The aim of this study was to highlight the increasing chance of Western physicians encountering patients (both immigrants and expatriates/travelers) seeking help for loiasis. Methods: We describe three cases of imported loiasis observed at two hospitals in Italy and France, and present a review of all previously published cases in the medical literature in the last 25 years . The search was performed using PubMed and Scopus databases using the terms ''Loa loa'' AND ''loiasis''. Results: We reviewed 101 cases of imported loiasis of which 61 (60.4%) were reported from Europe and 31 (30.7%) from the USA. Seventy-five percent of infestations were acquired in three countries: Cameroon, Nigeria, and Gabon. Overall, peripheral blood microfilariae were detected in 61.4% of patients, eosinophilia in 82.1%, eye worm migration in 53.5%, and Calabar swellings in 41.6%. However, Calabar swellings and eosinophilia were more common among expatriates/travelers, whereas African immigrants were more likely to have microfilaremia. Eye worm migration was observed in a similar proportion in the two groups. Only 35 patients (including the three described here) underwent clinical follow-up for a median period of 10.5 months (range 1-84 months); clinical relapse occurred in three of these patients and persistence or reappearance of blood microfilaria in another two. Conclusions: Due to increasing travel and the migration of people from the endemic countries of West Africa to Europe and the USA, we speculate on the possible emergence of loiasis. Western physicians should be aware of the typical (eye worm migration and Calabar swellings) as well as unusual clinical presentations.
Oocyte donation pregnancies are associated with a higher rate of placental disorders of pregnancy, such as gestational hypertension and pre-eclampsia. The risk of poorer neonatal outcomes is increased in oocyte donation pregnancies compared to other in-vitro fertilization pregnancies. Poorer outcomes have been demonstrated especially for twin pregnancies and in association with previous chronic pathologies or the development of obstetrics complications.
Intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is associated with increased risk of perinatal morbidity and mortality, as well as long-term neurological deficits. However, neurostructural correlations with observed developmental disabilities have not yet been established. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) could prove useful for assessing brain development in the early neonatal period. We evaluated cerebral lesions and morphological maturation by MRIs in 59 preterm neonates, in order to verify the hypothesis that IUGR interferes on human brain development. A total of 26 pregnancies were complicated by IUGR and 33 pregnancies delivered preterm at a comparable gestational age with appropriate for gestational age (AGA). Magnetic resonance examination was performed at the completion of 41 weeks' gestation. White matter disease studied with MR included periventricular cavitations and punctuate lesions characterized by increased signal on T1-weighted and decreased signal on T2-weighted images. Cerebral maturation was defined by the total maturation score, on the basis of 4 morphological parameters of cerebral maturation: myelination (M), cortical infolding (C), germinal matrix distribution (GM), and glial cell migration pattern (G). No difference in brain lesions and in the level of cerebral maturation was found between preterm AGA and IUGR neonates. However, myelination was significantly reduced in IUGR neonates with brain sparing compared to IUGR neonates with normal Doppler of middle cerebral artery. Our study could not demonstrate any major significant difference between preterm AGA and IUGR neonates in terms of lesion occurrence and cerebral maturation. We observed, however, a mild delay in myelination in IUGR with brain sparing in utero. The relevance of this finding needs to be investigated with long-term follow-up.
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