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2016, Volume 32, Number 2, Page(s) 082-090
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DOI: 10.5146/tjpath.2015.01350 |
Gastrointestinal Parasitosis: Histopathological Insights to Rare but Intriguing Lesions of the Gastrointestinal Tract |
Burçin PEHLİVANOĞLU1, Başak DOĞANAVŞARGİL1, Murat SEZAK1, İlke NALBANTOĞLU2, Metin KORKMAZ3 |
1Department of Pathology, Ege University Faculty of Medicine, İZMİR, TURKEY 2Department of Pathology and Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MİSSOURİ, USA 3Department of Parasitology, Ege University Faculty of Medicine, İZMİR, TURKEY |
Keywords:
Histopathology, Parasitic diseases, Eosinophilia, Infection, Gastrointestinal tract |
Objective: Gastrointestinal parasitosis is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality. Definitive diagnosis is usually made by stool tests and/or
serology but may require tissue evaluation. Although pathologists are usually familiar with common parasites, it is not well established whether
the diagnosis could be suspected without seeing the “parasite” itself.
Material and Method: Resection or biopsy specimens of 32 cases with Giardia intestinalis (n=20), Enterobius vermicularis (n=5), Entamoeba
histolytica (n=4), Fasciola hepatica (n=1), Strongyloides spp. (n=1) and Taenia saginata (n=1) infections were retrospectively re-evaluated for
accompanying mucosal changes, and compared with nonparametric tests.
Results: The most common changes were congestion (65.6%) and eosinophilic infiltration (50%). Chronic active mucosal inflammation
accompanied 37.5% of the cases. More than 10 eosinophils/HPF were present in 43.8%. Only one case of G. intestinalis, E. vermicularis, E.
histolytica, and F. hepatica showed more than 50 eosinophils/HPF. Mucosal architectural abnormalities were present in 34.4%. Granulomas,
giant cells and Charcot-Leyden crystals were only seen accompanying F. hepatica. No statistically significant difference was found between
parasite subspecies regarding presence of inflammation, lymphoid aggregates, architectural distortion, congestion, ulceration and increase of
eosinophils.
Conclusion: Parasites induce nonspecific inflammation, slight mucosal architectural changes, mild eosinophilic infiltrate or granuloma
formation. They may cause ulceration, bowel obstruction or perforation. Parasitosis should also be considered when evaluating cases mimicking
inflammatory bowel disease, celiac disease or those that do not fulfill diagnostic criteria.
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