Gnathostomiasis
Dormancy Period: Up to 4 weeks.
Gnathostomiasis is transmitted by the ingestion of third-stage larvae from raw or insufficiently cooked second intermediate or paratenic hosts such as freshwater fish, snakes, poultry, or frogs. The incubation period for gnathostomiasis is 3–4 weeks when the larvae begin to migrate through the subcutaneous tissue of the body.
A few days after ingestion epigastric pain, fever, vomiting, and loss of appetite resulting from migration of larvae through intestinal wall to the abdominal cavity will appear in the patient. Migration of parasites in the subcutaneous tissues causing intermittent, migratory, painful, pruritic swellings is known as cutaneous larva migrans. Patches of edema appear after initial symptoms clear and are usually found on the abdomen.
Migration to other tissues causes visceral larva migrans and can result in cough, hematuria, ocular involvement, meningitis, encephalitis and eosinophilia. Eosinophilic myeloencephalitis may also result from invasion of the central nervous system by the larvae.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnathostomiasis
https://duckduckgo.com/?q=%22Gnathostomiasis%22&t=newext&atb=v373-1&iar=images&iax=images&ia=images
Therapure Remedies: Neem Soap with scrub glove, Vita Bath with CP SO, CP BVC, CP C, CP W, CP PAR-D. CP PAR-M, CP PIN, CP PRS, CP SPQ, CP 1-5, CP ID, Steamer Therapy with CP B or R Tinctures. Therapure Bug Juice.
Jamu Jo: JJ 6, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15.
IV Therapy: Glutathione, DMSO, CP ID, CP IN, CP IZ, CP IS, Lysine, Magnesium, Vitamin B Complex, Vitamin D, Zinc.
Conventional Remedies: Albendazole, membendazole, ivermectin