recovered after treatment with praziquantel and purgation with magnesium salts. A total of 158 specimens (1–107 specimens/individual) was collected, together with varying numbers of other intestinal flukes. The patients had eaten various kinds of brackish water mollusks caught in an estuary near their villages. Five bivalves and a gastropod species suspected as sources of human infection were collected and examined. Two bivalves (Mactra veneriformis and Solen grandis) and the gastropod (Neverita bicolor) were found to be infected with the metacercariae of A. tyosenense; adult flukes were confirmed after the experimental infection of chicks. The results show that A. tyosenense infects humans and that brackish water mollusks are the source of human infection.
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