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Case Reports
A case of disseminated strongyloidiasis diagnosed by worms in the urinary sediment
Young-Ha Lee
Parasites Hosts Dis 2024;62(2):238-242.
Published online May 27, 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/PHD.23124
Strongyloidiasis is a chronic infection caused by the intestinal nematode parasite Strongyloides stercoralis and is characterized by a diverse spectrum of nonspecific clinical manifestations. This report describe a case of disseminated strongyloidiasis with urination difficulty, generalized weakness, and chronic alcoholism diagnosed through the presence of worms in the urinary sediment. A 53-year-old man was hospitalized for severe abdominal distension and urinary difficulties that started 7–10 days prior. The patient also presented with generalized weakness that had persisted for 3 years, passed loose stools without diarrhea, and complained of dyspnea. In the emergency room, approximately 7 L of urine was collected, in which several free-living female adult and rhabditiform larvae of S. stercoralis, identified through their morphological characteristics and size measurements, were detected via microscopic examination. Rhabditiform larvae of S. stercoralis were also found in the patient’s stool. During hospitalization, the patient received treatment for strongyloidiasis, chronic alcoholism, peripheral neurosis, neurogenic bladder, and megaloblastic anemia, and was subsequently discharged with improved generalized conditions. Overall, this report presents a rare case of disseminated strongyloidiasis in which worms were detected in the urinary sediment of a patient with urination difficulties and generalized weakness combined with chronic alcoholism, neurogenic bladder, and megaloblastic anemia.

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  • Tropical gastrointestinal infections of contemporary public health importance
    Carlos Seas, Pedro Legua
    Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases.2025; 38(5): 426.     CrossRef
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  • 67 Download
  • 1 Web of Science
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An Imported Case of Disseminated Echinococcosis in Korea
Dong Hoon Shin, Hae Chan Jo, Jeong-Han Kim, Kang Il Jun, Wan Beom Park, Nam-Joong Kim, Min-Ho Choi, Chang Kyung Kang, Myoung-don Oh
Korean J Parasitol 2019;57(4):429-434.
Published online August 31, 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3347/kjp.2019.57.4.429
A complicated case of echinococcosis with multiple organ involvement is reported in a 53-year-old businessman who frequently traveled overseas, including China, Russia, and Kazakhstan from 2001 to 2007. The patient was first diagnosed with a large liver cyst during a screening abdomen ultrasonography in 2011, but he did not follow up on the lesion afterwards. Six years later, dizziness, dysarthria, and cough developed, and cystic lesions were found in the brain, liver and lungs. The clinical course was complicated when the patient went through multiple surgeries and inadequate treatment with a short duration of albendazole without a definite diagnosis. The patient visited our hospital for the first time in August 2018 due to worsening symptoms; he was finally diagnosed with echinococcosis using imaging and serologic criteria. He is now on prolonged albendazole treatment (400 mg twice a day) with gradual clinical and radiological improvement. A high index of suspicion is warranted to early diagnose echinococcosis in a patient with a travel history to endemic areas of echinococcosis.

Citations

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  • Imported parasitic diseases in the Republic of Korea: status and issues
    Jong-Yil Chai
    Journal of the Korean Medical Association.2025; 68(1): 52.     CrossRef
  • Delayed Diagnosis of Imported Cystic Echinococcosis and Successful Treatment With Percutaneous Drainage and Albendazole in Korea: A Case Report
    Won Jun Choi, Hanna Jin, Hyeon Jae Jo, Chan Mi Lee, Chang Kyung Kang, Pyoeng Gyun Choe, Wan Beom Park, Nam Joong Kim, Min-Ho Choi
    Journal of Korean Medical Science.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Clinical Implications for the Comprehensive Interpretation of Radiologic and Immunodiagnostic Tests in Patients Suspected of Parasitic Hepatic Cyst, a Rare Case in Korea
    Jae-Sung Yoo, Min-Kyu Kang, Jung-Gil Park, Hyung-Joo Kim, Joon-Hyuk Choi
    Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease.2023; 8(3): 155.     CrossRef
  • Renal Hydatid With Tuberculosis in a Child: A Rare Coexistence
    Sravanthi Vutukuru, Shailesh Solanki, Prema Menon, Nitin Peters, Ram Samujh, Radhika Srinivasan
    Advances in Pediatric Surgery.2022; 28(2): 76.     CrossRef
  • Hepatic Hydatid Cyst: A Case Report
    Wan Chul Kim, Jae Uk Shin, Su Sin Jin
    The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology.2021; 77(1): 35.     CrossRef
  • 7,205 View
  • 113 Download
  • 5 Web of Science
  • Crossref