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      Systemic infection with Alaria americana (Trematoda).

      Canadian Medical Association journal
      Adult, Granuloma, Hemorrhage, Humans, Liver, pathology, Lung, Male, Myocardium, Necrosis, Stomach, Thrombosis, Trematoda, isolation & purification, Trematode Infections, parasitology, Vascular Diseases

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          Abstract

          Alaria americana is a trematode, the adult of which is found in mammalian carnivores. The first case of disseminated human infection by the mesocercarial stage of this worm occurred in a 24-year-old man. The infection possibly was acquired by the eating of inadequately cooked frogs, which are intermediate hosts of the worm. The diagnosis was made during life by lung biopsy and confirmed at autopsy. The mesocercariae were present in the stomach wall, lymph nodes, liver, myocardium, pancreas and surrounding adipose tissue, spleen, kidney, lungs, brain and spinal cord. There was no host reaction to the parasites. Granulomas were present in the stomach wall, lymph nodes and liver, but the worms were not identified in them. Hypersensitivity vasculitis and a bleeding diathesis due to disseminated intravascular coagulation and a circulating anticoagulant caused his death 8 days after the onset of his illness.

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