Tapeworms Flashcards
Cestodes
Tapeworms that have hooks and suckers on their mouth
Only seen in raw/undercooked pork/beef/fish
Taenia saginata and taenia sodi
Both are tapeworms
- saginata = mild diarrhea and ab pain or asymptomatic presentation. Seen in undercooked beef
- sodium = mild diarrhea and ab pain (never asymptomatic). Seen in undercooked pork
Saginata cant be spread once infected in humans (dead-end host)
Solium can be spread once infected in humans (fecal-oral route)
solium (not saginata) produces “cysticercosis” which is where cysts from solium are found in muscles/skin/organs and brain
Diphyllobothrium Latum
Fish tapeworm that is ONLY seen in undercooked or raw fish
- larvae look like gains of rice (plerocercoids)
Can get up to 10 meters long when fully adult and can release up to 1 million eggs/day in intestines
Symptoms:
- mild GI discomfort and weight loss
- B12 deficiency and megaloblastic anemia (absorbs B12 vitamin, so host is deficient naturally)
Echinococcus granulosus
Dog/sheep tapeworm that produce hydatid cysts
- cysts when they grow, can get massive (apple-cantaloupe sized) so symptoms are usually only present due to this mass effect of growth
- *even though the cysts are most commonly in the liver and lungs (can be seen anywhere though), you CANNOT biopsy liver or lungs for conformation.**
- this can burst the cysts and cause anaphylactic shock due to massive IgE reactions
Trematodes
Are leaf-shaped flukes that are hermaphrodites
also called “liver flukes” and the usual host is snails.
Colonorchis sinensis
A fluke that is found in undercooked/raw fish
- is endemic to Asia, but incidence is slowly increasing worldwide
Encrypt in stomach and gut and eventually migrate to the biliary tree.
- mature in the biliary tree and parasites damage bile ducts
**infection dramatically increases the risk of developing cholangiocarcinoma
Schistosoma
Long worms that are 6-17mm that live over 10 years in the venous system
- “valentines day worm” since male and female worms stay with each other
3 subtypes:
1) mansoni
- inferior mesenteric veins of the large intestines lives in
- has a “lateral spine” in its ovum
2) japonicum
- inferior and superior mesenteric veins of the small intestines
- has no spine in its ovum
3) haematobium
- urinary bladder and Urinary tract veins
- *high risk of developing squamous cell carcinoma if chronic infection
- has “terminal spine” on ovum
Symptoms of schistosoma
intially start in the veins and either get lodged into the liver or gets excreted out of the host
- *produces granulomatous reaction and fibrosis of the liver and portal HTN**
- always shows Hepatosplenomegaly
Symptoms: (rest of symptoms are 2-12 weeks after exposure)
- extreme pruritis (within 1 hr)
- fever/chills/malaise
- diarrhea
- “katakana/snail fever”
Diagnosis:
- eosinophila and past history
- see eggs on microscopy to confirm