Amarnath Shivantha, El Imad Cheikh Talal, Ebare Kingsley, Wu Hueizhi, Mulrooney Stephen
Department of Internal Medicine, Staten Island University Hospital, Northwell Health, Staten Island, New York, USA.
Department of Gastroenterology, Staten Island University Hospital, Northwell Health, Staten Island, New York, USA.
Case Rep Gastroenterol. 2019 Dec 12;13(3):526-531. doi: 10.1159/000504956. eCollection 2019 Sep-Dec.
Cryptosporidial enteritis has a rising incidence in the USA, mostly affecting immunocompromised individuals and children. It has a self-limiting course in healthy hosts. Herein, we present a unique case of a healthy middle-aged female who presented with a 1-month history of voluminous watery diarrhea and acute blood loss anemia. Cryptosporidial enteritis was diagnosed based on endoscopy with biopsy-proven evidence of 2 jejunal peptic ulcers infected with spp. that was originally missed on routine stool culture, ova and parasite tests. The patient was successfully treated with nitazoxanide, and eradication of the protozoan was also confirmed on repeat endoscopic biopsies of the ulcer that were carried out 6 months later. To our knowledge, this is the first case to be reported in the literature with infective colonization of peptic ulcers with spp. with consequent systemic symptoms.