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  • Title: [Fever and lymphadenopathy: acute toxoplasmosis in an immunocompetent patient].
    Author: Kaparos N, Favrat B, D'Acremont V.
    Journal: Rev Med Suisse; 2014 Nov 26; 10(452):2264, 2266-8, 2270. PubMed ID: 25562978.
    Abstract:
    Toxoplasmosis is an infectious disease caused by the intracellular parasite Toxoplasma gondii. In Switzerland about a third of the population has antibodies against this pathogen and has thus already been in contact with the parasite or has contracted the disease. Immunocompetent patients are usually asymptomatic (80-90%) during primary infection. The most common symptom is neck or occipital lymphadenopathy. Serology is the diagnostic gold standard in immunocompetent individuals. The presence of IgM antibodies is however not sufficient to make a definite diagnosis of acute toxoplasmosis. Distinction between acute and chronic toxoplasmosis requires additional serological tests (IgG avidity test). If required, the most used and probably most effective treatment is the combination of pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine, with folinic acid.
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