학술논문

An Unusual Case of Extra-Enteric Blastocystosis in the Uterine Cervix
Document Type
Article
Source
(2022): 571-576.
Subject
Language
Korean
ISSN
29825164
Abstract
Extra-enteric infections by Blastocystis spp. have rarely been documented. Here, we report a case of extra-enteric blastocystosis in a patient with minimal cervicitis symptoms. A 47-year-old Hispanic female patient was attended in a pri- mary health centre in Michoacan state, Mexico, for her routine gynaecological medical examination. As only symptom, she referred to a slight vaginal itching. The presence of several vacuolar-stages of Blastocystis spp. were identified by Pa- panicolaou staining; molecular identification was attempted by culture-PCR sequencing of a region of 18S gene from cer- vical and faecal samples obtained 2 months after cytological examination, even when patient declared that she tried self- medicating with vaginal ovules. Blastocystis ST1 was identified only in the faecal sample. The presence of Blastocystis spp. in the cervix of a patient with scarce symptomatology, demonstrates the extraordinary flexibility of this microorgan- ism to adapt to new environments and niches.
Extra-enteric infections by Blastocystis spp. have rarely been documented. Here, we report a case of extra-enteric blastocystosis in a patient with minimal cervicitis symptoms. A 47-year-old Hispanic female patient was attended in a pri- mary health centre in Michoacan state, Mexico, for her routine gynaecological medical examination. As only symptom, she referred to a slight vaginal itching. The presence of several vacuolar-stages of Blastocystis spp. were identified by Pa- panicolaou staining; molecular identification was attempted by culture-PCR sequencing of a region of 18S gene from cer- vical and faecal samples obtained 2 months after cytological examination, even when patient declared that she tried self- medicating with vaginal ovules. Blastocystis ST1 was identified only in the faecal sample. The presence of Blastocystis spp. in the cervix of a patient with scarce symptomatology, demonstrates the extraordinary flexibility of this microorgan- ism to adapt to new environments and niches.