6.8 Cestodes Flashcards

1
Q

What are cestodes

A

tapeworms

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2
Q

what is the head of a tapeworm called? what about the chain segments

A

the scolex; the strobia

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3
Q

Cestodes are typically highly host-specific/nonspecific

A

host-specific

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4
Q

what is the effect of cestodes on the intermediate host vs definitive host

A

usually not pathogenic as adults in definitive hosts and do NOT replicate in the definitive host but will cause pathogenesis in the intermediate host

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5
Q

what are the 3 body regions of a tapeworm (cestode)

A
  • scolex (head)
  • neck
  • stroblia (chain of segments)
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6
Q

T/F cestodes are hermaphroditic

A

T

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7
Q

Do cestodes have a digestive tract/mouth? Explain

A

No -> they absorb nutrients from the environment like an inside-out GI tract

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8
Q

what is the purpose of the scolex

A

embeds in the mucosa

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9
Q

what is the morphology of all cestode eggs? how are they laid?

A

hexacanth (meaning 6 hooks); laid fully larvated (infectious), usually shed in feces or shed into the environment within degenerating segments

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10
Q

describe the morphology of the immature stages of cestodes

A

great variety depending on the type of intermediate host infected and the tapeworm group

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11
Q

how many intermediate hosts do most cestodes have

A

usually only one; aquatic host tapeworms may have a second host

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12
Q

what are some different morphological arrangements of immature cestodes?

A
  • cysticercus
  • cysticercoid
  • coenurus
  • hydatid cyst
  • cysticercoid
  • procercoid -> plerocercoid
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13
Q

what are the tapeworms with mammalian IH?

A

Taenia, Echinococcus

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14
Q

what are the tapeworms with arthropodan IH

A

Diphylidium, Monezia, Anoplocephala

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15
Q

what are the tapeworms with Crustacean IH

A

Diphyllobothrium

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16
Q

what type of immature stage exists in the following types of cestodes?

Mammalian IH:
- Taenia
- Echinococcus

Arthropodan IH:
- Diphylidium
- Anoplocephela
- Monezia

Crustacean IH:
- Diphyllobothrium

A

Mammalian IH:
- Taenia: CYSTICERCUS, COENURUS, STROBLIOCERCUS
- Echinococcus: HYDATID CYST

Arthropodan IH: CYSTICERCOID
- Diphylidium
- Anoplocephela
- Monezia

Crustacean IH: PROCERCOID -> PLEROCERCOID
- Diphyllobothrium

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17
Q

what is the only tapeworm with a direct life cycle

A

Hymenolepsis nana

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18
Q

what is the general indirect life cycle of a tapeworm

A

eggs in feces -> hexacanth embryo infects IH -> embryo migrates to site of development and transforms into infective form (ex. cysticercus) -> IH eaten by DH -> scolex of tapeworm attaches to gut and matures

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19
Q

tapeworms are usually named based on their DH or IH?

A

IH

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20
Q

most tapeworms involve what type of relationship between intermediate and definitive hosts

A

predator-prey

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21
Q

For Taenia pisiformis (Rabbit Tapeworm)
- what site do adult tapeworms infect and in what species
- what site do the larvae infect and in what form and in what species

A
  • adults in SI of dogs
  • larvae are cysticercus in rabbits
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22
Q

what is the name of the Rabbit Tapeworm

A

Taenia pisiformis

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23
Q

Describe the morphology of the Taenia pisiformis:
- scolex
- stroblia
- segments
- egg

A
  • scolex has 4 suckers and 2 rows of hooks
  • stroblia shiny, white, tapered, and up to 2 meters
  • single genital pore on each segment
  • radially striated shell (embryophore), found as single eggs
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24
Q

what is the site of development of Taenia pisiformis in the IH and how

A

in the liver or peritoneal cavity; forms a cysticercus (fluid-filled bladder with an invaginated scolex)

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25
Q

describe the Taenia pisiformis life cycle

A

hexacanth eggs released from segments into the environment and are ingested by rabbits -> hexacanth larva hatches and migrates to the liver or peritoneal cavity where it forms a cysticercus -> dog eats rabbit -> scolex in the cysticercus evaginates, attaches to the gut and starts forming a stroblia

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26
Q

what is the PPP for Taenia pisiformis

A

6-8 weeks

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27
Q

what is the pathogenesis of Taenia pisiformis in dogs

A

non-pathogenic

28
Q

how do we treat Taenia pisiformis in dogs

A
  • prevent hunting to block transmission
  • specific cestodicides
29
Q

What is the name of the rat tapeworm

A

Taenia taeniaeformis

30
Q

what are the IH and DH of Taenia taeniaformis

A

IH: rodents (especially rats and mice)
DH: felids

31
Q

what is the morphology of Taenia taeniaformis
- adults
- immature
- eggs

A
  • adults: scolex with 4 suckers and 2 hooks; stroblia up to 60cm long
  • strobliocercus
  • eggs are typical taeniid eggs
32
Q

where does Taenia taeniaformis develop in the
- IH
- DH

A

IH: liver
DH: SI

33
Q

what is the pathogenesis of Taenia taeniaformis in felids

A

no pathogenesis

34
Q

how do we prevent and treat Taenia taeniaformis

A
  • prevent hunting to block transmission
  • specific cestodicides
35
Q

what are the IH for Taenia crassiceps? DH?

A

foxes and groundhogs; dogs (zoonotic in people as well)

36
Q

when would Taenia crassiceps become a zoonotic threat

A

immunocompromised host

37
Q

what is the immature stage of Taenia crassiceps in the IH

A

budding cysticercus (tapioca mass)

38
Q

how do we treat Taenia crassiceps

A

prevent hunting to block transmission; specific cestodicides

39
Q

What is the name of the beef tapeworm

A

Taenia saginata

40
Q

what is the IH and DH of Taenia saginata

A

IH: cattle
DH: humans

41
Q

what is the immature stage of Taenia saginata in the IH and where

A

cysticercus in the flesh

42
Q

T/F Bovine cysticercosis (Taenia saginata) is reportable

43
Q

what are the IH and DH of Echinococcus granulosus and why do we care

A

IH: moose (liver)

DH: wolf/dog (SI)

ZOONOTIC

44
Q

describe the morphology of Echinococcus granulosus:
- adults
- immatures
- eggs

A
  • adults <1cm; stroblia only 3-4 segments; scolex has 4 suckers and 2 rows of hooks
  • immature stages are hydatid cysts
  • radially striated taeniid egg
45
Q

what is the pathogenesis of Echinococcus granulosus

A

hydatid cysts in humans can cause a space-occupying lesion leading to pressure necrosis; rupture causes anaphylactic shock

46
Q

How can you tell apart Taenia from Echinococcus eggs in dog feces

A

you cannot

47
Q

what are the IH and DH of Echinococcus multilocularis and why do we care

A

IH: rodents (liver and other organs)
DH: fox (SI)

Dangerous zoonotic threat!

48
Q

describe the morphology of Echinococcus multilocularis
- adults
- immatures
- eggs

A

adults: <1cm, only 3-4 segments in stroblia; scolex has 4 suckers and 2 rows of hooks

immatures: alveolar hydatid cyst (pieces can break off making it dangerous)

eggs: typical taeniid egg

49
Q

T/F we can distinguish Taenia eggs and Echinococcus eggs

50
Q

How do we treat zoonotic Echinococcus multilocularis and Echinococcus granulosus in humans

A

surgical removal and treatment with antihelmenthics

51
Q

what are the DH and IH of Diphylidium caninum

A

DH: dogs, cats, rarely humans
IH: fleas

52
Q

describe the appearance of adult Diphylidium caninum

A

scolex with 4 suckers and multiple rows of hooks; barrel shaped segments with pores on each side; stroblia up to 1/2m long

53
Q

what is the morphology of Diphylidium immature stages and eggs

A

immature stages:
- cysticercoid inside the body cavity of the flea

eggs: in packets, each with an unstriated embryophore

54
Q

what is the life cycle of Diphylidium caninum

A

eggs released into the environment -> liberated eggs ingested by flea larvae -> hexacanth embryo penetrates body cavity of insect forming cysticercoid -> adult flea ingested by dog -> scolex attaches to gut and stroblia matures

55
Q

what is the PPP of Diphylidium caninum

56
Q

what is the pathogenesis of Diphylidium in dogs

A

non-pathogenic

57
Q

how can we prevent and treat Diphylidium

A
  • specific cestodicides
  • flea control
58
Q

how can you tell apart Taenia segments from Diphylidium segments

A

have to rehydrate them to see the differences; the eggs are also different

59
Q

what is the IH and DH of Anoplocephela perfoliata

A

DH: equids
IH: free-living mites

60
Q

what is a characteristic feature of Anoplocephela

A

super short segments; scolex has lappets (bowtie)

61
Q

what is the pathogenesis of Anoplocephela in horses

62
Q

what is the appearance of Anoplocephela eggs in horses

A

hexacanth embryo within a pyriform apparatus (molar) -> whole egg looks like a chocolate covered cherry with the pit

63
Q

what are the IH and DH of Monezia sp.

A

IH: free-living mites on pasture
DH: ruminants

64
Q

how can we tell apart Monezia eggs from Anoplocephela eggs

A

species! (Anoplocephela for equids vs Monezia for ruminants)

65
Q

what are the IH and DH of Diphyllobothrium

A

IH (2): copepod (procercoid); fish (pleurocercoid)

DH: fish-eating mammals (zoonotic)

66
Q

what is the morphology of Diphyllobothrium latum:
- adults
- eggs

A

adults: stroblia can by many m long; scolex has grooves

eggs: operculate; yellow-brown; ciliated hexacanth embryo (coracdium)

67
Q

what is the pathogenesis of Diphyllobothrium latum

A

usually non-pathogenic but can cause pernicious anemia in predisposed humas