Results 151 to 160 of about 1,278 (196)
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Gnathostomiasis: Clinicopathologic Study

The American Journal of Dermatopathology, 2004
Gnathostomiasis is a systemic parasitic disease that is caused by the ingestion of contaminated raw fish, the intermediate host. Involvement of the skin is a common event, and when it does happen, it can produce a superficial or creeping eruption, pseudofurunculosis, and nodular migratory panniculitis.
Mario, Magaña   +3 more
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GNATHOSTOMIASIS IN THREE CATS

Australian Veterinary Journal, 1977
SUMMARY A fatal infection with Gnathostoma spinigerum causing a perforated stomach is described in a 3‐year‐old cat. In a second debilitated case a small serosal perforation was found on a gastric lesion, while a third cat in good condition is described with a well developed stomach lesion but without perforation.
K F, Trueman, P B, Ferris
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GNATHOSTOMIASIS IN JAPAN

Archives of Dermatology, 1952
THIS BRIEF discussion of gnathostomiasis in Japan will start with the history of so-called Yangtze edema. Yangtze edema ( chōkō-fushu in Japanese) during the past 50 years has occasionally occurred among Japanese people who lived in the Yangtze Kiang Valley in China.
openaire   +2 more sources

Cerebral gnathostomiasis

Medical Journal of Australia, 2021
Simon Smith   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Gnathostomiasis

Archives of Dermatology, 1984
• With the recent influx of southeast Asians into the United States, an increased incidence of human gnathostomiasis can be expected. A Laotian woman had had two weeks of pruritus associated with fleeting erythematous patches on her abdomen. A peripheral eosinophilia was present.
openaire   +1 more source

Neurological manifestations of gnathostomiasis

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 1977
Neurological features of 24 patients with nervous system gnathostomiasis were reviewed. The commonest presenting features were radiculomyelitis or radiculomyelitis terminating with encephalitis, and subarachnoid haemorrhage. A primary encephalitic form was noted in 2 patients.
P, Boongird   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Human gnathostomiasis in Mexico

International Journal of Dermatology, 1998
Case 1 A 31‐year‐old man from Acapulco, Guerrero, in the southwest of Mexico, was seen in March 1994 for evaluation of a 1‐month history of intermittent migratory subcutaneous swellings on the left scapula, neck, upper lip, and chin. The edema was painful and nonpruritic, with an oval shape of approximately 5–10 cm in diameter.
F, Vargas-Ocampo   +2 more
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[Gnathostomiasis].

Medecine tropicale : revue du Corps de sante colonial, 2005
Gnathostomiasis is an helminthic zoonotic disease endemic in Asia, mainly in Southeastern Asia, and Latin America, that has been increasingly reported in travelers returning from these areas. It is due to the consumption of raw or insufficiently cooked meat (chiken, snakes), frogs or fish, contaminated with larvae of the gender Gnathostoma ...
P, Parola, E, Caumes
openaire   +1 more source

Intraocular Gnathostomiasis

Ophthalmology, 1981
M E, Bathrick, C A, Mango, J F, Mueller
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Gnathostomiasis

2022
Rahul Garg   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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