Eur J Pediatr Surg 2008; 18(4): 280-281
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-989378
Case Report

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Rare Gallbladder Parasitosis Mimicking Cholelithiasis: Dicrocoelium Dendriticum

T. Soyer1 , F. Turkmen1 , N. Tatar2 , Ö. Bozdogan2 , O. Kul3 , A. Yagmurlu4 , M. Çakmak1
  • 1Department of Pediatric Surgery, Kırıkkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Kırıkkale, Turkey
  • 2Department of Pathology, Kırıkkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Kırıkkale, Turkey
  • 3Department of Pathology, Kırıkkale University, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kırıkkale, Turkey
  • 4Department of Pediatric Surgery, Ankara University, Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey
Weitere Informationen

Publikationsverlauf

received Sept 13, 2007

accepted after revision October 29, 2007

Publikationsdatum:
15. Juli 2008 (online)

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Abstract

Cholelithiasis is increasingly diagnosed in childhood and infancy. Biliary parasites are the rarest cause of cholelithiasis in all age groups. We present a twelve-year-old girl with non-hemolytic gallbladder stone and discuss the clinical features and differential diagnosis of Dicrocoelium dendriticum (DD) invasion that causes and/or mimics cholelithiasis in children.

References

M.D. Tutku Soyer

Assistant Professor
Department of Pediatric Surgery
Kırıkkale University
Faculty of Medicine

Fabrikalar mah.

71100 Kırıkkale

Turkey

eMail: tutku@sanalofis.net