A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria

We report a case of subconjunctival invasion of Dirofilaria repens in a woman from Southern Bulgaria. Dirofilariasis is an extremely rare parasitic disease for Bulgaria. It occurs as an endemic parasitosis in the Mediterranean countries. It is caused by helminths of the genus Dirofilaria, which are...

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Main Author: Stoyanova Nina S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pensoft Publishers 2018-06-01
Series:Folia Medica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/folmed.2017.60.issue-2/folmed-2017-0097/folmed-2017-0097.xml?format=INT
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spelling doaj-3c207f1125d34cdc8ad4afed0839c9b82020-11-25T02:50:49ZengPensoft PublishersFolia Medica 1314-21432018-06-0160232332710.1515/folmed-2017-0097folmed-2017-0097A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in BulgariaStoyanova Nina S.0Department of Ophthalmology, Medical Faculty, Medical University of Plovdiv, Plovdiv, BulgariaWe report a case of subconjunctival invasion of Dirofilaria repens in a woman from Southern Bulgaria. Dirofilariasis is an extremely rare parasitic disease for Bulgaria. It occurs as an endemic parasitosis in the Mediterranean countries. It is caused by helminths of the genus Dirofilaria, which are parasites in dogs, cats, foxes, wolves – the final hosts of the parasite. It may very rarely occur in humans, the infection triggered by a bite of bloodsucking mosquitoes, which are the intermediate hosts of Dirofilaria. The clinical forms of dirofilariasis in humans are subcutaneous, pulmonary and ocular, the brain, testes and mammary glands being rarely affected. A 51-year-old patient presented with migrating edema in the area of the left temple and upper eyelid, with redness and swelling of the conjunctiva, as well as a subjective sense of movement under the eyelid of the left eye, lasting for about ten days. The subconjunctival localization of a moving 9.5-cm nematode was established, it was surgically removed and histologically studied. This case of ocular subconjunctival dirofilariasis is of clinical interest due to the rarely observed pathology.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/folmed.2017.60.issue-2/folmed-2017-0097/folmed-2017-0097.xml?format=INTsubconjunctival parasitosisDirofilaria repens
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stoyanova Nina S.
spellingShingle Stoyanova Nina S.
A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria
Folia Medica
subconjunctival parasitosis
Dirofilaria repens
author_facet Stoyanova Nina S.
author_sort Stoyanova Nina S.
title A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria
title_short A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria
title_full A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria
title_fullStr A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria
title_full_unstemmed A Case of Subconjunctival Dirofilariasis in Bulgaria
title_sort case of subconjunctival dirofilariasis in bulgaria
publisher Pensoft Publishers
series Folia Medica
issn 1314-2143
publishDate 2018-06-01
description We report a case of subconjunctival invasion of Dirofilaria repens in a woman from Southern Bulgaria. Dirofilariasis is an extremely rare parasitic disease for Bulgaria. It occurs as an endemic parasitosis in the Mediterranean countries. It is caused by helminths of the genus Dirofilaria, which are parasites in dogs, cats, foxes, wolves – the final hosts of the parasite. It may very rarely occur in humans, the infection triggered by a bite of bloodsucking mosquitoes, which are the intermediate hosts of Dirofilaria. The clinical forms of dirofilariasis in humans are subcutaneous, pulmonary and ocular, the brain, testes and mammary glands being rarely affected. A 51-year-old patient presented with migrating edema in the area of the left temple and upper eyelid, with redness and swelling of the conjunctiva, as well as a subjective sense of movement under the eyelid of the left eye, lasting for about ten days. The subconjunctival localization of a moving 9.5-cm nematode was established, it was surgically removed and histologically studied. This case of ocular subconjunctival dirofilariasis is of clinical interest due to the rarely observed pathology.
topic subconjunctival parasitosis
Dirofilaria repens
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/folmed.2017.60.issue-2/folmed-2017-0097/folmed-2017-0097.xml?format=INT
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