Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Jun 2014)

High occurrence of Calodium hepaticum (syn. Capillaria hepatica) spurious infection in a village in the Atlantic Forest of southern Brazil

  • Débora do Rocio Klisiowicz,
  • Larissa Reifur,
  • Márcia Kiyoe Shimada,
  • Juciliane Haidamak,
  • Regielly Caroline Raimundo Cognialli,
  • Tatiane Ferreira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/0074-0276140315
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 109, no. 3
pp. 371 – 373

Abstract

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Calodium hepaticum (syn. Capillaria hepatica) is a nematode of the Capillariidae family that infects rodents and other mammals. In Brazil, human spurious infections of C. hepaticum have been detected in indigenous or rural communities from the Amazon Basin, but not in the southern states of the country. Here, we report the highest occurrence (13.5% of 37 residents) of C. hepaticum human spurious infection detected in Brazil and the first record in a southern region, Guaraqueçaba. The finding is explained by the area being located in the Atlantic Forest of the state of Paraná, surrounded by preserved forests and because the inhabitants consume the meat of wild mammals.

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