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Journal Article

Citation

Schenone H. Bol. Chil. Parasitol. 1996; 51(1-2): 20-27.

Vernacular Title

Diagnosticos hechos a 1384 pacientes que consultaron por probable mordedura de

Affiliation

Departamento de Parasitología, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1996, Universidad de Chile)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9196950

Abstract

Accumulate experience, from 1955 to 1995, in an outpatient university parasitology clinic in Santiago, with 1,384 patients referred from diverse public and private medical institutions because of a probable spider bite or insect stings, is presented. It is noteworthy that only 618 (44.7%) of consultations corresponded to clinical conditions originated by arthropods, whereas from the remaining 766, 612 (44.2%) were due to a bacterial, viral or parasitic etiology and 154 (11.1%) were caused by physical or chemical agents. Frequency of diagnosis was: loxoscelism 16.6%, spider bites (excluded Loxosceles laeta) 1.3%, scorpion sting 0.9%, tick stings 2.2%, insect bites 23.7%, impetigo 6.6%, folliculitis 11.3%, boil 22.7%, erysipelas 0.1%, pustula maligna 0.3%, herpes simplex 2.5, palpebral herpes zoster 0.3%, acute Chagas' disease 0.4%, angioneurotic edema 0.1%, ecchymosis 3.0, contact dermitis 7.8% and chemical dermitis 0.2%. These frequencies do not indicate the real occurrence of the diagnosed nosologies, but what happened in a specialized outpatient clinic dealing cheaply with parasitic diseases and arthropod envenomations. Description of relevant clinical features and epidemiological considerations of pathology observed, conjointly with differential diagnosis are presented.


Language: es

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