A 67-year-old sugarcane farmer visited our hospital with a nematode infection (Figure 1) after having an itchy sensation in his anus the previous night and finding the nematode coming out of his anus that morning. He reported no history of overseas travel or symptoms, except weight loss of 5 kg over several months. No abnormalities were found on physical examination, in laboratory findings (including blood eosinophil counts and IgE levels), and in chest/abdominal computed tomography. No eggs were found in the stool. The nematode was identified morphologically as an adult male Ascaris. Two days after treatment with a single dose of 500 mg pyrantel pamoate, he found another 10-cm-long Ascaris worm excreted in his feces. His farm, located next to a pigsty (Figure 2), had been fertilized with manure from pigs 4 years, 2 years, and 5 months prior to the hospital visit. In addition, he often ate lunch without proper handwashing and may have acquired the infection through oral contact with his fingers contaminated with Ascaris eggs. Genome sequencing results for two polymorphic sites in the ribosomal RNA internal transcribed spacer 1 region—C and A in positions 133 and 246, respectively—were identified as those of Ascaris suum, suggesting pig origins.1,2
Ascariasis in humans is usually caused by Ascaris lumbricoides. However, A. suum, a parasite of pigs, has caused human infections in the United States and a few European countries.3–5 Although human-to-human transmission of A. lumbricoides is less likely in regions where sewerage systems are developed, swine-to-human zoonoses by A. suum can occur even in developed countries without adequate management of swine manure or control of swine parasites. This case highlights the importance of acknowledging Ascaris as an important zoonotic pathogen as well as the “One Health” approach to control infectious diseases.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Editage (www.editage.com) for the English language editing.
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