Explore chapters and articles related to this topic
Dermoscopy in General Dermatology
Published in Ashfaq A Marghoob, Ralph Braun, Natalia Jaimes, Atlas of Dermoscopy, 2023
Iris Zalaudek, Nicola di Meo, Paola Corneli
Tungiasis is an infectious disease caused by the flea Tunga penetrans, which lives in humid sand contaminated by feces of pigs and cows. The parasite penetrates the epidermis, causing reactive hyperplasia and subsequent light brown itchy papules that are typically seen on the soles and the periungueal area.22Dermoscopic examination shows a central pigmented ring with a central pore and an eccentric gray-bluish blotch over a whitish background.23,24
Diagnosing Parasitic Infections
Published in Firza Alexander Gronthoud, Practical Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, 2020
Tunga penetrans (chigoe flea or jigger) produces local pruritus as it partly buries itself in the skin and lays eggs, causing swelling and local skin irritation, which may be complicated by bacterial superinfection.
Parasitoses
Published in Giuseppe Micali, Francesco Lacarrubba, Dermatoscopy in Clinical Practice, 2018
Elvira Moscarella, Leonardo Spagnol Abraham, Giuseppe Argenziano
Tunga penetrans is a ground flea that infests the skin of humans and can have various animals (pigs, cows, cats, dogs, and rats) serving as usual reservoirs.7–8 The disease is usually acquired by walking barefoot in humid ground contaminated by the flea. Therefore, the feet are the preferred site of penetration. The flea is not able to jump high; even so, ectopic lesions have been reported in almost all parts of the body and are associated with high infestation grades and young age.9 Both male and female fleas may penetrate the skin, but after copulation, the male dies, whereas the female remains in the skin completing her vital cycle that lasts about 4–6 weeks. The flea penetrates the skin with the head of the exoskeleton, creating a cavity that reaches the superficial dermis, where it is nourished by the blood of the dermal vascular plexus. After penetration into the skin, the female starts producing eggs and enlarging her body from 1 mm to about 1 cm in diameter. Eggs and feces are eliminated through a small opening in the epidermis and then the flea dies in the cavity. The natural history of the disease has been divided into five phases:10 (1) penetration, (2) hypertrophy, (3) the white halo phase, (4) inoculation, and (5) rest of the fleas in the host’s cutis.
Epidemiology of tungiasis in sub-saharan Africa: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Published in Pathogens and Global Health, 2020
Oluwasola O. Obebe, Olufemi O. Aluko
Tungiasis is a public health skin disease prevalent in many rural and urban slums and caused by the female sand fleas, Tunga penetrans [1,2]. Tungiasis is a zoonosis and affects humans and animals alike in disadvantaged communities in the Caribbean, sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), and South America, primarily affecting children and the elderly [3–5]. Tunga penetrans, the causative organism of tungiasis attack mostly the periungual region of children and the elderly, although, infection of the elbows, hands, and genital areas have been reported [6]. Mud or earthen housing materials, poor hygiene behavior, rearing of domestic animals (such as pigs, dogs, and cats) and walking barefoot, have been associated with jigger infection [7,8]. The acute stage of tungiasis is characterized by itching, swelling, deep fissures, ulcers, and abscess development as a result of bacterial superinfection, while the chronic form may be accompanied by protracted pain, deformity, damage to the feet and disability [6,9,10]. Despite the considerable magnitude of the disease, it is widely overlooked by the academic community, health care practitioners, public health experts, decision-makers, funding organizations, and pharmaceutical companies. A prevalence of 80% and up to 60% in children and the general population, respectively has been reported around the world [11]. A point prevalence of between 16–54% has also been reported in low socio-economic prone communities in Latin America, the Caribbean, and sub-saharan African countries [1,5]. The prevalence of tungiasis in the human population has been studied sporadically in SSA [12–18]. However, to the best of our knowledge, no comprehensive study has been conducted on tungiasis in SSA; hence we present the outcome of a systematic review and meta-analysis of the epidemiology of tungiasis in SSA.