A retrospective epidemiological and diagnostic study of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) was carried out during the period 2001-2007 and included patients suspected of VL who had been diagnosed at the Parasitological Laboratory at the Institute for Infectious and Tropical Diseases, Belgrade. Diagnosis of VL was confirmed by microscopic examination of Giemsa-stained bone marrow (BM) smears. BM smears from 134 patients were examined; 22 cases of VL were diagnosed, the majority of which involved individuals who had been on holiday at the Montenegrian sea coast. The sensitivity of the initial BM smears was inadequate; this required the application of a serological test, adapted for routine use, for the diagnosis of VL.
Summary:A retrospective study of the course and outcome of trichinellosis in a series of 50 patients hospitalized at the Institute for Infectious and Tropical Diseases in Belgrade between 2001 and 2008 was performed. Clinical diagnosis of trichinellosis was based upon the patients' clinical history, symptoms and signs, and eosinophilia. The occurrence of cases showed a strong seasonality (P < 0.0001). The incubation period ranged between one and 33 days. The mean time between onset of symptoms and admission was nine days. Family outbreaks were the most frequent. Smoked pork products were the dominant source of infection (76 %). Fever was the most frequent clinical manifestation (90 %), followed by myalgia (80 %) and periorbital edema (76 %). 43 patients were examined serologically and 72 % of them had anti-Trichinella antibodies. Eosinophilia and elevated levels of serum CK and LDH were detected in 94, 50 and 56 % of the patients, respectively. All patients responded favorably to treatment with mebendazole or albendazole, but eight developed transient complications. Trichinellosis remains a major public health issue in Serbia.
Since 2000, travel of Serbian citizens to tropical areas has been slowly but steadily increasing. To determine the epidemiological and clinical characteristics of imported malaria in Serbia, we analyzed clinical history data of all travelers who presented at the Clinic for Infectious and Tropical Diseases in Belgrade after their return from tropical and subtropical areas between 2001 and 2009. The study series involved a total of 2981 travelers, and included both those with (847) and without (2134) health problems. Malaria was diagnosed in 102 cases (3.4% of all travelers; 12.0% of travelers with febrile episodes). Occurring at a rate of 6 to 16 cases per year, it was predominantly imported from Africa (92.2%), particularly from Equatorial Guinea (38.2%) and Nigeria (15.7%). The most frequent reason for travel was work/business. Patients were predominantly (87.3%) male, and the majority (66.7%) was between 40 and 59 years of age. A total of 15 (14.7%) patients took some form of anti-malarial chemoprophylaxis. The dominant causative species was Plasmodium falciparum (78), alone (70) or in mixed infection with P. vivax (5) and P. malariae (3). P. vivax, P. ovale and P. malariae as single agents were each identified in 11, 1 and 1 cases, respectively. Of the 11 cases in which the parasite was not detected, six appeared to be true submicroscopic cases. The clinical course of the disease was severe in 13 patients, all with falciparum malaria, of which three (2.9%) died. Rather than for all travelers, in Serbia screening for malaria should be mandatory in all travelers to endemic regions who present with fever irrespective of chemoprophylaxis history. Inadequate sensitivity of conventional diagnostic methods, illustrated by the cases of submicroscopic malaria, requires introduction of molecular diagnosis in routine practice.
Background: Travel to the tropics is associated with a risk of parasitic infection, which is increasing in parallel with the rise in travel to these areas. We thus examined the prevalence and trend in the occurrence of parasitic infections in Serbian travelers. Methods: A retrospective analysis of the medical records of all travelers returning from tropical and subtropical areas, who presented at the Institute for Infectious and Tropical Diseases in Belgrade between January 2001 and January 2008, was performed. Results: Of a total of 2440 travelers, 169 (6.9%) were diagnosed with a parasitic infection, including malaria in 79, intestinal parasites in 84 (pathogenic species in 30 and non-pathogenic in 54), filariasis in four, and visceral leishmaniasis and fascioliasis in one patient each. Importantly, of the whole series only 583 (23.9%) were symptomatic, of which 19.4% were found to be infected with a parasite. The single pathogenic parasite occurring in asymptomatic patients was Giardia intestinalis. Conclusions: Parasitic infection causing symptomatic disease among travelers returning from tropical areas to Serbia is not infrequent. In view of the expected increase in travel to the tropics, diagnostic protocols for tropical parasitic diseases should take these data into account.
It is very difficult to make the diagnosis of a subcutaneous nodule. The difficulties arise in the differential diagnosis because subcutaneous nodules are suspected to be malignant neoplasm or other pathologies such as tuberculosis, fungal infections, sebaceous cysts, hamartomas, abscesses, and so on. Although human dirofilariasis is a rare disease, the number of reported cases has recently been increasing worldwide.
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