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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Parasitic skin infections: Neglected diseases or just challenging for diagnosis?

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Gardini G, Tomasoni LR, Castelli F
2020
Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases. 33 (2): 121-129

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The aim of the article is to review the most recent evidence concerning parasitic skin infections. RECENT FINDINGS: Parasitic skin infections are increasingly reported worldwide. Special at-risk categories are migrants, returning travelers, and immunocompromised individuals, who are at higher risk to present disseminated disease. The number of reported cases is growing even outside the endemic areas as a consequence of international travels, migration flows, increasing immunocompromised population, climate change, and natural disasters. SUMMARY: Skin parasitoses are neglected infections. Funding assigned to prevent and treat them is limited, even if they affect millions of persons worldwide. Diagnosis could be a challenge for clinicians of high-income countries who are facing an increasing number of such infections related to great epidemiological events.

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Resource Description

    General Exposure
    Global or Unspecified Location
    Dermatological Impact, Infectious Disease
    • Dermatological Impact, Infectious Disease: Foodborne Disease, Vectorborne Disease, Waterborne Disease
      • Foodborne Disease, Vectorborne Disease, Waterborne Disease: General Foodborne Disease
      • Foodborne Disease, Vectorborne Disease, Waterborne Disease: General Vectorborne Disease, Fly-borne Disease
        • General Vectorborne Disease, Fly-borne Disease: Leishmaniasis
        Fly-borne Disease
      • Foodborne Disease, Vectorborne Disease, Waterborne Disease: General Waterborne Disease
      Foodborne DiseaseVectorborne DiseaseWaterborne Disease
    Review Article
    Sociodemographic Vulnerability, Vulnerable Population
    • Sociodemographic Vulnerability, Vulnerable Population: Low Socioeconomic Status, Pre-existing Medical Condition, Displaced Populations
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