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Surgical Infections
Surgical Diagnosis and Management of Intestinal Obstruction Due to Ascaris lumbricoides
To cite this article:
Leticia López, Ruth Cáceres, Jazmin Servin, Jessica Esquivel, Myriam Chirico, Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales.
Surgical Infections.
-Not available-,
ahead of print.
doi:10.1089/sur.2008.103.
Online Ahead of Print: September 28, 2009
Leticia López,1 Ruth Cáceres,1 Jazmin Servin,1 Jessica Esquivel,1 Myriam Chirico,1 and Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales2,3 1San Lorenzo Mother and Child Center, Universidad Nacional de Asunción, Asunción, Paraguay. 2Parasite Ecology Section, Tropical Medicine Institute, Universidad Central de Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela. 3Instituto Experimental Jose Witremundo Torrealba, Universidad de Los Andes, Trujillo, Venezuela. Address correspondence to: Dr. Leticia López San Lorenzo Mother and Child Center Faculty of Medicine Universidad Nacional de AsunciónAsunción, ParaguayE-mail: Abstract Background: Ascariasis continues to be one of the most significant parasitic diseases in terms of its burden and complications in children in the developing world. Methods: Case report and literature review (Medline, SCI, and LILACS). Results: We report herein a case in which a Paraguayan infant presented with one of these complications: an intestinal obstruction due to Ascaris lumbricoides being diagnosed during surgery. The patient was managed with a conservative protocol for the extraction of the parasites using liquid petrolatum administered through a nasogastric tube followed with extensive water irrigation through the tube in conjunction with the administration of piperazine as antiparasitic treatment. Conclusions: This case, like others previously reported, shows that this complication can be successfully managed without major intestinal surgery. Early recognition of this condition, based on local prevalence, can prevent serious surgical complications, morbidity, and mortality associated with the intestinal obstruction due to A. lumbricoides. 
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