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Trematode infections in India: a review.

open access: yesTropical gastroenterology : official journal of the Digestive Diseases Foundation, 1992
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Intraocular Infection with a Trematode

New England Journal of Medicine, 2017
A 17-year-old boy from a rural town in Mexico presented with decreased visual acuity and pain in his right eye. Slit-lamp examination, shown in a video, revealed an intraocular infection with a trematode.
Juan Carlos Serna-Ojeda   +1 more
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Intestinal Trematode Infections

2014
Intestinal trematodes are among the most common types of parasitic worms. About 76 species belonging to 14 families have been recorded infecting humans. Infection commonly occurs when humans eat raw or undercooked foods that contain the infective metacercariae.
J. Guillermo Esteban   +2 more
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Trematode Infections

Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 2012
Food-borne trematodiases are an emerging public health problem in Southeast Asia and Latin America and of growing importance for travel clinics in Europe and North America. The disease is caused by chronic infections with liver, lung, and intestinal flukes.
Thomas Fürst   +7 more
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TREMATODE INFECTIONS

Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 1993
The parasitic diseases of the liver and lung are caused by trematodes or flukes--Opisthorchis viverrini, O. felineus, Fasciola hepatica, and Paragonimus westermani. Humans get infected by eating the second intermediate host of the fluke, for example, fish, crab, or water plant. The disease runs a chronic course.
Jay S. Keystone   +2 more
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Transmammary Infection of Newborn by Larval Trematodes

Science, 1984
Newborn cats and mice became infected with Alaria marcianae if they nursed from females that had been experimentally infected with the parasite. All lactating females showed mesocercarial stages in their mammary glands.
Kenneth C. Corkum, Wesley L. Shoop
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Epidemiology of Trematode Infections: An Update

2019
Digenetic trematodes infecting humans are more than 91 species which belong to 46 genera all over the world. According to their habitat in definitive hosts, they are classified as blood flukes (Schistosoma japonicum. S. mekongi, S. mansoni, S. haematobium, and S. intercalatum), liver flukes (Clonorchis sinensis, Opisthorchis viverrini, O.
Jong-Yil Chai, Bong-Kwang Jung
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Trematode Infections of Man

1986
A consideration of the chemotherapy of trematode infections of man will invariably be unevenly distributed with respect to the parasites involved. The great preponderance of attention must be devoted to the blood flukes or schistosomes, because of their great medical importance and because so much is known about their treatment.
Garcia Eg, William C. Campbell
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Epidemiology of Trematode Infections

2014
Human-infecting digenetic trematodes are approximately 70 species which belong to 60 genera over the world. According to their habitat in the definitive hosts, they are classified as blood flukes (Schistosoma japonicum. S. mekongi, S. mansoni, S. haematobium, and S. intercalatum), liver flukes (Clonorchis sinensis, Opisthorchis viverrini, O.
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