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International Journal of Health, Culture and Migration

Concerto per l'Etiopia

L'altra faccia di Gaia di Aldo Morrone

Dermatology of Human Mobile Populations

I SISTEMI SANITARI AFFRONTANO LA POVERTÀ

I colori della pelle

 

 
     

International Society of Dermatology - Palm Coast, FL - USA

   
San Gallicano Institute—IRCCS, Rome
Dep. of Preventive Medicine of Migration, Tourism and Tropical Dermatology

   

IISMAS
International Institute of Social, Medical and Anthropological Sciences - Rome

   
       
  First International Congress on    
  DERMATOLOGICAL CARE FOR ALL
“A BASIC HUMAN RIGHT”
   
       
 

Addis Ababa-Mekele (Ethiopia)
November 1 - 4, 2006
Italian Dermatological Hospital of Quihà - Tigray

   
       
       
 Abstracts ONCHOCERCIASIS IN TIGRAY, ETHIOPIA    
       
 

Author: Margherita Terranova, Valeska Padovese, Aldo Morrone
San Gallicano Dermatological Institute (IRCCS), Rome (Italy)
IISMAS- (International Institute of Social, Medical and
Anthropological Sciences)

   
       
       
 

ABSTRACT

Background Onchocerciasis, commonly known as river blindness, is an important cause of dermatitis and visual impairment, affecting about 18 million of people in Africa and Latin America, for a total of 37 endemic countries. It is caused by the filarial nematode, Onchocerca volvulus, which is transmitted by the bite of a black fly of the genus Simulium, near freely flowing waterways.
Patients and Methods: We report 8 patients observed in the Italian
Dermatological Centre (IDC) in Mekelle, capital of Tigray, the northern region of Ethiopia, between March and September 2006. All patient presented long history of spread itching and chronic dermatitis especially on the buttocks and lower limbs.
Skin snips of the lesions showed presences of microfilariae.
Results: Eight diagnosis of onchocerciasis were done and treatment with diethylcarbamazine PO was performed.
Conclusions: Ethiopia is considered an endemic area for onchocerciasis, but all the literature regards the western and southwestern regions of this country. We report cases observed in Tigray, a region of about Km2 54.500 for more than 4 million of inhabitants, where there are no information regarding the presence of this infection and where is not yet available ivermectin, the first line treatment for ochocerciasis.


References

  1. Boatin BA, Richards FO Jr. Control of onchocerciasis. Adv
    Parasitol 2006; 61: 349-394
  2. Hadis M, Wilson MD, Cobblah M, Boakye DA.
    Cytotaxonomic description of Simulium kaffaense, a new member of the S. damnosum complex (Diptera: Simuliidae) from south-western Ethiopia. Ann Trop Parasitol 2005; 99: 267-291
   
 Abstracts      
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
       
       
       
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