نتایج جستجو برای: pharyngeal myiasis

تعداد نتایج: 10652  

Journal: :Yonsei Medical Journal 2002

Journal: :Neurology 2015

2017
Nadia Ali El-Dib Wegdan Mohamed Abd El Wahab Doaa Ahmed Hamdy Mona Ibrahim Ali

Background Urinary myiasis is a form of myiasis caused mainly by larvae of Fannia scalaris, Musca, Sarcophaga, Lucilia, Wohlfahrtia, Calliphora, and rarely by Eristalis and Clogmia albipunctata. Methods This report presents a case of female patient complaining of dysuria and frequency of micturition associated with intermittent passage of small, motile, dark-colored worm-like organisms in uri...

2017
Jörgen Landehag Andreas Skogen Kjetil Åsbakk Boris Kan

Hypoderma tarandi causes myiasis in reindeer and caribou (Rangifer tarandus spp.) in most northern hemisphere regions where these animals live. We report a series of 39 human myiasis cases caused by H. tarandi in Norway from 2011 to 2016. Thirty-two were residents of Finnmark, the northernmost county of Norway, one a visitor to Finnmark, and six lived in other counties of Norway where reindeer ...

Journal: :Anais brasileiros de dermatologia 2012
Adriana Andrade Raposo Antônio Pedro Mendes Schettini Cesare Massone

Myiasis is a disease caused by infestation of fly larvae in human and other vertebrate tissues. It is a skin condition common in tropical and subtropical countries and its predisposing factors are: chronic diseases, immunodeficiency, poor hygiene, senility, psychiatric disorders, skin cancers and ulcerated mucosae. We report the case of a healthy patient who after traumatic injury of a preexist...

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology 1989
J K Baird C R Baird C W Sabrosky

Human infection with botfly larvae (Cuterebra species) are reported, and 54 cases are reviewed. Biologic, epidemiologic, clinical, histopathologic, and diagnostic features of North American cuterebrid myiasis are described. A cuterebrid maggot generally causes a single furuncular nodule. Most cases occur in children in the northeastern United States or the Pacific Northwest; however, exceptions...

2016
Fareedi Mukram Ali Kishor Patil Sanjay Kar Atulkumar A. Patil Shabeer Ahamed

Certain dipteran flies larvae causing invasion of the tissues and organs of the humans or other vertebrates are called as myiasis, which feed on hosts dead or living tissues. It is well documented in the skin and hot climate regions; underdeveloped countries are affected more commonly. Oral cavity is affected rarely and it can be secondary to serious medical conditions. Poor oral hygiene, alcoh...

2017
Su-Min Song Shin-Woo Kim Youn-Kyoung Goo Yeonchul Hong Meesun Ock Hee-Jae Cha Dong-Il Chung

A fly larva was recovered from a boil-like lesion on the left leg of a 33-year-old male on 21 November 2016. He has worked in an endemic area of myiasis, Uganda, for 8 months and returned to Korea on 11 November 2016. The larva was identified as Cordylobia anthropophaga by morphological features, including the body shape, size, anterior end, posterior spiracles, and pattern of spines on the bod...

Journal: :Indian pediatrics 2014
Sunil Rathi Kailash Pednekar Ashish Pathak Poonam Singh

BACKGROUND Wound myiasis in the Indian subcontinent is most commonly caused by old world screw-worm (Chrysomya bezziana). CASE REPORT AND MANAGEMENT A 4-year-old malnourished girl presented with full thickness rectal prolapse following acute diarrhea with a large wound and screwworm myiasis of the rectum. Turpentine oil was applied to immobilize the maggots followed by manual extraction. Prol...

2015
Clare A Anstead Pasi K Korhonen Neil D Young Ross S Hall Aaron R Jex Shwetha C Murali Daniel S T Hughes Siu F Lee Trent Perry Andreas J Stroehlein Brendan R E Ansell Bert Breugelmans Andreas Hofmann Jiaxin Qu Shannon Dugan Sandra L Lee Hsu Chao Huyen Dinh Yi Han Harsha V Doddapaneni Kim C Worley Donna M Muzny Panagiotis Ioannidis Robert M Waterhouse Evgeny M Zdobnov Peter J James Neil H Bagnall Andrew C Kotze Richard A Gibbs Stephen Richards Philip Batterham Robin B Gasser

Lucilia cuprina is a parasitic fly of major economic importance worldwide. Larvae of this fly invade their animal host, feed on tissues and excretions and progressively cause severe skin disease (myiasis). Here we report the sequence and annotation of the 458-megabase draft genome of Lucilia cuprina. Analyses of this genome and the 14,544 predicted protein-encoding genes provide unique insights...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید