Imported Fasciola hepatica infection in the United States and treatment with triclabendazole. (73/1248)

Infection with Fasciola hepatica, a liver trematode, is not frequently reported in the United States. We describe 2 patients, both originally from Cape Verde, who illustrate the spectrum of clinical presentations of F. hepatica as well as the means of treating infection with this parasite. Patient 1 had extensive disease and underwent multiple diagnostic procedures before the correct diagnosis was reached. Patient 2, who had few symptoms, had fascioliasis diagnosed by a noninvasive evaluation. Both patients were treated with triclabendazole without experiencing significant side effects. Fascioliasis that has been imported to the United States may elude prompt or accurate diagnosis. Obtaining a detailed travel history and recognizing the clinical presentation early in the course of infection may permit timely and noninvasive identification of infection. Triclabendazole is now the recommended drug for treating for fascioliasis because of its efficacy, safety, and ease of use.  (+info)

Simuliid blackflies (Diptera: Simuliidae) and ceratopogonid midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) as vectors of Mansonella ozzardi (Nematoda: Onchocercidae) in northern Argentina. (74/1248)

Mansonella ozzardi, a relatively nonpathogenic filarial parasite of man in Latin America, is transmitted by either ceratopogonid midges or simuliid blackflies. In the only known focus of the disease in north-western Argentina the vectors have never been incriminated. This study investigated the potential vectors of M. ozzardi in this area. The only anthropophilic species of these Diptera families biting man at the time of the investigation were Simulium exiguum, S. dinellii, Culicoides lahillei and C. paraensis. Using experimentally infected flies S. exiguum and both species of Culicoides allowed full development of microfilariae to the infective stage, with C. lahillei being a more competent host than S. exiguum. Based on these data, biting rates and natural infectivity rates it is probable that at the begininning of the wet season C. lahillei is the main vector of M. ozzardi and both C. paraensis and S. exiguum secondary vectors. Additionally, it was found that a single dose of ivermectin was ineffectual in eradicating M. ozzardi from infected individuals in this area.  (+info)

Late onset temporal lobe epilepsy with MRI evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis following acute neurocysticercosis: case report. (75/1248)

The objective of this case report is to describe magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS) in a patient with new onset temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and acute neurocysticercosis with multiple cysts. A 56 years old man with new onset headache, Simple Partial Seizures and Complex Partial Seizures underwent CT scan and lumbar puncture as diagnose proceeding. Multiple cysts and meningitis were identified, with a positive immunology for cysticercosis. Seizures were recorded over the left temporal region in a routine EEG. Treatment with albendazole was performed for 21 days, with clinical improvement and seizure remission after 4 months. An MRI scan 11 months after treatment, showed complete resolution of those cystic lesions and a left hippocampal atrophy (HA) with hyperintense T2 signal. The presence of HA and hyperintense T2 signal in this patient has not, to date, been associated with a poor seizure control. CONCLUSIONS: This patient presented with MRI evidence of left MTS after new onset partial seizures of left temporal lobe origin. Although we did not have a previous MRI scan, it is likely that this hippocampal abnormality was due to the acute inflammatory response to cysticercosis associated to repeated partial seizures. This suggests that acute neurocysticercosis associated with repeated seizures may cause MTS and late onset TLE.  (+info)

The efficacy and tolerability of triclabendazole in Cuban patients with latent and chronic Fasciola hepatica infection. (76/1248)

Current chemotherapy for the treatment of infections caused by the liver fluke Fasciola hepatica is not satisfactory. Therefore, the efficacy and tolerability of triclabendazole (TCZ) was assessed for this indication. Eighty-two patients (51 female, 31 male, age 15-81 yr, mean 42 yr) with chronic or latent F. hepatica infection refractory to previous anti-helminthic chemotherapy were enrolled in a 60-day open, non-comparative trial. Patients received 20 mg/kg TCZ as two doses of 10 mg/kg administered after food 12 hr apart. Efficacy of treatment was assessed by stool microscopy, determination of Fasciola excretory-secretory antigen (FES) in feces, and by ultrasonography (US) which were systematically performed pre-therapy and on Days 1-7, 15, 30, and 60 post-therapy. For continuous safety assessment, patients were hospitalized during the first week after therapy and then monitored at home for the appearance of any adverse events. Clinical chemistry and hematology tests were carried out on Days 1, 3, 7, 15, and 60, and whenever an adverse effect occurred possibly related to therapy. Seventy-one (92.2%) of the 77 patients who completed the 60-day follow-up period became egg-negative. Efficacy of therapy was supported by the disappearance or decrease of FES antigen and of ultrasonography abnormalities. In the 6 remaining patients, parasitological cure was achieved by another single TCZ dose of 10 mg/kg on Day 60. A total of 74 adverse events possibly related to therapy was reported by 54 patients. The most important adverse event was colic-like abdominal pain (40 patients [49%]) consistent with the expulsion of the parasite through the bile ducts as confirmed by US on Days 2-7. Most adverse events (53) were graded as mild, 20 as moderate, and only 1 as severe (a biliary colic responding to spasmolytic therapy within two hours). Triclabendazole 20 mg/kg is an effective therapy for the treatment of F. hepatica infection in patients who have failed to respond to other antihelminthic agents. Biliary colics reflecting the expulsion of dead or damaged parasites usually occur during Day 3-7 and respond well to spasmolytic therapy.  (+info)

Effect of dose increase or cimetidine co-administration on albendazole bioavailability. (77/1248)

The low bioavailability of albendazole affects the therapeutic response in patients with echinococcosis. Cimetidine co-administration is reported to improve bioavailability. To analyze the assumed dose-dependent bioavailability of albendazole, we administered 5 to 30 mg/kg albendazole to 6 male volunteers in a randomized cross-over study. To assess the effect of cimetidine (10 mg/kg twice daily), the drug was given with albendazole (20 mg/kg). A dose-dependent bioavailability was not observed. This was due to inter-individual variability of the maximal concentration (Cmax 38%-72%) of albendazole sulphoxide (ABZSX), the active metabolite of albendazole. Cmax was 0.21+/-0.14 mg/L after 5 mg/kg and 0.39+/-0.19 mg/L after 30 mg/kg albendazole (P = 0.217). Cimetidine tended to decrease Cmax by 52% (P = 0.109) and significantly inhibited ABZSX breakdown as indicated by the prolongation of ABZSX elimination half-life from 7.4+/-3.3 hr to 19.0+/-11.7 hr (P = 0.028). Remarkably, the inter-individual variability of Cmax was significantly lower during cimetidine co-administration: 14% versus 72%.  (+info)

Intestinal helminth infections, anaemia and labour productivity of female tea pluckers in Bangladesh. (78/1248)

We conducted a randomized clinical intervention trial over 24 weeks on a tea estate in north-east Bangladesh to investigate the effect of iron supplementation and anthelmintic treatment on the labour productivity of adult female tea pluckers. A total of 553 full-time tea pluckers, not pregnant and not breastfeeding, were randomly assigned to one of the four intervention groups: group 1 received iron supplementation on a weekly basis, group 2 received anthelmintic treatment at the beginning and half-way through the trial (week 12), group 3 received both iron supplementation as group 1 and anthelmintic treatment as group 2, and group 4 was a control group and received placebos. No significant difference in labour productivity was found between the four intervention groups over the trial period. However, there was a negative association for all three worms (Ascaris lumbricoides, Trichuris trichiura and hookworms) between the intensity of helminth infections (eggs/g faeces) and all measures of labour productivity. Lower haemoglobin values and anaemia (< 120 g/l Hb) were both associated with lower labour productivity and more days sick and absent. Taller women with greater arm circumference were able to pluck more green leaves, earn higher wages and were absent less often.  (+info)

Cerebral cysticercus granuloma associated with a subdural effusion. (79/1248)

The association of a solitary cerebral cysticercus granuloma with a subdural effusion is being reported. The granuloma and the effusion resolved following albendazole therapy. We speculate that the spread of the inflammatory changes around the granuloma to the subdural space could have led to the development of the subdural effusion.  (+info)

Insights about the biosynthesis of the avermectin deoxysugar L-oleandrose through heterologous expression of Streptomyces avermitilis deoxysugar genes in Streptomyces lividans. (80/1248)

BACKGROUND: The avermectins, produced by Streptomyces avermitilis, are potent anthelminthic agents with a polyketide-derived macrolide skeleton linked to a disaccharide composed of two alpha-linked L-oleandrose units. Eight contiguous genes, avrBCDEFGHI (also called aveBI-BVIII), are located within the avermectin-producing gene cluster and have previously been mapped to the biosynthesis and attachment of thymidinediphospho-oleandrose to the avermectin aglycone. This gene cassette provides a convenient way to study the biosynthesis of 2,6-dideoxysugars, namely that of L-oleandrose, and to explore ways to alter the biosynthesis and structures of the avermectins by combinatorial biosynthesis. RESULTS: A Streptomyces lividans strain harboring a single plasmid with the avrBCDEFGHI genes in which avrBEDC and avrIHGF were expressed under control of the actI and actIII promoters, respectively, correctly glycosylated exogenous avermectin A1a aglycone with identical oleandrose units to yield avermectin A1a. Modified versions of this minimal gene set produced novel mono- and disaccharide avermectins. The results provide further insight into the biosynthesis of L-oleandrose. CONCLUSIONS: The plasmid-based reconstruction of the avr deoxysugar genes for expression in a heterologous system combined with biotransformation has led to new information about the mechanism of 2,6-deoxysugar biosynthesis. The structures of the di-demethyldeoxysugar avermectins accumulated indicate that in the oleandrose pathway the stereochemistry at C-3 is ultimately determined by the 3-O-methyltransferase and not by the 3-ketoreductase or a possible 3,5-epimerase. The AvrF protein is therefore a 5-epimerase and not a 3,5-epimerase. The ability of the AvrB (mono-)glycosyltransferase to accommodate different deoxysugar intermediates is evident from the structures of the novel avermectins produced.  (+info)