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Cutaneous Larva Migrans

Pediatric Emergency Care, 2003
Cutaneous larva migrans is occasionally seen in pediatric emergency outpatient care settings. It results from infestation of hookworm larvae into the epidermis. The infestation is self-limited but may produce severe discomfort. The diagnosis relies entirely on clinical findings. Laboratory findings only support the clinical diagnosis but do not confirm
Neal P. Simon, Michael W. Simon
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Cutaneous Larva Migrans

Southern Medical Journal, 1993
The case of cutaneous larva migrans presented here is typical for its mechanism and geographic location of infection, evolution of lesions, and prompt response to treatment. Except for pinworms, helminth infections are rarely thought of in emergency departments away from the areas where the parasites are especially prevalent. The several-day incubation
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Cutaneous larva migrans

Current Infectious Disease Reports, 2004
International travel and increasingly exotic diets have resulted in an increase in cases of cutaneous larva migrans in industrialized countries. A broader spectrum of clinical presentation and complications of cutaneous larva migrans is recognized by clinicians.
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Cutaneous Larva Migrans

New England Journal of Medicine, 1998
Figure 1. A hookworm larva was acquired by a 47-year-old man during a vacation at a beach on the Alabama coast of the Gulf of Mexico. An isolated lesion resulted, and it resolved after liquid-nitrogen cryotherapy was administered just beyond the advancing end (single arrow). This photograph was taken a week and a half after the larva was acquired.
Emily F. Omura, Jane McClure Blaum
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Cutaneous Larva Migrans

Journal of Cutaneous Pathology, 2005
Cutaneous larva migrans is the most common tropically acquired dermatosis caused by larvae of various nematodes, which penetrate the skin and subsequently migrate, causing serpiginous lesions and pruritus. The diagnosis is usually made clinically. While a biopsy taken just ahead of the leading edge of a lesion is felt to enhance the yield of a positive
A. Allan, H. Oriba
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Cutaneous Larva Migrans

2020
Cutaneous larva migrans is a common parasitic infestation of the skin caused by percutaneous penetration and migration by dog and cat hookworms.
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Cutaneous larva migrans

Medicina Clínica (English Edition), 2023
Miguel Mansilla-Polo   +5 more
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Cutaneous larva migrans

QJM: An International Journal of Medicine, 2022
M T, Hla Aye   +5 more
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