Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine (Sep 2014)

A case report of cutaneous larva migrans in a Mexican population of high marginalization

  • Isaac Aguirre Maldonadoa,
  • Silvia Cruz Duartea,
  • Felipe González Velázqueza,
  • Alfonso Alexander Aguilerab

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12980/APJTB.4.2014APJTB-2014-0119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 9
pp. 755 – 756

Abstract

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The creeping verminous dermatitis or cutaneous larva migrans is a parasitosis caused by percutaneous penetration and migration of larval nematode parasites characterized by producing one or more serpiginous erythematous, indurated, raised and pruritic lesion. The most common cause of cutaneous larva migrans is the Ancylostoma braziliense located in warm climate zones. In the present study, authors reported a case of cutaneous larva migrans with a characteristic clinical picture: erythematous-papular and vesicular lesion and serpiginous path, with progressive, and pruritic growth and it shown that a living area with immigration, tropical weather conditions and poverty may lead to this common infection.

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