Sunday, May 31, 2026

Answer to Case 811

Answer to the Parasite Case of the Week 811: Strongyloides stercoralis L3 larvae; presentation consistent with hyperinfection. 

As noted by Florida Fan, this is a "typical case of full blown invasive strongyloidiasis. The Gram stain didn’t give us much detail for the identification. The wet mounts appear to show the notched tail of the infective filariform stage."

Here is a closer up view of the notched tail from Dr. Lee, confirming the identification of S. stercoralis L3 larvae:

(The notch is very subtle and can be difficult to appreciate) 

Florida Fan also shared that while the "filariform larvae cannot penetrate nitrile examination gloves, I would surely take extra precautions while handling such a specimen such as double gloves." HLCM Fan also shared a story of a past case: " We had a case of S. stercoralis a years back and went a little crazy with lab security measures (double gloves, nobody could use the BSC after us before we clean it with alcohol and UV, biosafety apron with sleeves, the samples were inactivated before leaving the lab, etc). We were not exaggerating; this sample is really dangerous."

These precautions are important as L3 larvae can penetrate intact skin and cause infection in the human host. In addition to glove use, we would tape up the bacteriology culture plates to prevent the larvae from migrating outwards.

HLCM Fan asked how we can differentiate the larvae in this case from those of S. fuelleborni. Fortunately, the answer is simple: S. fuelleborni does not have an autoinfection cycle, so we would not expect to find L3 larvae in a respiratory specimen during the chronic stage of infection. It is only during the early acute stage that the larvae may migrate through the lungs before reaching the intestinal tract (see the CDC lifecycle).  

Thanks again to Dr. Frankie Lee for donating this classic case!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thank you for your response!
-HLCM Fan