Parasitology 7: Platyhelminthes Flashcards
You find a spirurid species that you have never seen before. 1 thing that you can say about this parasite?
Parasite is transmitted by an arthropod
A dog in you practice needs a blood transfusion. The only compatible donor available presents MF in blood (positive to heartworm). Can you go ahead with the transfusion? Why?
Yes
because MF is NOT the infective stage
What are examples of Platyhelminthes?
Tapeworms
Flukes
(FLAT worms)
What are the general characteristics tapeworms and flukes?
Flat mostly
Hermaphrodites
Definitive host diagnosis: eggs
AT LEAST 1 INTERMEDIATE HOST
Tape worm
segmented?
where are the found?
organs?
host?
pathogenic?
Segmented, often long
Adults in host GI tract, almost always small intestine
Worms have no intestine, absorb nutrients across surface
At least 1 intermediate host
Adults often nonpathogenic but people repelled
Adulat tapeworm are ___________ into regions
Divided
Scolex (holdfast)
-sucks and/or hooks
-attaches to gut wall
Neck
-region of cell division, gives rise to proglottids
Proglottids (segments
-segments mature as they travel down the chain
-oldest segments at the posterior end
Each segment has at least one set of all reproductive organs of both sexes
Classified as?
Maturation?
Common tapeworms shed gravid _____
Classified as
* Immature
* Mature
* Gravid: contains fully developed eggs
Maturation occurs as moves down the chain
Common tapeworms shed gravid SEGMENTS
What is the general term for larval tapeworm?
Metacestode
INFECTIVE STAGE
Are the few or many different morphologic types of larval tapeworms?
Many
What is the general life cycle of Cestoda?
Intermediate host eats eggs in environment
Definitive host eats intermediate hosts
Common tapeworms
Family Taeniidae?
Family other?
Another tapeworm group has _ intermediate hosts
Family Taeniidae
* Vertebrates are definitive and intermediate hosts
Family other
* Invertebrate intermediate host, vertebrate definitive host
Another tapeworm group has 2 intermediate hosts
Family Taeniidae
segments?
larval stages?
eggs passed from the host in segments?
Segments square to rectangular in shape
In general, larval stages (metacestode) most
important, adults have little significance
Eggs passed from the host in segments
* Usually infection recognized from seeing segments
* Eggs seen infrequently in fecal exams
* Look the same for all family members
* Fecal flotation often negative because eggs in the segments
How big are Cestoda eggs?
40micrometers
half the size of ascarid eggs
What are the 2 common/mportant kinds of Taeniidae?
cysticercus
Hydatid
Cysticercus
bladder?
production?
disease?
- Fluid-filled bladder
- Inverted, invaginated scolex
- 1 Cysticercus produce 1 adult tapeworm in the DH
- Infection/disease called cysticercosis
Hydatid
bladder?
attachment?
cysts?
production?
disease?
- Fluid-filled bladder lines by a delicate parasitic membrane
- Heads detach from wall into cyst fluid
- Secondary cysts are formed as invaginations on the walls
- 1 hydatid produces up to thousands adult tapeworms
- Infection/disease called hydatidosis
How do you remember Taenia Taeniaeformis
CATS MOUSE
- Common tapeworm of hunting cats
- Eggs shed in segments
- IH: Rodent, metacestode (Strobilocercus) in liver
Host do you remember Taenia pisiformis
CANID RABBIT
- Definitive host: canids
- Egg shed in segments
- IH: Rabbits
How do you diagnosis Taenia taeniaeformis and T. pisiformis?
See segments
Fecal flotation
* Quite insensitive
* Centrifugal flotation only detects 25% of the
infections (Little et al., 2015)
Genus Echinococcus
size adults?
Metacestode stage?
Very small adults: 3-6 mm
Metacestode stage: Hydatid
* Undergoes asexual reproduction
* Multiple scoleces formed
* Potential for thousand of scolices to form
Echinococcus multilocularis
location?
life cycle?
Northern temperate zone: northern US, Canada,
central Europe
Life cycle
* Definitive host: Fox, sometimes dog, rarely cat
* Intermediate host: Small rodents, including lagomorphs
* Humans, dogs, and pigs: aberrant or accidental IH
* Metacestode: AVEOLAR CYST (multilocular cyst)
Echinococcus multiocularis Clinical importance?
*Sometimes hydatid forms in people or dogs
*Alveolar echinococcosis or alveolar hydatid
disease
*Difficult to remove surgically because grows
invasively
*New focus of infection in Ontario and Alberta
*Recently found in Virginia and Vermont
Taenia spp. what is the definitive host?
Human
Taenia saginata
size?
species?
location?
5-15m
human/cattle
cysticerci in bovine muscle 0.6mm
Taenia solium
species?
location?
human/pig
cysticerci in pork
Taenia solium and T. saginata clinical importance from adults?
- Mild abdominal discomfort
- Occur worldwide (very uncommon in the US)
- Slaughter inspection
- Cysticerci killed by cooking or periods of freezing
- Endemic cases in US rare
Taenia solium
what happens when human ingest eggs?
human disease?
symptoms?
what continent is it prevalent?
- When humans ingest eggs they get cysticerci
- Causes human disease called cysticercosis or
neurocysticercosis - Headache, confusion, seizures
- Leading cause of adult onset epilepsy globally
- Major problem in Latin America
- Cases has occurred in the US – origin?