Toxocarosis y colecistitis aguda alitiásica: ¿consecuencia o coincidencia? / Toxocarosis and acalculous acute cholecystitis: consequence or coincidence?
Rev. chil. infectol
; 33(3): 346-351, jun. 2016. ilus, tab
Article
in Spanish
| LILACS
| ID: lil-791030
Responsible library:
CL1.1
RESUMEN
La toxocarosis humana es una parasitosis larvaria crónica catalogada dentro de las cinco enfermedades subestimadas más importantes por los CDC. Las larvas pueden diseminarse por vía sistémica y migrar a distintos tejidos (larva migrans visceral) incluyendo el hígado y vesícula biliar. La colecistitis aguda acalculosa (CAA) es una enfermedad rara en niños. El diagnóstico se basa en parámetros clínicos y criterios imagenológicos. Se ha asociado a sepsis, shock, trauma, quemaduras, enfermedades sistémicas graves, anomalías congénitas e infecciones, como también en niños sanos. Presentamos el caso de una toxocarosis infantil con síntomas clínicos y criterios imagenológicos compatibles con una CAA tratado médicamente, y discutir la relación entre ambos cuadros en base a la evidencia publicada.
ABSTRACT
Human toxocarosis is a chronic larval parasitosis listed as one of the five most important neglected diseases by the CDC. The larvae can spread systemically and migrate to different tissues including liver and gallbladder. Acalculous acute cholecystitis (AAC) is a rare disease in children. The diagnosis is based on clinical parameters and imaging criteria. It has been reported in relation to sepsis, shock, trauma, burns, severe systemic diseases, congenital anomalies, infections and also in healthy children. We report a pediatric case of toxocarosis, with clinical symptoms and imaging criteria compatible with AAC treated medically, and discuss the relationship between toxocarosis and AAC based on published evidence.
Full text:
Available
Collection:
International databases
Health context:
Neglected Diseases
Health problem:
Helminthiasis
/
Neglected Diseases
/
Zoonoses
Database:
LILACS
Main subject:
Larva Migrans, Visceral
/
Acalculous Cholecystitis
Limits:
Child
/
Humans
/
Male
Language:
Spanish
Journal:
Rev. chil. infectol
Journal subject:
Communicable Diseases
Year:
2016
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Chile
Institution/Affiliation country:
Universidad San Sebastián/CL