Human intestinal anisakiosis due to consumption of raw salmon

Am J Surg Pathol. 2003 Aug;27(8):1167-72. doi: 10.1097/00000478-200308000-00017.

Abstract

Anisakiosis is a parasitic infection that follows consumption of raw or insufficiently pickled, salted, smoked, or cooked wild marine fish infected with Anisakis sp. larvae. We report a case of intestinal anisakiosis in a 50-year-old man from Quebec who presented with abdominal pain and peripheral eosinophilia after eating raw wild-caught salmon from the Pacific Ocean off Canada. Abdominal CT scan showed bowel distension proximal to a segmental jejunal wall thickening, which was resected. The jejunum segment showed a localized area of serositis with mucosal edema and a submucosal abscess rich in eosinophils surrounding a parasite consistent with the third larval stage of Anisakis sp. Diagnostic morphologic characteristics included an unpaired excretory gland (renette cell), Y-shaped lateral epidermal cords, no apparent reproductive system, and a ventriculus (glandular esophagus). These features and the absence of lateral alae excluded Ascaris sp. The absence of ventricular appendage and intestinal cecum excluded other anisakids of the genera Pseudoterranova and Contracaecum. As the popularity of eating raw fish is growing in North America, anisakiosis may be diagnosed more frequently in surgical specimens. This parasitic infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute abdominal syndromes and eosinophilic infiltrates of the stomach, small intestine, colon, omentum, and mesentery, especially with a history of raw marine fish consumption.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Anisakiasis / microbiology
  • Anisakiasis / pathology*
  • Anisakiasis / surgery
  • Anisakis / isolation & purification*
  • Anisakis / pathogenicity
  • Humans
  • Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic / microbiology
  • Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic / pathology*
  • Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic / surgery
  • Jejunum / parasitology
  • Jejunum / pathology
  • Jejunum / surgery
  • Larva
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Salmon / parasitology*
  • Treatment Outcome