Stabroek News Sunday

U.S. woman found with eye worm previously known only in cattle

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NEW YORK, (Reuters) - An Oregon woman has become the first person worldwide known to have had an eye infestatio­n by a tiny worm species previously seen only in cattle that is spread by flies that feed on eyeball lubricatio­n, U.S. government researcher­s said on Monday.

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scientists said 14 translucen­t parasitic worms of the species Thelazia gulosa, all less than half an inch (1.27 cm) long, were extracted from the 26-year-old woman’s eye over a 20-day period before her symptoms dissipated.

This species of Thelazia worm was previously seen in cattle throughout the northern United States and southern Canada, the researcher­s reported in a study published in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. They said the study indicates that North Americans may be more vulnerable than previously understood to such infections.

If the worms remain in a person’s eye for a prolonged time, they can cause corneal scarring and even blindness, according to the researcher­s.

“Cases of eye worm parasitic infections are rare in the USA, and this case turned out to be a species of the Thelazia that had never been reported in humans,” said study lead author Richard Bradbury, who works with the CDC’s Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria.

Bradbury said previously it was thought there were only two different species of these eye worms that infected humans worldwide, and that Thelazia gulosa is now the third.

The researcher­s said the woman noticed a small, translucen­t worm in her left eye after experienci­ng irritation. Her frequent

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