Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2020)

Clinical Characteristics of Disseminated Strongyloidiasis, Japan, 1975–2017

  • Mitsuru Mukaigawara,
  • Masashi Narita,
  • Soichi Shiiki,
  • Yoshihiro Takayama,
  • Shunichi Takakura,
  • Tomokazu Kishaba

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2603.190571
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 3
pp. 401 – 408

Abstract

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Clinical characteristics of disseminated strongyloidiasis, the severest form of strongyloidiasis, are not well described. We conducted a retrospective, consecutive chart review of patients with disseminated strongyloidiasis admitted to Okinawa Chubu Hospital in Okinawa, Japan, during January 1975–December 2017. The 70 patients were classified into 3 clinical phenotypes: dissemination (32 patients [45.7%]), occult dissemination with meningitis caused by enteric organisms (12 patients [17.1%]), and occult dissemination with culture-negative suppurative meningitis (26 patients [37.1%]). Associated mortality rates were 56.3%, 16.7%, and 11.5%, respectively, and sepsis occurred in 40.6%, 58.3%, and 11.5% of cases, respectively. Common symptoms included fever (52.9% of patients), headache (32.9%), and altered mental status (24.3%). Patients were treated with thiabendazole (before 2003) or ivermectin (after 2003). Our findings show that disseminated strongyloidiasis has clinical phenotypes in terms of severity and that identification of occult dissemination, a mild form with prominent neurologic manifestations, is lifesaving.

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