Alveolar hydatid disease
Alveolar hydatid disease | |
---|---|
Classification and external resources | |
Specialty | infectious disease |
ICD-10 | B67.7 |
ICD-9-CM | 122.7 |
DiseasesDB | 4048 |
Alveolar hydatid disease (AHD), also known as alveolar echinococcosis, alveolar colloid of the liver, alveolococcosis, multilocular echinococcosis, and small fox tapeworm is a form of echinococcosis, a disease that originates from a parasite.[1] Although alveolar echinococcosis is rarely diagnosed in humans and is not as widespread as cystic echinococcosis, it is also still a serious disease that not only has a significantly high fatality rate but also has the potential to become an emerging disease in many countries.
References
- ↑ Geramizadeh, Bita; Baghernezhad, Mohammad (2016). "Hepatic Alveolar Hydatid Cyst: A Brief Review of Published Cases from Iran in the Last 20 Years". Hepatitis Monthly. 16 (10). doi:10.5812/hepatmon.38920.
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