نتایج جستجو برای: urogenital myiasis

تعداد نتایج: 6009  

Journal: :European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology 2019

Journal: :The Tohoku journal of experimental medicine 2005
Köksal Yuca Hüseyin Caksen Yunus Feyyat Sakin Sevil Ari Yuca Muzaffer Kiriş Hasan Yilmaz Hakan Cankaya

Myiasis is a disease caused by fly larvae. The term "myiasis" is derived from the Greek word "myia" meaning fly. Aural myiasis is a rare clinical state and occurs frequently in children. In this article, six children with aural myiasis, caused by the fly larvae, are reported because of unusual presentation. All of the children with aural myiasis were associated with chronic otitis media. In the...

Journal: :Journal of medical entomology 2008
T E Huntington David W Voigt L G Higley

Infestation of animal tissues by dipteran larvae (myiasis) commonly occurs in many species, but it is unusual for humans in temperate regions. Nevertheless, human myiasis is regularly observed in many primary care facilities in the United States. Beyond medical issues associated with treating human myiasis, both the causal agent and the longevity of myiasis can have legal implications, for exam...

2016
Gianne Pascoal Fernanda Queiroz de Oliveira Rosana Rocon Siqueira Maria Gabriela Araújo Lopes Marcelino Pereira Martins Neto Aloísio Carlos Couri Gamonal

Myiasis refers to Diptera larvae infesting vertebrate animals. There are two forms of the disease: primary and secondary. In primary myiasis, fly larvae invade and develop in healthy tissue; in secondary myiasis, flies lay their eggs in skin ulcerations, and the larvae develop in tissue necrosis products. Furuncular myiasis is a type of primary myiasis. Treatment for it consists of techniques s...

Journal: :Vector borne and zoonotic diseases 2016
Sherry A M Johnson Daniel W Gakuya Paul G Mbuthia John D Mande Kofi Afakye Ndichu Maingi

Myiasis is the infestation of tissues of live vertebrate animals and humans with dipterous larvae. In sub-Saharan Africa, Cordylobia anthropohaga and Cordylobia rodhaini are known to be responsible for cutaneous myiasis in animals and humans. Human cases of myiasis, purportedly acquired in Ghana but diagnosed in other countries, have been reported; however, published data on its occurrence in a...

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