Results 171 to 180 of about 3,533 (202)
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Clonorchiasis: An Update

Southern Medical Journal, 1987
The ability of Clonorchis sinensis to cause severe hepatobiliary disease is illustrated by the case we have reported, in which biliary obstruction and hepatic fibrosis resulted from the pathologic process associated with chronic clonorchiasis.
A C, Lin   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Clonorchiasis of the pancreas

Clinical Radiology, 1990
Three patients with pancreatic clonorchiasis were examined with endoscopic retrograde pancreatography. On each of the three cases there was diffuse irregular dilatation of tributaries of the pancreatic duct in the pancreatic tail. The main pancreatic duct and tributaries draining into the body and head portion were not dilated.
J H, Lim, Y T, Ko
openaire   +2 more sources

Cholangiographic appearance in clonorchiasis

The British Journal of Radiology, 1984
Clonorchiasis may lead to cholangitis. Clonorchis sinensis infiltration of the biliary system produces an easily recognisable cholangiographic picture. The findings consist of characteristic filling defects and changes in the intrahepatic and extrahepatic ducts. The filling defects are usually small and irregular and the size is uniform.
T K, Choi, K P, Wong, J, Wong
openaire   +2 more sources

Clonorchiasis: an update

Journal of Helminthology, 2005
AbstractClonorchis sinensis, the Chinese or oriental liver fluke, is an important human parasite and is widely distributed in southern Korea, China (including Taiwan), Japan, northern Vietnam and the far eastern part of Russia. Clonorchiasis occurs in all parts of the world where there are Asian immigrants from endemic areas.
openaire   +2 more sources

Clonorchiasis in San Francisco

JAMA, 1962
CLONORCHIASIS is endemic in China, Korea, Japan, and Formosa. San Francisco, being a strategic center in commerce with the Far East, probably has the largest colony of patients with clonorchiasis outside the Orient. This study describes factors pertinent to an understanding of the disease in an extra-Oriental setting. History.—On Sept.
openaire   +2 more sources

Clonorchis and Clonorchiasis

1967
Publisher Summary Clonorchiasis commonly occurs in several countries of the Orient, including China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and North Vietnam. The symptoms evoked in clonorchiasis fall into three categories—mild, moderate, and severe, and manifestations are progressive, depending on the period of infection, condition of the host, and possibility of ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Clonorchiasis and Opisthorchiasis

2014
Clonorchiasis and opisthorchiasis are helminthic diseases caused by the liver flukes Clonorchis sinensis, Opisthorchis felineus, and Opisthorchis viverrini, respectively. Humans acquire these trematode infections by consuming raw or partially cooked freshwater fish infected with the larval stage metacercariae.
Edoardo Pozio   +1 more
openaire   +1 more source

Treatment of Clonorchiasis

The American Journal of Tropical Medicine, 1924
Summary The results of treating 6 cases of clonorchiasis are discussed and compared. The first 3 cases were more fully reported in an earlier paper. Details of the others are appended. Four of the 6 cases appear to have been cured. In favor of this view are the following facts: 1.
openaire   +1 more source

Clonorchiasis in Surinam.

Tropical and geographical medicine, 1982
A 46-year-old Chinese male was admitted to the Deaconesses' Hospital in Paramaribo with severe bleeding from esophagus varices. After being first on a wrong track the diagnosis clonorchiasis was made. The case history of the patient is described. This was the second case of clonorchiasis in Surinam.
B F, Oostburg, S J, Smith
openaire   +1 more source

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