Article 5YF70 Army of worm larvae hatch from man’s bum, visibly slither under his skin

Army of worm larvae hatch from man’s bum, visibly slither under his skin

by
Beth Mole
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5YF70)
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Enlarge / A Strongyloides filariform larva. (credit: Getty | BSIP)

Doctors in Spain diagnosed a man with an unusual roundworm infection after watching an army of larvae writhe and slither under his skin, blanketing his whole body in an ever-shifting rash.

Doctors reported the man's rare hyperinfection this week in the New England Journal of Medicine, highlighting the unusual sight of a wriggling, sliding skin rash that tracked the movements of individual parasitic prowlers. The official diagnosis was larva currens from Strongyloides.

The unfortunate patient appeared to have a perfect storm of risk factors to develop the uncommon and unpleasant infection. The 64-year-old worked in sewage management and had previously been diagnosed with metastatic lung cancer. For three years prior, doctors had noted bouts where he had eosinophilia-unusually high levels of disease-fighting white blood cells-which can be an indicator of a parasitic infection.

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