1. Omental anisakiasis: a rare mimic of acute appendicitis.
- Author
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Rushovich AM, Randall EL, Caprini JA, and Westenfelder GO
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Diagnosis, Differential, Eosinophilic Granuloma etiology, Eosinophilic Granuloma pathology, Humans, Larva pathogenicity, Male, Necrosis, Nematode Infections complications, Nematode Infections pathology, Omentum parasitology, Appendicitis diagnosis, Eosinophilic Granuloma diagnosis, Nematode Infections diagnosis, Omentum pathology
- Abstract
The authors recently encountered a patient with omental anisakiasis who presented with features of acute appendicitis and who made an uneventful recovery following resection of an inflammatory omental mass containing the larva(e). Anisakiasis refers to infestation of humans by species of marine nematode larvae belonging to the subfamily Anisakinae. Although this condition is rarely reported in the United States, it has been well described both in Holland and in the Orient. Several publications in the Japanese literature have detailed the morphology of the parasite and the clinical symptoms of infestation. The source of infestation is most often raw or uncooked fish, the latter widely enjoyed as a foodstuff in the Orient, but less popular in the United States. With the growing popularity of "sushi" bars and the increasing numbers of Americans developing a taste for raw fish, this condition may become more prevalent in the future.
- Published
- 1983
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