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Cercarial Dermatitis or Swimmer’s Itch – Risk and Causes

What is Cercarial Dermatitis?

Cercarial dermatitis, also known as swimmer’s itch, is an itchy rash caused by a tiny parasitic worm. It’s contracted by swimming or wading in infested fresh water lakes or ponds. The parasite’s usual hosts are waterfowl and rodents. After the parasite is excreted from the waterfowl or rodent, it then enters a snail. After further development, it leaves the snail and comes into contact with human skin. It can’t enter your bloodstream or deeper tissues, but it can cause an uncomfortable, itchy rash when it burrows into your skin.

The rash begins to itch and appears while one is still in the water. After a few hours, the itching and rash disappears. However, about 10–15 hours after the initial rash the papules and itch return. The rash appears as small, itchy red bumps that can turn into blisters. It usually clears up within a week.

Pathophysiology

Cercarial dermatitis occurs when free-swimming cercariae penetrate the skin of humans (incidental host) and cause an allergic skin reaction (types I and IV hypersensitivity). The life cycle begins as cercariae infect birds (definitive host), maturing into adult worms within blood vessels. Adult worms then produce eggs that are passed in avian feces.

The eggs hatch and liberate ciliated miracidia into the water, which infect snails (intermediate host). Miracidia mature within snails and produce free-swimming cercariae, which either reinfect birds or infect humans. Cercarie die upon penetration into human skin, thus halting the schistosome life cycle.

Causes of cercarial dermatitis

Swimmer’s itch or Cercarial Dermatitis is a disease of aquatic birds and humans are accidentally affected.

Schistosomes are parasitic flatworms with a lifecycle that involves aquatic birds (eg, ducks, geese, gulls, swans) or mammals (eg, beavers, muskrats), specific species of aquatic snails, and warm fresh or salt water.

The parasites that cause swimmer’s itch live in the blood of waterfowl and in mammals that live near ponds and lakes. Examples include:

The parasite’s eggs enter the water via their hosts’ feces. Before infecting birds, other animals or people, the hatched parasites must live for a time within a type of snail. These snails live near the shoreline, which explains why infections occur most often in shallow water.

Swimmer’s itch isn’t contagious from person to person, so you don’t need to worry about catching cercarial dermatitis from someone who has this itchy rash.

Who is at Risk?

What are the symptoms of swimmer’s itch (cercarial dermatitis)?

You can develop swimmer’s itch within minutes or days of swimming in infested water.

Symptoms of swimmer’s itch (cercarial dermatitis) include:

What are the complications of swimmer’s itch?

How is cercarial dermatitis diagnosed?

There are several types of skin reactions similar to cercarial dermatitis, which can make it hard to tell if your condition is a cercarial dermatitis. For example, insect bites, jellyfish stings, or bacterial infections may cause similar symptoms on your skin. There are no specific tests for cercarial dermatitis. To diagnose swimmer’s itch, the doctor may ask you specific diagnostic questions to identify the allergy. Your doctor will want to know:

When you first started feeling the itchy sensation

If you’ve had a swimming session with the last 24 hours

If other people who were exposed to the water developed similar symptoms

Your doctor may also ask about your medical history, notable allergies, and whether you’re taking any special medications or supplements.

Treatment for cercarial dermatitis

The rash will go away in a few weeks to a month. Make sure to prevent infection by not scratching it. You can treat itching with any of these:

The best way to avoid getting the rash is to stay out of lakes or bodies of water known to be infested.

Lifestyle and home remedies

These tips might help reduce the itch:

Prevention of cercarial dermatitis

The parasites that cause cercarial dermatitis live in the blood of waterfowl and in mammals that live near ponds and lakes. To reduce the risk of cercarial dermatitis:

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