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A number of species of parasitic worms can inhabit the human
intestinal tract and cause disease. While not microorganisms,
they are studied and diagnosed using microscopic and immunologic techniques familiar to microbiologists. Some invade tissue
and others do not, so that their presence in the body is often
called an infestation rather than an infection. These worms, or
helminths, are divided into two groups, the roundworms and
the flatworms, and the flatworms are further divided into the
tapeworms and the flukes. Tapeworms are ribbon-shaped and
segmented, while flukes are generally shorter and leaf-shaped.
Tapeworms differ from the other parasitic helminths in that they
lack a digestive tract; they absorb nutrients through their skin. In
most instances the helminths themselves are difficult to find and
examine, so that they are identified by the microscopic appearance of their eggs, or ova, which are often present in the host’s
feces in large numbers. The ova of each helminth species are distinctive and can be identified on the basis of size, shape, thickness of the outer covering, embryonation, and other features.
Some helminths have complex life cycles, involving one or more
intermediate hosts where early stages of development occur,
and a definitive host where the sexually mature forms occur.
Generally, helminths have male and female forms, but most of
the flatworms are hermaphroditic, meaning that both male and
female sex organs reside in the same worm.
A
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by American physicians, and pinworms infest more than 200
million people worldwide.
Symptoms
About one-third of individuals infested with E. vermicularis are
asymptomatic. The most common symptom in adults is anal
itching, sometimes accompanied by vaginal irritation. Sleeplessness, nightmares, nervousness, irritability, anal pain, and weight
loss are common in affected children.
Causative Agent.
Enterobius vermicularis is a tiny roundworm; the females average about 10 mm in length, and the males, 2 to 3 mm. The
female has a sharply pointed tail end, which inspired its popular
name pinworm. The worms can often be detected in the anal
area by using a flashlight about 2 hours after retiring, or early in
the morning. Ova can be collected from the anal area by pressing transparent tape against the anus. The pinworm ova are
elongated and have a distinctive appearance, flat on one side and
containing a larval worm (figure 24.26a).
Pathogenesis
Some notable examples of diseases due to roundworms (nematodes) are discussed in this section. Pinworm disease, whipworm
disease, and ascariasis are acquired by ingesting ova. Hookworm
disease and strongyloidiasis are contracted by skin penetration
by worm larvae, and trichinosis by eating undercooked meat
containing worm larvae.
The worms live mainly in the upper part of the large intestine.
They may, however, migrate throughout the intestinal and
female genital tracts during their 1- to 2-month life span, feeding on bacteria and other intestinal material. Tiny ulcerations
and inflammation occur where the worms attach to the intestinal epithelium. The male worms die soon after mating. The
mature females containing 5,000 to 15,000 ova migrate out of
the anus, usually while their host is sleeping, deposit their eggs
in a sticky matrix, and die. Figure 24.26b shows the enormous
numbers of ova present in a single worm. The sensation caused
by worms exiting the anus leads to scratching, bleeding, and
bacterial infection. If the anal area is not kept clean, eggs
deposited there hatch, and the larval worms crawl through the
anus, enter the intestine, and perpetuate the infestation.
Pinworm Disease (Enterobiasis)
Epidemiology
Pinworm disease, enterobiasis, is caused by the pinworm, Enterobius vermicularis. It is the most common helminth disease seen
Scratching deposits E. vermicularis ova on the fingers and under
the fingernails. Because of the enormous numbers of ova, clothing,
Diseases Due to Intestinal
Roundworms
(a)
(a)
100 µm
Ova
(b)
20 µm
(b)
Body
0.5 mm
Figure 24.26 Pinworm, Enterobius vermicularis (a) Microscopic view of
the ova, showing flattened side and developing worm larva. (b) Body of the adult
worm surrounded by thousands of its ova.
Figure 24.27 Whipworm, Trichuris trichiura (a) The slender anterior
portion is embedded in the mucous membrane, while the thicker portion protrudes into
the intestinal lumen. (b) Ovum. Notice the long oval shape, thick wall, and plugs at
each end.
oughly cleaned. Ideally, heat in the household should be turned
up and all members take a vacation for a week.
Whipworm Disease (Trichuriasis)
bedding, various surfaces, and even the air in the household
become contaminated. Inhaled and ingested ova are swallowed
and hatch in the small intestine, and the larval worms reach
maturity in 2 to 6 weeks. Ova can survive for about a week in
cool moist conditions, but they quickly die if conditions are hot
and dry. Enterobiasis occurs worldwide and, unlike most other
helminth diseases, is more common in temperate climates and
does not spare upper socioeconomic groups. Humans are the
only host for E. vermicularis.
Prevention and Treatment
Hygienic habits and good ventilation minimize the risk of
acquiring E. vermicularis. Treatment is easy because effective
medications are available, but preventing reinfestation is difficult. All members of a household must be treated simultaneously, even those without symptoms. Clothing and bedding
should be washed in hot water, and household surfaces thor-
Whipworm disease, trichuriasis, affects an estimated 500 to 800
million people in warm and wet regions of the world where people defecate on the ground or use human feces for fertilizer.
Symptoms
Most infestations, even with as many as 100 worms, are asymptomatic. Very heavy infestations can cause anemia from blood
loss, weight loss, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and protrusion of
the bowel through the rectum from forcefully straining to expel
the worms.
Causative Agent
The causative agent of trichuriasis is the whipworm, Trichuris
trichiura. The worms are 3 to 5 cm long, with a slender anterior portion and a short, thicker posterior portion, hence the
name whipworm (figure 24.27a). The unmistakable ova can be
found by microscopic examination of the feces (figure 24.27b).
Pathogenesis
Trichuriasis is contracted by ingesting the mature T. trichiura ova.
The ova hatch in the small intestine, and the emerging larvae burrow into pockets in the intestinal epithelium. Here they develop
for about a week, then return to the bowel lumen and migrate to
the large intestine. They become sexually mature and start producing eggs in 1 to 2 months. The slender anterior region of the
worm is inserted into the intestinal mucosa, with the thicker portion protruding into the bowel lumen. The intestinal epithelium
is damaged by the penetrating worm, causing blood loss and an
inflammatory response. Sometimes people infested with T. trichiuria develop hives because of allergy to worm antigens.
Epidemiology
Infection is by the fecal-oral route. Each mature female worm produces about 5,000 ova per day. These ova are eliminated with the
feces and can contaminate hands and foods, but they are not immediately infectious. The ova require about 3 weeks in a warm, moist,
and shady place before they are capable of parasitizing a new host.
The worms can live 3 to 8 years, so that repeated ingestions of eggs
can cause a large buildup of the numbers of the worms in a person’s intestine. Also, because of the long life of T. trichiura, the
worms are frequently found in people who traveled to endemic
areas years ago. Humans are the only reservoir for T. trichiura.
Prevention and Treatment
Trichuriasis is prevented by proper disposal of human feces and
other sanitary measures. Several medications provide safe and
effective treatment of the disease.
Ascariasis
Ascariasis is a helminthic disease caused by Ascaris lumbricoides,
the largest and most prevalent human roundworm. Worldwide,
an estimated 1 billion people are infested.
Symptoms
Most cases of ascariasis are asymptomatic. Many individuals
infested with the worms, however, develop one or more bouts of
fever, trouble breathing, coughing, and wheezing. Some infested
people have the frightening experience of vomiting up a large
worm, or passing one in their feces; others develop abdominal
pain when the worms obstruct the intestine or gallbladder.
Causative Agent
Ascaris lumbricoides (see figure 24.28) is a roundworm prevalent worldwide in areas where human feces contaminate the
soil. Female worms are enormous, ranging from 20 to 45 cm
long and 3 to 6 mm wide, while males are somewhat smaller.
The ova are nearly spherical, with a thick wall and irregular
outer surface (see figure 24.28). The life cycle of A. lumbricoides is complex. The ova released by mature females are eliminated with the host’s feces. The tiny worm larva inside the ova
must develop in soil or other location outside the host’s body
for at least 11/2 weeks before they can survive and mature in a
new host. After being swallowed by the new host, the ova hatch
in the duodenum. At this point, the tiny larval worms do some-
thing totally unexpected. Instead of staying in the intestine,
they burrow through the intestinal epithelium, enter the circulatory system, and are carried throughout the body. Those that
reach the lungs push through the capillary walls into the alveoli. Here they undergo further development, reach 1 to 2 mm
in length, and shed their covering twice to get ready for the rest
of their journey. After about 10 days, they move out of the alveoli into the air passages of the lungs, and they are coughed up
and swallowed (figure 24.28). The developmental changes
that take place in the lungs make them resistant to stomach
juices, and so they pass safely through the stomach into the
small intestine. They mature to adulthood after about 2 months
in the upper small intestine, feeding on intestinal contents.
They live about 1 year.
Pathogenesis
Large masses of worms can obstruct the intestine, while wandering worms can obstruct or perforate various organs. Except
for the larval worms that reach the lung, circulating larvae lodge
in capillaries throughout the body and die, causing an inflammatory and immune response and consequent aches, pains, and
fever. The larval penetration into the lungs causes microscopic
bleeding, which if widespread, can predispose one to bacterial
pneumonia; lesser amounts of damage provoke inflammatory
and immune responses, coughing, wheezing, and pain.
Roundworms of some species of animals can penetrate
human tissues but cannot complete their life cycle. Instead, their
larvae wander through the tissues and eventually die, causing an
intense inflammatory reaction. Preschool children are especially
susceptible to this condition, called visceral larva migrans,
because of their tendency to put rocks and dirt into their
mouths. If the material is contaminated with certain roundworm ova, the eggs hatch, and the larvae migrate through body
tissues. One example is Toxocara canis, an intestinal roundworm
of dogs that resembles A. lumbricoides. This helminth can cause
damage to various organs of a child, even blindness when its larvae lodge in the eyes.
Epidemiology
Humans are the only natural hosts of A. lumbricoides. A closely
similar helmith of pigs can sometimes infect people. The
helminth female produces more than 200,000 ova daily. These
ova are remarkably resistant to heat, cold, drying, and disinfectants. Moreover, the ova remain infectious for up to 10 years,
contaminating soil, dust, and food. In many areas of the world,
human feces is used as fertilizer for food crops, and children
defecate outdoors causing extensive soil contamination. Young
children commonly place soiled objects into their mouth, and
they are prone to eat soil if they are anemic or iron deficient.
Children may have 50 or more worms, the record being well
over 1,000.
Prevention and Treatment
Prevention of ascariasis depends on hygienic practices and sanitary disposal of human feces. Effective and safe medications are
available for treating the disease.
Alveolus
(a) Worm eggs from
contaminated
soil are ingested
(d) Larvae from lung
enter esophagus
and then gastrointestinal
tract
(b) Ingested eggs
hatch; larvae
penetrate intestinal
capillaries and
are carried to lung
Bronchiole
FPO
100 µm
(c) Larvae in the lung
leave the capillaries
and enter alveoli
and bronchioles
Figure 24.28
(a–f) Life Cycle of Ascaris
lumbricoides, the Largest Roundworm Infesting
the Human Intestine Curiously, larvae hatching in the
intestine migrate through the lungs and back to the
intestine before maturing to adulthood.The ova are nearly
spherical, thick-walled, with a ruffled border.
(e) Larvae mature
to adulthood
(f) Eggs passed
in feces
Hookworm Disease
Hookworms infest about 900 million people in warm, wet areas
around the world where people defecate on the ground and do
not wear shoes. Hookworm disease was once common in the
southeastern United States. Asymptomatic individuals are still
seen in most states, but they have contracted their hookworms
in other countries.
Symptoms
The vast majority of hookworm infestations are asymptomatic.
An itchy foot rash commonly occurs at the site of skin penetration by the worms. Cough, fever, and shortness of breath can
occur, and later, diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting. The most
important symptoms of hookworm disease are mental and physical retardation in children.
Causative Agents
Necator americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale account for
most cases of human hookworm disease. The worms are about
10 mm long and live in the small intestine, attaching by means
of small hooks or plates located about their mouth. The hookworm life cycle is shown in figure 24.29. The female worm
6 cm
releases her eggs, and they are discharged with the feces, contaminating soil in places that lack toilets. The eggs hatch in the
soil, releasing tiny larvae that develop in the soil and become
infectious. These larvae generally penetrate the skin of a person’s feet, wiggle their way into the bloodstream, and are carried to the heart and lungs. In the lungs, as in ascariasis, they
push through the capillary walls into the alveoli, migrate into
the bronchial tubes, and then enter the gastrointestinal system
when lower respiratory tract secretions are coughed up and
swallowed. Once in the small intestine, the larvae attach and
mature to complete their life cycle.
Pathogenesis
Hookworms feed by sucking the blood of the host. More than
1,000 worms may be found in a single person, and the constant
loss of blood frequently produces anemia. Children who acquire
hookworms may be undernourished already, and the anemia
resulting from hookworm disease may cause weakness, fatigue,
and physical and mental retardation. Initial attachment of the
worms can cause nausea and vomiting. Migration of the larvae
through the lungs causes microscopic bleeding and inflammatory and immune responses that result in coughing, wheezing,
and shortness of breath. The itchy rash, called ground itch, that
Bronchioles
Alveoli
Prevention and Treatment
Prevention of hookworm disease depends on sanitary
disposal of human feces and wearing shoes. Highly
effective medications are available to eliminate the
infestation.
Strongyloidiasis
(c) Larvae
mature in the
small intestine
and produce ova
(b) Larvae in the
lung leave the
capillaries,
enter the
alveoli and
bronchioles
Strongyloidiasis, the disease caused by Strongyloides
stercoralis, occurs in a spotty distribution in warm, wet
areas of the world, with an estimated 400,000 cases in
the southeastern United States and Puerto Rico. This
disease differs from most other helminthic diseases in
that it perpetuates itself indefinitely in the absence of
reexposure to the causative agent.
Symptoms
Most infections are asymptomatic, but abdominal
pain, diarrhea, recurrent rashes on the buttocks and
lower back, and respiratory symptoms can occur with
heavy infestations.
Causative Agent
Large
intestine
(d) Hookworm ova
from feces
hatch in soil;
larvae develop
into an
infectious
form
(a) Larvae penetrate
skin and enter
capillaries
The adult Strongyloides stercoralis (figure 24.31),
sometimes called a threadworm, is only about 2 mm
long. Its life cycle is similar to that of hookworms with
two important exceptions: (1) the worms can multiply
sexually in the soil; and (2) ova produced by intestinal
worms hatch before they are discharged in the feces.
These intestinal larvae can mature to an infectious
form, penetrate the intestine or the anal skin, and
thereby perpetuate the infection indefinitely.
Pathogenesis
Most individuals with strongyloidiasis are asymptomatic because their immune system limits tissue invasion. Heavy infestations, however, can damage the
50 µm
lungs and intestine, sometimes leading to invasion by
Figure 24.29 (a–d) Life Cycle of a Hookworm Infection begins with penetration of the
bacterial pathogens. Recurrent rashes result from
skin by the worm larvae.The micrograph shows the thin-walled ovum containing the developing
hypersensitivity to the larvae at the sites of penetration.
worm embryo.
In people who are debilitated, alcoholic, or immunosuppressed, massive numbers of the worms arise, penetrating all parts of the body, including the brain. These massive
often develops between the toes at the site of larval penetration,
infections are rapidly fatal unless treated.
is probably an allergic response to repeated exposures.
The larvae of dog and cat hookworms can contaminate
Epidemiology
soil and penetrate the skin, especially of people such as plumbers
Strongyloidiasis occurs in much the same distribution as hookthat sometimes have to crawl in dirt under buildings. The larvae
worm, but favoring tropical areas. Since the organisms can mulwander just under the skin surface, causing itchy red tracts
tiply in soil, contaminated areas may remain infectious even
(figure 24.30) that advance as much as 1 to 2 cm per day for a
when there are no new deposits of human feces. Human infecmonth or more, before dying. This condition is called cutations can last for a lifetime, and they can be transmitted to other
neous larva migrans.
people through close physical contact. Many American soldiers
contracted the disease during World War II while imprisoned in
Epidemiology
Southeast Asia.
Hookworm disease occurs around the world in temperate and
tropical climates where the soil is moist, human feces is
Prevention and Treatment
deposited on the ground, and people are barefooted. Each
Prevention of strongyloidiasis is the same as for hookworm disfemale worm can produce 25 million ova in her lifetime of 2 to
ease. Effective medications are available but require a longer
10 years.
because of damage to the heart or brain. The disease occurs
worldwide except for Australia and some Pacific Islands.
Causative Agent
Figure 24.30 Cutaneous Larva Migrans, an Occupational Hazard of
Plumbers and Others Who Crawl Under Buildings Where Dog or Cat Feces
Have been Deposited Larval hookworms from the feces penetrate and wander
under the skin, causing serpentine tracts of inflammation before dying.
The cause of trichinosis is usually Trichinella spiralis, a 1 to 4 mm
long roundworm that lives in the small intestine of meat-eating
animals, especially rats, pigs, bears, dogs, and humans. Its life
cycle is shown in figure 24.32. The female worm discharges her
living young into the lymph and blood vessels of the host’s
intestine without an intervening egg stage, and those larvae are
carried to all parts of the body. Most of the larvae are killed by
body defenses, but some survive in the muscles of the host
where they become encased with scar tissue. The worms then
stay alive for months or years within the muscle. If the flesh of
an infested pig or other carnivorous animal is eaten by humans
or other animals, the digestive juices of the new host release the
larvae, permitting them to burrow into the new host’s intestinal
lining. The larvae then mature, and the females begin producing larvae in the new host to complete the life cycle of the
worm. Each female adult Trichinella may live 4 months or more
and produce 1,500 young.
Pathogenesis
The penetration of larval worms into the host’s tissues is responsible for the symptoms of trichinosis. Abdominal pain and diarrhea begin within the first week after eating meat containing T.
spiralis, when the worms mature and begin discharging their
larvae. Fever, muscle pain, rash, and facial swelling result from
inflammatory and immune reactions to larvae lodged in various
tissues. Only larvae that penetrate skeletal muscle survive.
Epidemiology
100 µm
Figure 24.31
Strongyloides stercoralis Larva in Feces The adult worm is
only about 2 mm long, and has a life cycle similar to hookworms. Unlike other
intestinal roundworms, however, S. stercoralis can multiply in the soil and in the body
of a single host.
period of treatment than for hookworm, and even so, relapses
may occur.
Trichinosis (Trichinellosis)
Trichinosis, also known as trichinellosis, differs from all the roundworm diseases discussed previously in that it is contracted by eating inadequately cooked meat. Since pork is a leading source of
infection, the incidence of the disease has fallen markedly in the
United States over the years due largely to federal regulations on
how pigs raised commercially are fed. Nevertheless, the potential
for large outbreaks of the disease still exists because the meat of a
number species of animals can be infectious.
Symptoms
Trichinosis is characterized by abdominal pain and diarrhea, followed in about a week by fever, muscle pain, swelling around
the eyes, and sometimes a rash. Occasional cases are fatal
In trichinosis, the same animal generally serves as both the
definitive and the intermediate host, human beings one hopes
being the exception. Almost all warm-blooded carnivores can
be hosts for T. spiralis. Many cases of the disease have been contracted from the meat of wild animals, including bear, wild boar,
walrus, and cougar.
Prevention and Treatment
Prevention of trichinosis depends on thorough cooking of meat
so that all parts reach at least 170°F (77°C). Pigs raised commercially must by law be fed only cooked garbage to ensure that
they do not receive meat scraps containing viable Trichinella larvae. Government inspection of meat does not detect Trichinella
infestation. Larvae in pork are generally killed at 5°F (:15°C) or
lower for 3 weeks if the meat is less than 15 cm thick. Wild
game, however, often harbors Trichinella species that are not
killed by freezing. Medication is available that can probably prevent the disease in persons who have eaten meat shown to contain Trichinella, but there is no effective treatment.
M I C R O C H E C K
Parasitic worms are divided into the roundworms
(nematodes) and the flatworms. Flatworms are further
divided into tapeworms (cestodes) and flukes
(a) Infested meat
is ingested
(b) Larvae deposited
by adult worms into
blood or lymph vessels
(c) Larvae lodge
in muscle
and encyst
150 µm
Figure 24.32 (a–c) Life cycle of
Trichinella spiralis, the Cause of
Trichinosis Most cases of the disease
result from eating inadequately cooked
pork or bear meat.
(trematodes). Roundworm diseases include pinworm,
whipworm, and ascariasis contracted by ingesting worm
ova; hookworm disease and strongyloidiasis, contracted
through skin penetration by the worm larvae; and
trichinosis, acquired by ingesting inadequately cooked
meat containing encysted worm larvae.
■
■
Why might asymptomatic strongyloidiasis pose a serious
threat to an individual who develops
immunodeficiency?
Would you be surprised to see new cases of ascariasis
turning up 3 years after all the inhabitants of a
Southeast Asian village began using outhouses to
deposit their feces? Why or why not?
Diseases Due to Intestinal Flatworms
This section gives some examples of diseases due to tapeworms,
cestodes, and an example of a disease caused by a very large
intestinal fluke, or trematode. ■ cestodes, p. 317 ■ trematodes, p. 318
Tapeworm Disease
Tapeworms can exceed 10 m (more than 30 ft.) in length and
have a ribbonlike appearance. Their structure is quite distinctive in
that there is no digestive tract. The head end, called a scolex, is
only 1 to 2 mm in diameter and is merely an attachment device to
anchor the organism so that it is not eliminated by peristalsis. The
neck region continuously produces segments called proglottids
that become more mature the further they are from the scolex.
The proglottids are little more than hermaphroditic egg factories;
depending on the species, ova are discharged from an opening in
the proglottid, or the proglottid separates from the rest of the
worm and releases its ova by breaking apart. People become
infested with tapeworms by eating inadequately cooked red meat
or fish. Three important tapeworms are the beef tapeworm, the
pork tapeworm, and the fish tapeworm. Beef, pork, and fish refer
to the sources of human infection, not where the adult worms
exist; human beings are the definitive host for all three.
Symptoms
Most tapeworm victims have few or no symptoms. An occasional individual will develop vomiting and abdominal pain.
Rarely, weakness, unsteadiness, mental abnormalities, tumorlike
swellings, blindness, or epilepsy occur.
Causative Agents
intestinal juices, depriving the host of this essential vitamin and
causing anemia, weakness, unsteadiness, and other manifestations of nervous system malfunction.
The intermediate developmental forms of tapeworms can
also infect humans and cause symptoms. This occurs in the case
of D. latum when infected water fleas are accidentally ingested, as
might happen with drinking lake water. Infection can also result
from the practice of applying raw meat or fish to open wounds in
the mistaken belief that the meat will aid recovery. If larvae are
present in the flesh, they penetrate the tissues via the wound.
Pork tapeworms are the most dangerous of the three
types, because its eggs may hatch before being discharged in the
persons’s feces or ova contaminating fingers or foods can be
ingested and hatch. Larvae emerging from the ova do the same
as they would do in a pig. Although humans are a poor excuse
The tapeworms Taenia saginata or beef tapeworm, Taenia
solium or pork tapeworm, and Diphyllobothrium latum or fish
tapeworm can be distinguished by the structure of their scolices,
their proglottids, and their ova. Taenia saginata and T. solium
each have a single intermediate host, cattle and pigs, respectively, while D. latum has two or more.
Cattle ingest T. saginata ova when they feed on pasture
contaminated with feces from people who carry the adult worm.
The ova hatch in the cattle intestines, releasing larvae that burrow through the intestinal wall and lodge in the flesh of the animals. Here each of the parasites develops into a cysticercus, a
cystic structure containing an immature
scolex. When the inadequately cooked beef is
eaten by a person, the cysticercus is released
from the meat by digestive enzymes, matures,
attaches to the intestinal wall, and soon develops into an egg-producing adult tapeworm.
The life cycle for the pork tapeworm, Taenia
solium, is similar except pigs rather than cattle
are the intermediate host. Cysticerci in inadequately cooked meat represent the only
source of adult worms in people.
The intermediate hosts of D. latum are
water fleas and fish, whereas the definitive
host, the mature egg-producing form, occurs
in humans; bears, dogs, and other animals can
be definitive hosts for the same or similar
tapeworms. When ova of D. latum passed
(g) Adult worm
develops in
with a person’s feces enter fresh water, they
human small
soon release ciliated larvae, which are
intestine
devoured by water fleas (figure 24.33). The
larvae lose their cilia, claw their way into the
water flea’s body using tiny hooks, absorb
nutrients from the flea’s blood, and increase
in size. These larvae can develop further only
if the water flea is eaten by a fish. In a fish’s
muscle, the organism continues developing
and becomes infectious for humans. Usually,
however, it gets passed from one fish to
another as bigger fishes eat smaller ones,
before being eaten by the human host. In the
human host, the flesh of the fish is digested
(h) Degenerating
worm segments
away by stomach juices, releasing the wormcontaining
like larva. It attaches to the small intestine,
many eggs
rapidly matures, and begins producing ova.
(f) Infested fish
eaten by
human
(e) Larvae in
muscle of
fish
(d) Small fish eaten
by large fish
(c) Water flea eaten
by small fish
(b) Larva
eaten by
water flea
Knob
Swimming larva
(a) Ovum in
fresh water
Pathogenesis
Symptoms of tapeworm disease can arise from
the presence of adult worms in the intestine.
Nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain sometimes arise because the worms partly obstruct
the intestine. Also, large fish tapeworms can
absorb almost 100% of vitamin B12 from
Figure 24.33 (a–h) Life Cycle of the Fish Tapeworm,
Diphylobothrium latum Notice that this species requires two or more
intermediate hosts. Distinctive features of the ovum are its large size, oval
shape, and operculum, a trapdoor through which the larva exits the
ovum. Infestation is a risk for those who are fond of eating uncooked fish.
20 µm
Operculum
for an intermediate host, the larvae penetrate the intestinal wall
by means of tiny hooklets. Then they enter the bloodstream,
from which they invade tissues throughout the body, including
the eyes, brain, heart, and muscles. In the tissues they develop
into cysticerci, 0.5 to 5 or more cm in diameter. The condition
resulting from cysticerci in the tissues is called cysticercosis and
can mimic a brain tumor or cause epilepsy (figure 24.34).
Epidemiology
Tapeworm disease occurs wherever people eat raw meat or fish.
The beef tapeworm is the most common in the United States,
reported from eight states in one survey. The fish tapeworm
mainly occurs in the north central part of the United States,
where formerly outhouses were constructed so as to discharge
directly into the lakes. The pork tapeworm is rare in the United
States, but it may occur in immigrants from parts of Mexico,
India, the Philippines, and other parts of the world where eating raw pork is traditional.
Prevention and Treatment
Control of tapeworms depends on adequate cooking of meat
until it is no longer pink in the center. Fish should also be thor-
oughly cooked, or if eaten raw should be deep frozen for a week
before eating. Proper disposal of human feces and good
hygienic habits are especially important for controlling pork
tapeworm disease. Effective medicines are available both for ridding the body of adult worms and for treating cysticercosis.
Giant Intestinal Fluke Disease (Fasciolopsiasis)
Fasciolopsiasis, disease caused by Fasciolopsis buski, may be
acquired in a number of countries of Southern Asia, including
parts of China, India, Myanmar (Burma), Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. An
estimated 10 million people are infested worldwide.
Symptoms
Symptoms of fasciolopsiasis are diarrhea, abdominal pain, generalized weakness, and swelling of the face and other parts of the
body.
Causative Agent
Fasciolopsis buski, also known as the giant intestinal fluke, can be as
large as 7.5 cm long and 2.0 cm wide. This hermaphroditic
helminth lives in the upper and middle small intestine; attachment
Hooklets
(c) Inadequately cooked
pork containing
cysticerci ingested
by human
Sucker
200 µm
Adult worm
Cysticerci
Scolex
(f) Ova ingested
by human leads
to cysticercosis
(d) Cysticercus develops
into mature tapeworm
in small intestine
(e) Ova and ova-filled
proglottids passed
in human feces
Proglottid
Figure 24.34 (a–e) Life Cycle of the Pork Tapeworm, Taenia solium, Acquired by Eating
Inadequately Cooked Pork If worm ova hatch in the intestine, larval forms called cysticerci can develop throughout
the person’s tissues. A cysticercus in the brain can cause epilepsy.
(b) Cysticercus develops
in flesh of pig
(a) Pig ingests embryonated
ovum from human feces
Epidemiology
and movement is aided by two suckers. Unlike tapeworms, flukes
like F. buski have a digestive system. Ova are passed in the feces of
the definitive hosts, humans and pigs, and the enclosed embryos
mature in warm fresh water in about 6 weeks (figure 24.35). The
ova then hatch, releasing ciliated larvae, which penetrate the flesh
of certain snail species that serve as intermediate hosts. In the snail,
the organisms develop and multiply asexually, eventually exiting
the snail in the form of motile long-tailed larvae called cercariae.
These cercariae attach to the outer covering of water plants such
as water chestnuts, where they form cysts infectious for pigs and
human beings. People generally become infected when they peel
off the outer portion of water plants with their teeth in order to
eat the edible inner portion of the plant. The worms exit from
their cysts in the duodenum, attach, and after several months
begin producing ova.
Fasciolopsiasis can be prevented by killing encysted F. buski on
water plants by dipping them in boiling water for a few seconds
before peeling and eating. Rinsing the edible portion thoroughly in clean water after peeling is probably also effective.
The disease is effectively treated with praziquantel. Table 24.17
compares some features of these parasitic helminths.
Pathogenesis
M I C R O C H E C K
Fasciolopsiasis occurs in warm climates where people raise pigs
and eat raw freshwater plants, and where a suitable snail intermediate host exists. Feces from infested humans or pigs must
reach the ponds inhabited by the snails and edible water plants.
Each adult worm produces more than 20,000 ova per day and
lives about 1 year.
Prevention and Treatment
Tapeworms are ribbonlike creatures, consisting largely
of a string of hermaphroditic egg-producing segments.
The pork tapeworm, Taenia solium, is the most
dangerous because its ova can hatch in the human
intestine, the larvae entering brain and other tissues,
Inflammation occurs at the site of attachment of the helminths,
followed by ulceration and bleeding. Heavy infestations can interfere with nutrition or even obstruct the intestinal tract. Severe
symptoms also arise from toxicity and allergy to substances
released by the worms and absorbed by the host’s circulation.
(g) Cercariae attach to
water plant and encyst
(f) Cercariae exit
the snail
(h) Cyst is ingested by human or pig;
larva excysts in the duodenum
and becomes adult worm
Oral sucker
Ventral sucker
(a) Adult worm
in duodenum
(e) Asexual multiplication
and differentiation into
cercariae occur over a
number of weeks
(b) Ova in feces reach
warm fresh water,
embryo develops
(d) Miracidium
burrows into
flesh of snail
(c) Miracidium
emerges after
3 to 6 weeks
Figure 24.35 (a–h) Life Cycle of the “Giant Intestinal Fluke,” Fasciolopsis buski The infectious larva of
this worm encysts on certain edible water plants, including a kind of water chesnut. People become infested when they
peel the edible portion with their teeth.
TABLE 24.17 Notable Helminthic Diseases of Human Beings
Disease and Causative Agent
How Acquired
Disease Characteristics
Prevention and Control
Enterobiasis (pinworm),
Enterobius vermicularis
Hand to mouth; inhalation
Itching of anal region, restlessness, nervousness, irritability,
poor sleep
Handwashing, daily change of
underclothing and bed sheets
Trichuriasis, (whipworm)
Trichuris trichiura
Ingestion of eggs of parasite
along with contaminated food
or water
Abdominal pain, bloody stools,
diarrhea, and weight loss
Sanitary disposal of human
feces; frequent handwashing
Ascariasis, Ascaris lumbricoides
Ingestion of eggs of parasite or
water along with contaminated food
Abdominal pain, live worms
vomited or passed in stool
Sanitary disposal of human
feces
Hookworm disease,
Necator americanus and
Ancylostoma duodenale
Larvae penetrate bare feet
Anemia, weakness, fatigue,
physical and mental retardation
in children
Sanitary disposal of human
feces; wearing shoes
Strongyloidiasis,
Strongyloides stercoralis
Larvae penetrate bare feet
Skin rash at site of penetration,
cough, abdominal pains, weight
loss
Sanitary disposal of human
feces; wearing shoes
Trichinosis, Trichinella spiralis
Eating raw or undercooked
meat, usually pork
Fever, swelling of upper eyelids,
muscle soreness
Adequate cooking of meat
Tapeworm disease,
Taenia solium, T. saginata,
Diphyllobothrium latum
Eating raw or undercooked
meat or fish
Abdominal pain, anemia,
cysticercosis
Thorough cooking or deep
freezing of meat and fish
Fasciolopsiasis,
Fasciolopsis buski
Eating raw water plants with
encysted larvae
Diarrhea, abdominal pain,
weakness, body swelling
Brief treatment of plants in
boiling water
resulting in cysticercosis. Tapeworm disease is usually
acquired by eating inadequately cooked beef, pork, or
fish. Fasciolopsiasis is caused by the giant intestinal
fluke, a relatively short, nonsegmented hermaphoditic
flatworm usually acquired when a person uses their
teeth to peel certain edible aquatic plants having
encysted fluke larvae on their surface.
■
■
Describe the anatomy of a tapeworm.
How might you explain the development of epilepsy in
a Mexican man fond of eating traditional dishes made
from raw pork?
F U T U R E
D
C H A L L E N G E S
Defeating Diarrhea
evelopment of better preventive and treatment techniques for alimentary tract diseases has an urgency
arising from massive food and beverage production
and distribution methods. For example, in 1994, an
estimated 224,000 people became ill because a tanker truck used to
transport ice cream mix had previously carried liquid eggs. One
day’s production from a ground beef factory can yield hundreds of
thousands of pounds of hamburgers, which are soon sent to many
parts of this or other countries. The challenge is to better educate
the producers and transporters, to develop guidelines to help them
avoid contamination, and to utilize newly approved methods such
as meat irradiation.
Other challenges include the following:
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Exploit the power of molecular biology techniques to
produce effective vaccines against rotavirus, hepatitis C
virus, and bacterial pathogens. There is special need for
bacterial vaccines that can be administered by mouth and
evoke long-lasting mucosal immunity.
Find better ways of preventing and reversing resistance to
antibacterial medications. In the early 1980s, 0.6% of
Salmonella Typhimurium isolates were resistant to
ampicillin, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, streptomycin,
and sulfa drugs. Now, in some areas, over 30% of isolates
of this common salmonellosis cause are resistant to all
these medications.
Explore further the influence of global warming on
alimentary tract diseases. A study of Peruvian children by
Johns Hopkins University scientists found an 8% increase
in clinic visits for diarrhea with each 1°C increase in
temperature from the normal.
Explore new prevention and treatment options. Scientists
at the University of Florida have developed a genetically
engineered Streptococcus mutans that does not produce
lactic acid but readily displaces wild strains of the dental
decay causing bacterium. Researchers at the University of
Alberta have custom-designed a molecule that binds
circulating Shiga toxin, potentially preventing hemolytic
uremic syndrome. Others work on finding an effective
therapy for cryptosporidiosis.
STD Caused by
Multicellular Parasites
Two common STDs are caused by lice or mites, multicellular
skin parasites that are distributed worldwide and infect only
human beings. Nonsexual transmission can sometimes occur in
both instances. Besides the discomfort they cause, their chief
importance is to raise the possibility that other, unrecognized,
STDs might be present. Fortunately, neither of these parasites
are vectors of microbial diseases.
“Crabs” (Pubic Lice, Pediculosis Pubis)
Pediculosis pubis results from infestation by a species of louse.
Lice are wingless insects dependent for nutrition on sucking
blood from their host.
Symptoms
The principal symptoms are itching in the pubic area, and psychological stress from seeing the tiny lice and their eggs, called
nits, both visible to the unaided eyes. Sometimes, tiny spots of
blood are seen on the underclothing. In heavy infestations,
these lice may cling to hair of parts of the body other than the
pubic area, sometimes even the eyebrows and eyelashes.
Causative Agent
Pediculosis pubis is caused by Phthirus pubis, a slow-moving
insect resembling a microscopic crab (figure 25.22). The adult
form is approximately 2 mm in diameter; smaller juvenile forms
feed along with the adults. The females lay about six eggs daily,
attached tightly to body hairs. Hatching occurs in about 1 week,
and after several developmental stages, adulthood is reached in
about 2 weeks. Their life span is approximately 1 month.
Pathogenesis
Crab lice have piercing mouthparts with which they penetrate
the skin to obtain a blood meal. They usually feed for several
hours twice daily, leaving a tiny puncture site that can ooze a little blood. Symptoms are due to an allergic reaction to the feeding lice, and they do not appear for about a week after the
infestation begins. If the host becomes reinfested at a later date,
symptoms begin almost immediately. The intense itching leads
to scratching, which can in turn lead to secondary bacterial
infection.
Epidemiology
Phthirus pubis is slow moving and prefers to cling to the host’s
hair using its clawlike hooks. Since it can live only about 24 hours
away from a human host, transmission generally occurs during
close physical contact, mainly but not exclusively during sexual
intercourse. Fomites such as a towel or a theater seat can occasionally transmit the organisms.
Prevention and Treatment
Condoms do not prevent transmission. Several insecticides are
approved for treating pediculosis pubis, but they must be used
exactly as directed to avoid possible serious toxicity. Bedding
and clothing is washed in hot water, dry cleaned, or kept from
human contact for 3 days. Any sexual partners over the prior
month are examined and treated if needed. All are reexamined
after 1 week and retreated if necessary.
“Seven-Year Itch” (Scabies)
Scabies, also known as the “seven-year itch,” results from infestation with a mite, a tiny member of the arachnids, the class of
eight-legged creatures that includes spiders and scorpions. Other
mites, such as the house mouse mite, can transmit microbial diseases, and the dust mite causes allergic asthma. The scabies mite
is restricted to human beings, and it does not transmit microbial
diseases. Scabies occurs worldwide predominantly associated
with poverty and crowding, but anyone can contract the disease.
Symptoms
As with pediculosis pubis, the dominant symptom of scabies is
intense itching. Besides the pubic area, the space between the
fingers, the wrists, and the area under the breasts are often
involved. Rarely, the entire body below the neck is infested,
causing a scaly rash.
Causative Agent
The causative agent of scabies is Sarcoptes scabiei. The adult
female (figure 25.23a) is only 330 to 450 µm long; the male is
smaller. The organisms live on the surface of the human skin.
The females make burrows into the outer layers of epidermis
(figure 25.23b), forming tunnels where they lay several eggs
daily over a life span of 1 to 2 months. The tunnels are visible
to the unaided eyes as short, dark-colored wavy lines, sometimes
with a vesicle overlying the end containing the mite. The mites
can be scraped from the tunnels with a scalpel and identified
microscopically, the only way accurately to diagnose scabies. Sixlegged larvae hatch from the eggs and mature on the skin surface to the eight-legged form in about 2 weeks.
Pathogenesis
Usually it takes 2 to 6 weeks after contracting scabies for symptoms to appear. If following a cure scabies is contracted again,
however, symptoms appear in 1 to 4 days. Thus as with pediculosis pubis, the host’s allergic response to the mites and their
feces is largely responsible for symptoms of the disease. In the
usual individual with scabies, the number of mites is less than
100 and the disease goes away by itself in a matter of months.
In individuals with AIDS and other immunodeficiencies, however, millions of the organisms can be present, spreading over
much of the body and causing a severe rash with thickening and
peeling of the skin. Opportunistic bacterial pathogens, introduced by scratching, are a serious threat to patients with scabies.
Epidemiology
1 mm
Figure 25.22 Crab Louse, Phthirus pubis, is Usually Sexually
Transmitted It is not known to be a vector of infectious agents.
Scabies is usually transmitted by close contact with a person who
has the disease. In adults, transmission often occurs as a result
of sexual contact; in children, this is rarely so. Adults with the
disease should be checked for other possible STDs. Nonsexual
transmission of scabies occurs readily among children, especially
those less than five years old.
Skin surface
Epidermis
(a)
0.25 mm
(b)
Figure 25.23
Seven-Year Itch Mite, Sarcoptes scabiei, Commonly Sexually Transmitted
(a) Microscopic appearance in scrapings of a scabies burrow. (b) The female mite burrows into the outer layer of skin to
lay her eggs, causing an intensely itchy rash. Sarcoptes scabiei is not known to be a vector of infectious diseases.
Prevention and Treatment
Scabies is prevented by avoiding contact with those who have
scabies, their bedding, and their clothing. Sexual and other close
contacts within the month prior to diagnosis need to be examined and treated. Bedding and clothing is washed in hot water,
dry cleaned, or removed from human contact for 3 days. Insecticides suitable for use on the skin are effective against S. scabiei,
as is a sulfur-containing ointment, and ivermectin, an antiparasitic medication that paralyzes the organism. These medications
must be used exactly as prescribed in order to minimize the risk
of serious side effects.
The main characteristics of pediculosis pubis and scabies
are presented in table 25.17.
M I C R O C H E C K
The main importance of pubic lice and scabies is to
raise the possibility of other sexually transmitted
diseases. The possibility of secondary infection
introduced by scratching the involved area is another
important consideration.
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Explain why it takes 2 to 6 weeks for symptoms to
appear after first contracting scabies, but only a few
days after contracting the disease again.
What further testing should be considered once pubic
lice or scabies is diagnosed in an adult?
What evidence can you present that the immune system
plays a role in controlling scabies?
Why will condoms not prevent the spread of crab lice?
F U T U R E
F
C H A L L E N G E S
Getting Control of Sexually Transmitted Diseases
ew problems are as complicated as getting control of sexually transmitted diseases because of the psychological,
cultural, religious, and economic factors that are
involved, which vary from one population to another.
TABLE 25.17 Pediculosis Pubis and Scabies
Pediculosis Pubis (“Crabs”)
Scabies (“Seven-Year Itch”)
Symptoms
Intense itching, visible lice and eggs
Intense itching
Incubation period
Usually about 1 week
Usually about 1 month (2 to 6 weeks)
Causative agent
Phthirus pubis, a louse
Sarcoptes scabiei, a mite
Pathogenesis
Skin penetration by a blood-sucking insect;
allergic reaction to it
Burrowing into the epidermis by an arachnid;
allergic reaction to it
Epidemiology
Transmitted by sexual intercourse and other
close physical contact; sometimes by fomites
Same as for pediculosis pubis
Prevention and treatment
Avoidance of persons with the disease, their
clothing and bedding; treatment of contacts;
insecticide medications applied to the skin
Same as for pediculosis pubis.
Additional treatment options include ivermectin
and a sulfur ointment
Multicellular Parasites
A number of species of roundworms can infect the blood and
lymphatic vessels of humans. Mostly, they are contracted in
tropical countries, transmitted by biting insects. The adult
female worms live in the lymphatic vessels and deposit their offspring, tiny microfilaria, directly into the skin, lymphatics, or
bloodstream, where they can be identified in biopsies or blood
smears to make the diagnosis. The disorder these roundworms
produce is termed filariasis, and it may be asymptomatic or
produce dramatic symptoms. Two examples are elephantiasis,
marked swelling of a body part due to lymphatic obstruction,
caused by Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia sp., and river blindness, caused by Onchocerca volvulus.
Completely different kinds of parasitic worms live in the
blood vessels that carry venous blood from the intestines to the
liver, or in the veins of the bladder. They are responsible for the
disease schistosomiasis.
Schistosomiasis
Schistosomiasis, endemic in countries of Africa, Asia, the
Caribbean, and South America, involves more than 200 million
people worldwide and causes over 500,000 deaths annually.
About 400,000 individuals with the disease now live in the
United States, having emigrated from places where schistosomiasis is endemic. Schistosomiasis is caused not by roundworms,
but by flukes. Flukes are short, bilaterally symmetrical worms
that usually attach by one or more sucking discs.
Symptoms
Itching skin may occur at the time of exposure to fresh water containing the worm larvae. The itching subsides, and weeks later, a
generalized acute illness occurs, with fever, hives, cough, abdominal, joint and muscle pain, and diarrhea. Some people die during
this stage, but usually the symptoms subside and infected individuals are free of symptoms for a number of years. Then a chronic,
slowly progressing illness appears, with weakness, accumulation of
fluid in the abdominal cavity, and sometimes vomiting blood.
Causative Agent
Most cases of schistosomiasis are caused by three species of
flukes in the genus Schistosoma. Other genera of flukes that
infect humans are hermaphroditic, meaning that each worm has
both male and female reproductive organs, but Schistosoma
species have male and female worms. Schisto-soma means “splitbody,” referring to a deep groove running along the male’s
body in which he clasps his female partner. Schistosoma mansoni,
the only species established in the Americas, and the most common cause of schistosomiasis worldwide, is 10 to 20 mm long
and lives in the small veins of the human intestine. Because it
lives in blood vessels, it is called a blood fluke. The life cycle of
S. mansoni is shown in figure 28.13. The slender female worm
deposits ova that rupture through the tiny intestinal veins and
wall of the intestine to enter the lumen, ultimately to be eliminated with the feces. The ova hatch in fresh water, releasing ciliated larvae called miracidia which can live up to 6 hours. When
a miracidium encounters a certain species of snail, it penetrates
the snail’s body and multiplies asexually. Over about 6 weeks,
thousands of elongated fork-tailed larvae called cercariae
develop and leave their snail intermediate host to enter the
water. When they encounter a human being wading in the
water, they burrow through his or her skin, leaving their tails
behind them. These larvae proceed to enter the circulatory system, are carried by the bloodstream through the heart and
lungs, and eventually reach veins of the intestine, where they
mature, mate, and begin ova production.
(f) Ova that fail
to rupture
into the
intestine
are swept
to the
liver,
cause
scarring
Blood vessel
(d) Cercaria
from snail
penetrates
skin
Figure 28.13 Life Cycle of
Schistosoma mansoni (a) Eggs (ova)
from feces reach fresh water. (b) First larval
form (miracidium) hatches from ovum and
(c) infects snail. (d) Asexual reproduction in
body of snail and transformation into
another larval form (cercaria). (e) Cercariae
break out of snail and penetrate human
skin.Tail left behind, larva enters capillary, is
carried by bloodstream to intestinal veins,
and develops into mature fluke. (f) Ova
deposited, break into the intestine or are
swept to the liver by the blood.
(c) Snail
(e) Larvae from
skin capillaries
mature in
intestinal vein and
produce ova
(b) Miracidium
(a) Ovum
Eggs
Pathogenesis
Many of the cercariae die upon entering the skin, causing an
inflammatory and immune response that becomes more and
more intense with each exposure to the parasites. Each skin penetration by the schistosomes causes an itchy skin rash that gradually subsides. Weeks later, when the mature worms begin to
deposit their ova, a generalized illness occurs, probably due to
circulating schistosomal antigens reacting with antibodies.
Although some people die from the reaction, usually it subsides
within several months. Unfortunately, the worms continue to
deposit hundreds of ova per day over a lifetime that can exceed
a quarter century. Perpetuation of the species depends on ova
staying close to the intestine, where an intense inflammatory
response liquefies the tissue and allows them to rupture into the
intestinal lumen. The spine on the ovum probably helps hold
them in place, but many are swept away by the bloodstream to
the liver. The same inflammatory response to the ova occurs in
the liver, causing gradual destruction of liver cells and their
replacement with scar tissue. The end result is malnutrition and
a buildup of pressure in the abdominal veins and connecting
veins in the esophagus. Fluid accumulates in the abdominal cavity (figure 28.14), and hemorrhage occurs if the engorged
esophageal veins rupture.
Swimmer’s itch is a schistosomal disease that is common
across the United States. The disease is characterized by an itchy
rash caused by cercariae of schistosomes of wild birds and other
animals. The cercariae penetrate the skin of swimmers and then
die. These schistosomes are otherwise harmless, since they are
unable to complete their life cycle in humans.
Epidemiology
extensive contamination of water by human feces, and a suitable snail intermediate host. Farmers and people who fish or
wade in fresh water are at high risk for the disease. Large irrigation projects to enhance agriculture have extended the
range of the disease. Schistosomiasis cannot be contracted in
continental United States because there is no appropriate snail
intermediate host.
Prevention and Treatment
Preventing schistosomiasis depends on avoiding skin exposure
to fresh water contaminated with the miracidia, preventing
untreated human feces from entering fresh water, treatment of
cases of the disease, and measures, both chemical and biological, to control the snail intermediate hosts. Promising synthetic
peptide and DNA vaccines are under development. Effective
medications are available that kill the parasites in disease victims.
The main features of schistosomiasis are presented in
table 28.9.
TABLE 28.9 Schistosomiasis
Symptoms
Acutely: fever, hives, cough, abdominal, joint, and
muscle pain.These symptoms subside and after years
are replaced by generalized weakness and swelling
of the abdomen
Incubation period
Usually 2 to 6 weeks
Causative agents
Most cases are caused by three species of Schistosoma,
the most prevalent being S. mansoni. The male
schistosome has a longitudinal slit in its body in which
he clasps the female. Perpetuation of the life cycle
depends on rupture of their eggs into the lumen of the
intestine from the tiny intestinal veins where the
adults live.The eggs hatch in fresh water, releasing a
free-swimming miracidium that penetrates into the
flesh of the snail intermediate host. In the snail, the
organism multiplies and differentiates into forked-tail
cercariae that leave the snail and can infect humans
by penetrating their skin
Pathogenesis
Inflammatory and immune response to skin
penetration by the cercariae causes intense itching.
Allergic reaction to released schistosomal antigens as
the worms mature and begin depositing ova causes
the acute illness. Chronic malnutrition and swelling of
the abdomen result from liver damage caused by
ova that fail to penetrate into the intestinal lumen,
and are carried to the liver by the bloodstream
Epidemiology
Distribution of the disease is favored by large
bodies of shallow fresh water, extensive contamination
of the water with human feces, and a suitable snail
intermediate host. Farmers, people who fish, and
children who wade in fresh water at high risk
Prevention and
treatment
Prevention depends on proper disposal of human
feces, identifying and treating infected patients, and
measures to control the snail intermediate host.
Praziquantel is effective treatment
Transmission occurs in northern and eastern South America,
parts of the Caribbean, much of the African continent, parts of
the Middle and Far East, Philippines, Southeast Asia, China,
and Japan. The distribution depends on abundant fresh water,
Figure 28.14
Child with Schistosomiasis Notice the distended abdomen,
probably due to inflammatory enlargement of the liver and spleen. Later in the
development of the disease the abdomen will fill with fluid, the result of scarring that
obstructs the flow of blood throught the liver.
M I C R O C H E C K
The health and economic burden of multicellular
parasite infections challenges that of malaria. The
complex life cycle of Schistosoma mansoni provides a
number of possibilities for attacking schistosomiasis.
■
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Trace the life cycle of Schistosoma mansoni.
How long would it take S. mansoni to become extinct
if snail-eating fish eliminated the intermediate host?