Percutaneous emergence of gnathostoma spinigerum following praziquantel treatment

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Abstract

A Bangladeshi patient with prior travel to Saudi Arabia was hospitalized in the United States for a presumptive liver abscess. Praziquantel was administered following a positive Schistosoma antibody test. Ten days later, a subadult worm migrated to the skin surface and was identified morphologically as Gnathostoma spinigerum. This case highlights the challenges of gnathostomiasis diagnosis, raising questions on potential serologic cross-reactivity and the possible role of praziquantel in stimulating outward migration of Gnathostoma larvae/subadults.

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Sapp, S. G. H., Kaminski, M., Abdallah, M., Bishop, H. S., Fox, M., Ndubuisi, M., & Bradbury, R. S. (2019). Percutaneous emergence of gnathostoma spinigerum following praziquantel treatment. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed4040145

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