Gnathostomiasis Acquired by Visitors to the Okavango Delta, Botswana

Trop Med Infect Dis. 2020 Mar 6;5(1):39. doi: 10.3390/tropicalmed5010039.

Abstract

Gnathostomiasis is a zoonotic nematode parasite disease, most commonly acquired by eating raw or undercooked fish. Although the disease is well known in parts of Asia and Central and South America, relatively few cases have been reported from Africa. Raw fish consumed in the Okavango River delta area of Botswana, and in nearby western Zambia, has previously produced laboratory-proven gnathostomiasis in tourists. The purpose of this communication is to record additional cases of the infection acquired in the Okavango delta, and to alert visitors to the inadvisability of eating raw freshwater fish in the southern African region.

Keywords: Gnathostoma species; Okavango; gnathostomiasis; larva migrans; southern Africa; tourists.

Publication types

  • Case Reports