Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical (May 2019)

Human pulmonary dirofilariasis with secondary myocarditis

  • Andréa Beltrami Doltrário,
  • Natalí Caneli Valim,
  • Ellen Aparecida Pereira Barboza Dellaspora,
  • Gilberto Gambero Gaspar,
  • Fernanda Guioti Puga,
  • Alexandre Todorovic Fabro,
  • Mariângela Ottoboni Brunaldi,
  • Roberto Martinez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0037-8682-0461-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 52, no. 0

Abstract

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Abstract Dirofilariasis is a little-known zoonosis, with dogs and cats as definitive hosts. It is caused by nematodes and transmitted by mosquito bites. We report the case of a 67-year-old man with a consumptive syndrome with two subpleural pulmonary opacities. A transthoracic lung biopsy revealed a Dirofilaria worm. Myocardial nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) demonstrated dilated cardiomyopathy after myocarditis related to dirofilariasis. Human infection is rare and occurs accidentally. The most common radiological alteration is a mainly subpleural coin lesion. Dirofilariasis is a neglected emergent disease and knowledge about it is important for differential diagnoses from neoplastic pulmonary nodules.

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