Head Lice infestation Could Cause Iron Deficiency Anemia

Case report describes 23-year-old woman with no cause of anemia other than head lice infestation
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TUESDAY, Nov. 17, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Head lice infestation could cause iron deficiency anemia in the absence of any other cause, according to a case report published online Nov. 5 in BMJ Case Reports.

Noting that the concurrent presence of lice infestation and iron deficiency anemia has been reported in children and adults, Sarah Ali Althomali, from the King Abdulaziz Specialist Hospital in Taif, Saudi Arabia, and colleagues document a case of a young woman with severe iron deficiency anemia with no known cause. The 23-year-old patient presented to the emergency department with chest discomfort on exertion, palpitation, light-headedness, and generalized fatigability. She had a medical history of depression, which began four years earlier with loss of her mother. For the previous six months she had had secondary amenorrhea. The patient appeared depressed, fatigued, and uninterested in conversation. Her head was covered in lice and lice nits, and scratch marks were seen on her scalp.

The researchers reported that the patient was treated for head lice and given intravenous iron therapy for the anemia. Improvement was seen in her symptoms after ensuring good body hygiene and psychological therapy. The patient was lost to follow-up.

"We conclude that chronic and heavy lice infestation could be the cause of iron deficiency anemia in the absence of an obvious cause of iron deficiency anemia such as menstrual loss or chronic gastrointestinal bleeding," the authors write.

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