Join the 200th Anniversary Celebration

Images in Clinical Medicine

Ascariasis

Myoung Kuk Jang, M.D., and Ki Sung Lee, M.D.

N Engl J Med 2008; 358:e16April 3, 2008

Article

Video

Colonoscopy Demonstrating a Moving Worm, Identified as Ascaris lumbricoides.

Colonoscopy Demonstrating a Moving Worm, Identified as Ascaris lumbricoides.

A 60-year-old woman presented to the outpatient clinic with vague abdominal discomfort that had developed over the previous several weeks. There was no abdominal tenderness. Laboratory evaluation was notable for the white-cell count, which included 1.8% eosinophils. Colonoscopy demonstrated a worm, which moved (video). The worm had a smooth, cream-colored surface and was 20 cm in length. It was removed with an endoscopic snare and identified as Ascaris lumbricoides. The patient was given mebendazole; she did not pass any additional worms. Typically, complications from A. lumbricoides are associated with mechanical obstruction, such as migration of a worm into the biliary tree or the development of a high worm burden in the intestinal lumen. In this case, the abdominal discomfort resolved after the worm was removed. At a 2-month follow-up visit, the patient remained healthy.

Myoung Kuk Jang, M.D.
Ki Sung Lee, M.D.
College of Medicine, Hallym University, 445, Gildong, Kangdonggu, Seoul 134-701, Republic of Korea