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parasite?? Cantharid larva from intestine of a child
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Cesa |
Posted on 01-06-2011 11:10
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
Hello, Sorry for the unsharp images. They are from the intestine of a child. Photographs were taken in a local hospital in Van prov. (East Turkey). Any comment will be very much appreciated. Muhabbet Cesa attached the following image: [62.19Kb] Edited by Cesa on 02-06-2011 06:58 |
Cesa |
Posted on 01-06-2011 11:11
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
Cesa wrote:
Hello, Sorry for the unsharp images. They are from the intestine of a child. Photographs were taken in a local hospital in Van prov. (East Turkey). Any comment will be very much appreciated. Muhabbet Cesa attached the following image: [70.88Kb] |
Cesa |
Posted on 01-06-2011 11:19
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
Cesa wrote:
Cesa wrote: Hello, Sorry for the unsharp images. They are from the intestine of a child. Photographs were taken in a local hospital in Van prov. (East Turkey). Any comment will be very much appreciated. Muhabbet Cesa attached the following image: [77.04Kb] |
Cesa |
Posted on 01-06-2011 11:19
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
Cesa wrote:
Cesa wrote: Hello, Sorry for the unsharp images. They are from the intestine of a child. Photographs were taken in a local hospital in Van prov. (East Turkey). Any comment will be very much appreciated. Muhabbet Cesa attached the following image: [69.08Kb] |
Cesa |
Posted on 01-06-2011 11:20
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
Cesa wrote:
Cesa wrote: Cesa wrote: Hello, Sorry for the unsharp images. They are from the intestine of a child. Photographs were taken in a local hospital in Van prov. (East Turkey). Any comment will be very much appreciated. Muhabbet Cesa attached the following image: [67.78Kb] |
Paul Beuk |
Posted on 01-06-2011 13:04
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Super Administrator Location: Netherlands Posts: 19365 Joined: 11.05.04 |
Coleoptera, but I don't have any literature to look further here at home and I won't be back at the office until next Monday.
Paul - - - - Paul Beuk on https://diptera.info |
Cesa |
Posted on 01-06-2011 14:10
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
many thanks Paul |
Tony Irwin |
Posted on 01-06-2011 22:58
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Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7234 Joined: 19.11.04 |
I'm fairly sure these are Cantharidae larvae.
Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
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Cesa |
Posted on 02-06-2011 06:42
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Member Location: Turkey Posts: 1276 Joined: 13.10.09 |
Dear Tony Irwin, I agree with you in identification. Many thanks for your help on this matter. This is an interesting case. It is said that this is an old clinical case. It is also said that during about two months, abortion of these larvae (20-30 specimens) from digestive system of a child was made by using some medicine. The questions that couldnot be anwered are: How these larvae could live in stomach and also in the intestine of this child. It seems not to be a parasitism, as we have no knowledge on this point about the cantharid larvae. Is there any info in the literature on such a case? |
Grigory Popov |
Posted on 02-06-2011 20:21
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Member Location: Kyiv, Ukraine Posts: 63 Joined: 10.08.10 |
Children are a strange creatures, and the more so that everything lying (c)
Edited by Grigory Popov on 02-06-2011 20:22 |
Tony Irwin |
Posted on 02-06-2011 20:53
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Member Location: Norwich, England Posts: 7234 Joined: 19.11.04 |
I don't think these were living in the child's intestine. I think it more likely that the child was swallowing them and they passed through undamaged. The cuticle of a cantharid larva is covered with very small hairs - like velvet - so it is difficult for liquids (including digestive juices) to get to the larva. If they were swallowed, they would die from asphixation, but otherwise be intact and pass through the digestive tract. Cantharid larvae are active all year, especially in winter, and they often come indoors, so might easily be spotted by a child. When she was quite young, my sister used to eat larvae of the House Moth, Hofmannophila. Children can do strange things sometimes.
Edited by Tony Irwin on 02-06-2011 20:54 Tony ---------- Tony Irwin |
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Grigory Popov |
Posted on 02-06-2011 21:22
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Member Location: Kyiv, Ukraine Posts: 63 Joined: 10.08.10 |
Tony Irwin wrote: I don't think these were living in the child's intestine. I think it more likely that the child was swallowing them and they passed through undamaged. The cuticle of a cantharid larva is covered with very small hairs - like velvet - so it is difficult for liquids (including digestive juices) to get to the larva. If they were swallowed, they would die from asphixation, but otherwise be intact and pass through the digestive tract. Cantharid larvae are active all year, especially in winter, and they often come indoors, so might easily be spotted by a child. When she was quite young, my sister used to eat larvae of the House Moth, Hofmannophila. Children can do strange things sometimes. Oh, yes! Especially if the larva nice and velvety |
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