Commentary

Screening for parasitic infections: One doctor’s experience


 

References

Soin, et al, reported an interesting case of strongyloidiasis in a refugee in their Photo Rounds article, “Rash, diarrhea, and eosinophilia” (J Fam Pract. 2015;64:655-658). They mentioned the importance of having a high degree of suspicion for parasitic infections among refugees. Indeed, health screenings for refugees are necessary and should include testing for parasitoses. However, there are several other issues to consider.

First, a single screening may not be effective. Thus, results should be verified with repeat screening tests. In my experience in Thailand, a single screening of migrants from nearby Indochinese countries failed to detect several infectious cases, including tuberculosis, malaria, and intestinal parasite infections. To optimize early detection and infection control, a repeated check-up system is needed. It should be noted, however, that a false-negative result for strongyloidiasis is not common from a stool examination or immunological test.1

Pages

Recommended Reading

High gluten consumption early in life upped risk of celiac disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Leading scope manufacturer to pay hefty settlement for alleged kickbacks, bribery
MDedge Family Medicine
Study: 2.6% of patients discharged from U.S. hospital used probiotics
MDedge Family Medicine
Lessons from the Indiana HIV/HCV outbreak
MDedge Family Medicine
Birth-cohort HCV testing misses one-quarter of infections
MDedge Family Medicine
Test all kidney transplant patients for hepatitis E
MDedge Family Medicine
Privacy measure inadvertently suppresses substance abuse data
MDedge Family Medicine
Better control of asymptomatic C. difficile needed in communities
MDedge Family Medicine
Mongersen could be an impressive new treatment for inflammatory bowel disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Sulindac plus erlotinib reduces duodenal polyp burden
MDedge Family Medicine

Related Articles

  • Photo Rounds

    Rash, diarrhea, and eosinophilia

    A parasitic infection was high on our differential because of the patient’s refugee status. But an earlier O&P test had been negative.