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Journal ArticleDOI

[Visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar), an important disease not only in the tropics (author's transl)].

TLDR
A 39-year-old woman contracted visceral leishmaniasis on a 14-day visit to southern Italy and died of staphylococcal septicaemia before specific treatment could be effective, diagnostic efforts over four months having failed to make the diagnosis until four weeks before death as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
A 39-year-old woman contracted visceral leishmaniasis on a 14-day visit to southern Italy and died of staphylococcal septicaemia before specific treatment could be effective, diagnostic efforts over four months having failed to make the diagnosis until four weeks before death. Eight further cases reported in German-speaking medical journals illustrate similar diagnostic difficulties. The disease is accompanied by septic temperatures, frequently with two daily spikes, hepato- and splenomegaly, normochromic anaemia and leucocytopenia. But diagnosis can only be made by specific tests. The organisms can be discovered in sternal puncture and organ biopsies only if the Giemsa stain is used. Complement-fixation reaction for leishmania should be tried repeatedly, in case the disease is suspected.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Leishmaniasis diagnosed from bronchoalveolar lavage.

TL;DR: The case of a 51-year-old renal transplant patient, whose spleen had been removed 11 years ago, is a reminder of the interstitial pneumonitis in leishmaniasis and emphasizes the value of broad-spectrum methods detecting a variety of parasites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Kala-azar in a Four-Year-Old Child 18 Months after Brief Exposure in Malta

TL;DR: The development of kala‐azar after one week's stay in an endemic area stresses the importance of including this potentially fatal disease in the differential diagnosis of cases presenting with fever, splenomegaly, and pancytopenia.