Fascioloides magna “Giant Deer Fluke” Different behavior and pathology in different hosts.
Fascioloides magna “Giant Deer Fluke” Deer and Elk (normal hosts)—Liver migration, then matures in thin-walled fibrous cysts connected with bile ducts. (Well tolerated; eggs shed in feces).
Fascioloides magna “Giant Deer Fluke” Cattle, bison and swine—Liver migration, then encapsulation in thick-walled, closed cysts and no eggs are shed!
Fascioloides magna “Giant Deer Fluke” Sheep and goats: extensive, uninterrupted hepatic migration with out encapsulation; usually fatal; one fluke can kill a sheep or goat!
Pathology Pathology in C. sinensis and D. dendriticum: distended bile ducts and erosion of epithelium lining, but no secondary pathology like in F. hepatica!
Treatment Praziquantel (except for F. hepatica). Rafoxanide: is the drug of choice for F. hepatica!
Diagnosis Look for eggs in feces! But hard to diagnose (why?). SPURIOUS INFECTIONS!
Aquatic Vegetation Water Chestnuts
Pickled Fish
Digestive Tract Trematodes
Fasciolopsis buski Humans, pigs Orient Large (7.5 cm) Life cycle similar to Fasciola
Pathology and Symptoms Severity depends on worm burden Irritation Excess mucous secretion Ulceration, hemorrhage, Abscess Obstruction Chronic diarrhea Sensitization to worm metabolites Leukocytosis Anemia Eosinophilia Nausea/diarrhea Edema of face and intestinal wall Death
Treatment Praziquantel
Epidemiology Who gets infected? Rural to semi-urban areas School age children Prevalence 57% China 25% Taiwan 50% Bangladesh 60% India 10% Thailand
Epidemiology How do you get fasciolopsiasis? Ingest metacercariae Commercially raised aquatic plants Water chestnut Water caltrop Water hyacinth Water lotus Water lily Watercress
Epidemiology Lack of regulation on food industry Food preparation Sanitation (sewage) Night soil Pigs Habitat Food
Order Plagiorchiformes Family Troglotrematidae: these are oval thick flukes with a spiny tegument and dense vitellaria. Parasites of lungs, intestine, nasal passages, cranial cavities, and various ectopic locations.
Nanophyetus salmincola Fish Eating Mammal (Birds) Freshwater Snail Salmonid fish
Nanophyetus salmincola Northwest N. America Northeast Asia Crypts of the small intestine Human infections 98% prevalence in Siberian villages Pathology
Nanophyetus salmincola Salmon poisoning Highly pathogenic Neorickettsia helminthoeca Rickettsia Intracellular bacterium Typhus Nanophyetus salmincola is a vector for Neorickettsia helminthoeca.
Nanophyetus salmincola Disease High Fever Edema of face Vomiting Diarrhea Death in 10 days to 2 weeks.
Lung Flukes Paragonimus bronchiolar lumen and peribronchial tissues Antigenic Become encapsulated granuloma
Paragonimiasis Paragonimus 9 species in Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Central, North and South America Paragonimus westermani
Life cycle of Paragonimus
Paragonimus westermani 1st Int. Host Freshwater snails Streams Rice paddies Melanoides tuberculata
Paragonimus cercaria
Paragonimus westermani 2nd Int. Hosts: Potamon Rice Paddies Eriocheir Streams Larvae develop in brackish water
Paragonimus kellicotti Crayfish serve as 2nd IH in North America. Metacercariae are found in the heart.
Paragonimus A number of birds and mammals are know to serve as PH! Guinea pigs are known to serve as PARATENIC HOSTS for Paragonimus spp. in South America!
Paragonimus spp.
Paragonimus westermani Definitive Hosts
Paragonimus kellicotti Definitive Hosts
Chest roentgenogram of a patient with North American paragonimiasis
Pathology and Symptoms Juveniles Asymptomatic Adults Tissue damage Ciliated epithelium Inflammatory response Worms become encapsulated Fibrosis (Granuloma) Fibroblasts, eosinophils, lymphocytes Chest pain, dry cough, rusty sputum, dyspnea etc. Loss of lung function Ectopic infections Eggs Fibrosis
Normal bronchiole Worm pair
Plain skull film of a patient with chronic cerebral paragonimiasis
Diagnosis Look for eggs In ________________ Or in ______________ 85 X 50 μm
Treatment Praziquantel
Epidemiology How do people get infected? Infective stage? Mechanism?
Epidemiology Rice Paddies
STRIGEOID TREMATODES - trematodes that inhabit the small intestine of birds and mammals Alaria spp. Many species of Alaria occur in the small intestine of carnivores. Alaria canis in dogs. Alaria americana in foxes. Alaria mustelae in mink and weasels. Alaria taxideae in badgers
Morphology of Adult Alaria Body is divided into 2 regions. Three suckers are present Common genital pore is posterior.
Life Cycle of Alaria LIFE CYCLE is unusual in that 3 or 4 hosts may be involved. 1. Adults in small intestine of carnivore definitive host. 2. Eggs in feces hatch in water releasing miracidia that penetrate snail first intermediate host. 3. Cercariae released from snail penetrate a tadpole second intermediate host and transform into an unencysted stage called the Mesocercaria. 1 2 3
Life Cycle of Alaria 4. If tadpole is eaten by frogs, snakes, or mice the mesocercariea can serve in these peratenic hosts and mesocercariae undergo no further development. 5. Carnivore becomes infected by eating tadpole or paratenic host. 5 4
Life Cycle of Alaria 6. The mesocercariae penetrate the intestine, burrow through the diaphragm, and reach the lungs. Here they become metacercariae. 7. Metacercariae migrate up the respiratory tree and are swallowed. Adults in the carnivore's intestine. 6 & 7
Life Cycle of Alaria In one species, the mesocercariae can be transmitted to juvenile definitive hosts through the milk of the mother! When a lactating cat ingests mesocercariae, they disseminate throughout the tissues and are transmitted through the milk of the mother to the offspring!
Pathology of Alaria infections PATHOLOGY - Adult parasites cause severe damage to the small intestine of the carnivore. HUMAN INFECTION – few cases involved infection with mesocercariae! Most cases involved mesocercariae
We had two cases in Asian American men from Chinatown in San Francisco!
What did they eat?
Frog Legs
Dr. Kevin Kazacos
Bullfrog Over 70% of them were infected with Alaria sp.!
Alaria sp. in bullfrog leg muscles
Pathology of Alaria infections PATHOLOGY - Adult parasites cause severe damage to the small intestine of the carnivore. HUMAN INFECTION – few cases involved infection with mesocercariae! Most cases involved mesocercariae migrating to the eye One fatal case occurred in Canada from ingestion of poorly cooked frogs! Mesocercariae were identified in nearly every organ at autopsy. Photo shows mesocercaria in lung.
Blood Flukes (Schistosomes) Infect mammals, and birds. Live in the mesenteric veins (most species); some in urinary plexus veins, nasal veins, and dorsal aorta.
Blood Flukes Veins Mesenteric veins Anterior (superior) Small intestine Posterior (inferior) Large intestine Urinary bladder
Schistosoma Small elongate 1-2 cm Dioecious Gynecophoric canal Male helps female eat
Schistosomiasis Major Parasitic disease, with 200-300 million people infected. many are school age children
Schistosomiasis Schistosoma Bilharzia Egyptian papyri Egyptian mummies 1850 Theodor Bilharz Egyptian papyri Egyptian mummies Joshua’s curse on Jericho 1800 Napoleon’s army
Species that infect humans Schistosoma japonicum Anterior mesenteric veins Schistosoma mansoni Posterior mesenteric veins Schistosoma haematobium Veins draining the urinary bladder Schistosoma intercalatum Intestinal schistosomiasis in Africa Schistosoma mekongi Small intestine like S. japonicum (Vietnam)
} Species Schistosoma japonicum Schistosoma mansoni Big three! Anterior mesenteric veins Schistosoma mansoni Posterior mesenteric veins Schistosoma haematobium Veins draining the urinary bladder Schistosoma intercalatum Intestinal schistosomiasis in Africa Schistosoma mekongi Small intestine like S. japonicum (Vietnam) Big three!
Schistosomiasis Estimates 1947: 114,000,000 1968: 118,000,000 1972: 125,000,000 1979: 200,000,000 Current: More than 200,000,000
Why the Increase? Due to irrigation farming and building of dams to facilitate irrigation. Snail habitat has expanded and increases exposure to people.
Life Cycle Schistosomes live in blood vessels that drain tissues such as the bladder, S. intestine and L. intestine. They produce eggs within blood vessels!
Eggs have spines, no operculum, also have prominent secretory glands! S. mansoni S. japonicum S. haematobium
Eggs Eggs are shed to outside through excrement (feces or urine).
Chemical Signaling with arginine Life Cycle Chemical Signaling with arginine Adults can live 20-30 years 3 weeks Release Eggs in 5-8 Weeks
Distribution
Distribution
How do the eggs get out of the body?
How do the eggs get out of the body? Female worm leaves the male and migrates down to lay eggs.
How do the eggs get out of the body? Female worm leaves the male and migrates down to lay eggs. Egg spines help the eggs work their way into the tissue, but the miracidia also produces enzymes.
Granuloma can move with the eggs by peristaltic action. Immune response Granuloma (Eosinophils, macrophages, neutrophils) Granuloma can move with the eggs by peristaltic action.
Schistosomiasis Big picture the key to schisto pathology is the eggs not the adult worms!