RESUMO
Isolated omental hydatid cyst is a very rare clinical entity. Here, such a case has been presented where abdominal cystic mass came out as isolated hydatid cyst in the greater omentum.
Assuntos
Animais , Equinococose/tratamento farmacológico , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Omento/parasitologia , Doenças Peritoneais/tratamento farmacológico , Doenças Raras , Resultado do TratamentoRESUMO
Calomys callosus Rengger, 1830 (Rodentia: Cricetidae) is a mouse-like South American wild rodent, which is permissive to Schistosoma mansoni infection. In this paper we studied the effect of schistosomal infection in C. callosus mesenteric and omental milky spots (MS), subsidiary foci of coelom-associated lymphomyeloid tissue (CALT), during the acute, transitional (acute to chronic), and chronic phases of the infection. MS were morphologically analyzed by historical methods, using brightfield and confocal laser scanning microscopies. The MS of infected animals were mainly of lymphomyelocytic (42 to 90 days) and lymphoplasmacytic (160 days of infection) types and showed frequent presence of lymphoid follicles with germinal centers, plasmacytogenesis and plasmacytosis, mastocytosis, megakaryopoiesis, erythropoiesis and less pronounced eosinopoiesis. These results indicate that MS are a preferencial site of germinal-center-dependent and independent plasmacytogenesis, and a bone narrow-like organ, committed with various cellular lineages. The consequence of a C. callosus MS reactivity for schistosomal infection is still unknown and is under investigation.