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CASE SERIES |
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Year : 2020 | Volume
: 66
| Issue : 2 | Page : 99-101 |
Fulminant amebic colitis: An unusual postoperative complication of intraabdominal malignancy
S Misra1, P Sakhuja1, AK Agarwal2, A Javed2
1 Department of Pathology, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research, New Delhi, India 2 Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research, New Delhi, India
Correspondence Address:
P Sakhuja Department of Pathology, GB Pant Institute of Post Graduate Medical Education and Research, New Delhi India
 Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None  | Check |
DOI: 10.4103/jpgm.JPGM_605_19
Amebiasis caused by protozoa Entamoeba histolytica (EH) is the third leading parasitic cause of human mortality. Although amebiasis is endemic in India, only about 10% of the infected individuals manifest disease. Clinical spectrum of amebiasis ranges from asymptomatic colonization to amebic colitis to hemorrhagic and fulminant colitis. Factors causing an invasive infection are not completely understood. Pathogen virulence, host immunity, and ability of the pathogen to evade host immune response play vital role in determining the disease course. Host factors such as immunocompromised states may make an individual susceptible to develop symptomatic infection. Malignancies usually result in chronic debilitation which may make the individual prone to develop invasive amebiasis with rapid progression. We report two cases of invasive amebiasis which developed a fulminant course in the immediate postoperative period after abdominal surgeries for visceral malignancies.
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