CASE REPORTS
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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Case of creeping disease treated with ivermectin.

Journal of Dermatology 2009 Februrary
We report a case of creeping disease treated successfully with ivermectin. A 46-year-old man presented with a 1-month history of pruriginous linear erythema on his right thigh after a visit to Indonesia. Although he had no history of eating raw fish or meat, he walked along the river and in the jungle without wearing shoes. Creeping disease caused by animal hookworm was strongly suspected. The presence of parasite larvae was not confirmed in biopsied skin specimens. In enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, serum samples were negative for binding to hookworm antigens, including Ancylostoma canium, Necator americanus and Gnathostoma doloresi. He was treated with a single 12 mg oral dose (200 microg/kg) of ivermectin. The eruption and pruritus resolved within a few days after the administration and did not relapse.

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