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Expert Offers Tips to Squash Creepy Parasites


 

BALTIMORE — Parasite infections may not be one of the more common conditions treated by dermatologists, but the creepiness factor makes them stand out, judging from the series of anecdotes and advice presented by Dr. Dirk Elston.

"If you're not squirming by the end of this lecture, I have not done my job," joked Dr. Elston, at the Atlantic Dermatological Conference.

Dr. Elston, director of the dermatology department at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, Pa., provided helpful tips and more than a few gross-out moments during his presentation on onchocercoma, Sparganum proliferum, cutaneous larva migrans, myiasis, Amblyomma americanum, and lice and scabies.

Onchocercoma

An onchocercoma is a dermal or subdermal ball of writhing worms (Onchocerca), for which humans are the definitive host. Dirofilaria (heartworms) should be included in the differential diagnosis for onchocercoma, said Dr. Elston. However, humans are an accidental host for Dirofilaria.

"You develop a rip-roaring immune response to Dirofilaria in the form of an abscess, which you don't see with Onchocerca." It is possible to tell the two apart on histology. Dirofilaria is very muscular on histology, while Onchocerca has no muscle tone. In addition, Dirofilaria has a distinct ridge pattern on histology.

Sparganum proliferum

Dr. Elston described the case of a man, who was involved in a motorcycle accident years earlier. The local farmers had treated him with a meat poultice, which apparently contained a tapeworm (S. proliferum) that migrated into his body. He presented 40 years later with a multilocular cyst that contained the live tapeworm, when excised.

S. proliferum has all the features of a cestode: an intact secretory tegument, subtegumental cells, and smooth muscle cells. Many types of cestodes can live for many years and can reproduce asexually.

Cutaneous Larva Migrans

Cutaneous larva migrans (caused by worms) manifests as an erythematous, serpiginous, pruritic, cutaneous eruption caused by accidental percutaneous penetration.

"The trick is finding the worm, which can be anywhere within a centimeter [of the eruption]," said Dr. Elston. However, "nowadays, we tend to use ivermectin orally, off label." This systemic treatment does not require finding the worm.

Myiasis

Myiasis is infestation by the larvae (maggots) of dipterous (two-winged) flies and occurs most frequently in tropical climates. Dr. Elston related a story about an excised cyst. The patient had returned to the surgeon with wound infection and dehiscence, and "as he was injecting the wound … something shot out of it."

Standard treatment of myiasis is to cover the site with occlusive dressing to force the larvae out. "In this case, because there was secondary infection, we had to go in and clean it up," he said.

The patient's infestation involved the warble fly (Dermatobia hominis), the most common cause. "The warble is the furuncle; the bot is the organism in it," Dr. Elston noted.

Amblyomma americanum

A. americanum, the lone star tick, is "taking over the United States. Their range is now way up into the upper Midwest and through the Eastern seaboard. … They are becoming a very well-adapted tick," said Dr. Elston.

"They tend to attach in very, very large numbers," he noted. There are anecdotal stories of people crouching in the overgrown areas of Texas and having 2,000–3,000 ticks removed.

"Amblyomma likes the lower half of the body … and they carry Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia, and human granulocytic ehrlichiosis," Dr. Elston said. These ticks are very small. "It's not until they start to engorge that people realize that they're ticks because they're so small that you don't even see them."

Patients with Amblyomma infection often present for generalized pruritus, but Amblyomma can be identified on histology, even when the tick has disintegrated. "There's this cement that retains the shape of the mouth; sometimes you'll see just that in the tissue," said Dr. Elston. This mouth-shaped cement is diagnostic. The infiltrate is characteristic with CD30-positive lymphocytes.

Lice and Scabies

Pubic lice can occur anywhere on the body, including the eyelashes. "So if you see lice or nits on the eyelashes, don't look north for the source of the infestation. Look south," said Dr. Elston.

With head lice, parents and teachers sometimes find hair casts and assume they have found nits. "There are kids who get sent home numerous times because of 'no-nit' policies at schools, who never had lice. They've got hair casts." This may lead to unnecessary overexposure to permethrin, which has been associated with childhood leukemia.

"Body lice are important internationally because they are vectors for disease," Dr. Elston noted. On histology, chitin scrolls (pigtails) are diagnostic of scabies.

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