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A chronic disease caused by the filarial nematode Loa loa, with symptoms and signs first occurring approximately 3–4 years after a bite by an infected tabanid fly. When the infective larvae mature, the adult worms move about in an irregular course through the connective tissue of the body (as rapidly as 1 cm per minute), frequently becoming visible beneath the skin and mucous membranes; e.g., in the back, scalp, chest, inner surface of the lip, and especially on the conjunctiva. The worms provoke hyperemia and exudation of fluid, often a host response to the worm products, a Calabar or fugitive swelling which causes no serious damage and subsides as the parasites move on; the patient is annoyed by the “creeping” in the tissues and intense itching, as well as occasional pain, especially when the swelling is in the region of tendons and joints. Most patients have an eosinophilia of 10–30 or 40% in the circulating blood. SYN: Calabar swelling, fugitive swelling.
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loiasis var of LOAIASIS
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n.
a disease, occurring in West and Central Africa, caused by the eye worm Loa. The adult worms live and migrate within the skin tissues, causing the appearance of transitory calabar swellings. These are probably an allergic reaction to the worms' waste products, and they sometimes lead to fever and itching. Worms often migrate across the eyeball just beneath the conjunctiva, where they cause irritation and congestion. Loiasis is treated with diethylcarbamazine, which kills both the adults and larval forms.
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lo·i·a·sis (lo-iґə-sis) infection with the nematode eye worm Loa Loa, which inhabits subcutaneous connective tissue, especially around the orbit and under the conjunctiva, causing itching, eosinophilia, and occasionally edematous swellings called Calabar swellings. In rare severe cases, worms may migrate farther into the body and cause inflammation of joints or internal organs. Called also loaiasis.Medical dictionary. 2011.