HELMINTH PART II
Download
Report
Transcript HELMINTH PART II
HELMINTH PART II
DR SAMUEL AGUAZIM
CESTODE
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
TAPE WORM
TAENIA SAGINATA
INTERMEDIATE HOST: CATTLE
DEFINITIVE HOST: HUMANS
FORMS/TRANSMISSION
- Rare beef containing cysticerci is ingested
Interstinal tapeworm( affects small intestine)
Asymptomatic to vague abdominal pain
Chronic indigestion
Diagnosis: eggs or proglottids in feces
Treatment: praziquantel
TAENIA SOLIUM
• INTERMEDIATE HOST: SWINE
• DEFINITIVE HOST: HUMANS
• Humans can be both intermediate and
definitive host.
• Forms/transmission
• Intestinal tape worm
• Raw pork containing the cysticerci ingested by
humans
• CYSTICERCOSIS(INTERMEDIATE HOST): Humans
ingest eggs directly.
• Water and food contaminated with eggs auto
inoculation.
• disease/organ involvement/symptoms
• -intestinal tapeworm( same as taenia saginata)
• Larvae penetrate intestinal wall and migrate via the
blood to brain, heart, lungs and eye
• Diagnosis: eggs or proglottids in feces
• Treatment: praziquantel…
T. SOLIUM
T. SAGINATA
MOT: INGESTION OF CYSTICERCUS (larval worm)
IN PORK/BEEF PRODUCTS
CT Scan of Cysticercosis
DIPHYLLBOTHRIUM LATUM
•
•
•
•
•
•
INTERMEDIATE HOST: CRUSTACEANS
DEFINITIVE HOST: HUMANS, MAMMALS
HUMANS can be both IH & DH
Forms/transmission
SPARGANUM
Drinking pond water with copepods crustaceans
carrying the larval forms
• Intestinal tape worm
• Rare, eating raw prickled fish containing
sparganum
FISH TAPEWORM
Diphyllobothrium latum
longest tapeworm found in man
3-10 meters with more than 3000 proglottids.
Fish tapeworm:
Scolex has two
elongated sucking
grooves; no circular
suckers or hooks
Fish tapeworm:
Oval eggs have
an operculum
(lidlike opening)
at one end
MOT: INGESTION OF PLEROCERCOID LARVAE/SPARGANUM
IN INFECTED FISH
Copepod
• Disease/organ involvement/symptoms
• Sparganosis: larvae penetrate intestinal wall and
encyst
• Interstinal tape worm in the small intestine that
absorb vitamin B12 leading to PERNICIOUS
ANEMIA
• DIAGNOSIS: Eggs or proglottids in feces
• Biopsy for sparganosis
• Treatment: praziquantel
Echinococcus granulosus( dog tape
worm)
• INTERMEDIATE HOST: HERBIVORES
• DEFINITIVE HOST: Carnivores in sheep- raising
area
• Humans are intermediate hosts
• Forms/ transmission
• Ingestion of eggs
• Larvae can migrate to anywhere( liver is the
most common place)
Dog
tapeworm.
Scolex has four
suckers and a
double circle of
hooks.
• Disease: HYDATID CYST DISEASE
• Liver and lungs where cyst containing brood capsules
develop
• Eggs are ingested by sheep (and humans) and hatch
larvae in the gut that migrate in the blood to various
organs, especially the liver and brain.
• Larvae form one large, unilocular hydatid cyst
containing many minor pathogen and daughter cysts.
• Diagnosis- imaging and serology
• Treatment: surgery and albendazole
Echinococcus multilocularis
•
•
•
•
•
•
IH: RODENTS
DH: CANINES & CATS
HUMANS are intermediate hosts
Forms/transmission
Ingestion of eggs
Larvae can migrate to anywhere( liver is the
most common place)
• Disease: ALVEOLAR HYDATID CYST DISEASE
• Much more serious than echinococcus
granulosus : cyst metastasis: exogenous
budding cyst
• Diagnosis: difficult: MRI OR CT
• TREATMENT: SURGICAL RESECTION
E. Multilocularis multilocular, liver
Hymenolepis nana (dwarf tapeworm)
most frequently
diagnosed cestode
infection in theUS
small tapeworm
infects children
Reservoirs: Rodents
vague abdominal pain
enteritis
Diagnosis :eggs
DOC: Nicolsamide
MOT: INGESTION OF EGGS/ CYSTICERCOID
IN INSECTS
Spirometra
sparganosis
MOT: ingest polluted
water raw or inadequately
cooked flesh of
snakes or frogs
southeastern region of the
United States
east Asia (China, Japan,
and Korea)
southeast Asia (Malaysia,
India, and the Philippines)
Sparganosis
•
•
•
•
•
•
subcutaneous edema
Muscles
Eyes
urogenital system
abdominal viscera
central nervous system
Sparganosis
• Treatment
Surgical removal of sparganum larvae
Praziquantel
no available treatment for proliferative
sparganosis
Trichuris trichiura
Disease: Whipworm infection
Characteristics: Intestinal nematode. The
characteristic of “whiplike” apperance of the
adult worm.
Life cycle:
• Humans ingest eggs, which develop into
adults in gut.
• Eggs are passed in feces into soil, where they
embryonate, ie, become infectious.
Trichuris trichiura
Transmission:
• More than 500 million infected.
• Transmitted by food or water contaminated with
soil containing eggs.
• Humans are the only hosts. Occurs worldwide,
especially in the tropics.
Pathogenesis:
• Worm in gut usually causes little damage.
• The whipworm infects about 2 million children in
the U.S.
• Causes rectal pruritis and tenesmus, which often
results in rectal prolapse.
Infectious Diseases
Whipworm – Rectal Prolapse
Infectious Diseases
Whipworm – Rectal Prolapse
Laboratory Diagnosis:
• Eggs visible in feces.
• The egg is barrel-shape with a plug at each
end, in the stool.
Treatment: Mebendazole.
Prevention: Proper disposal of human waste
FOOTBALL SHAPE EGG
Trichuris trichiura eggs, a typical barrel shape two polar plugs, that are
unstained
LOA LOA
Disease: Loiasis.
Characteristics: Tissue nematode.
Transmission: Transmitted by deer flies. Humans are
the only definitive hosts. No animal reservoir.
Endemic in central and west Africa.
Pathogenesis: Hypersensitivity to adult worms
causes “swelling” in skin. Adult worm seen crawling
across conjunctivas
Laboratory Diagnosis:
• Microfilariae visible on blood smear.
Treatment: Diethylcarbamazine.
Prevention: Deer fly control.
Onchocerca
Disease: Onchocerciasis (river blindness).
Characteristics: Tissue nematodes.
Onchocerca
Transmission: Transmitted by female black flies. Humans are
the only definitive hosts. No animal reservoir. Endemic
along rivers of tropical Africa and Central America.
Pathogenesis:
Microfilariae in eye ultimately can cause
blindness. Adults induce inflammatory nodules in skin.
Laboratory Diagnosis: Microfilariae visible in skin biopsy,
not in blood.
Treatment: Ivermectin affects microfilariae, not adult
worms. Suramin for adult worms.
Prevention: Black fly control and ivermectin
RIVER BLINDNESS/SOWDA
trapped microfilaria in the cornea, choroid, iris and anterior
chambers, leading to photophobia, lacrimation and blindness
Toxocara canis
Disease:
Visceral larva migrans.
Characteristics: Nematode larvae cause
disease.
Life cycle:
• Toxocara eggs are passed in dog feces
• Ingested by humans.
• Hatch into larvae in small intestine
• Larvae enter the blood and migrate to organs,
especially liver, brain, and eyes, where they are
trapped and die.
Transmission:
• ingestion of eggs in food or water contaminated with
dog feces.
• Dogs are definitive hosts. Humans are dead end hosts.
Pathogenesis: Granulomas form around dead larvae.
Granulomas in the retina can cause blindness
Laboratory Diagnosis: Larvae visible in tissue.
Serologic tests useful.
Treatment: Diethylcarbamazine
Prevention: Dogs should be dewormed
Tissue nematode
Dracunculus
Disease: Dracunculiasis.
Characteristics: Tissue nematode.
Dracunculiasis
Transmission:
•
•
•
•
copepods in drinking water.
Humans are definitive hosts.
Many domestic animals are reservoir hosts.
Endemic in tropical Africa, Middle East, and India
Pathogenesis:
• Adult worms in skin cause inflammation and
ulceration.
Treatment:
• Niridazole.
• Extraction of worm from skin ulcer.
Prevention:
• Purification of drinking water
Dracula ate an infected
crustacean and got an ulcer
with protruding worm.
He removed the worm by
winding it around a stick.
Strongyloides
Disease: Strongyloidiasis
Characteristics: Intestinal nematode.
• NOTE: the only helminth to secrete
larvae (and not eggs) in feces
Transmission: Filariform larvae in soil penetrate skin. Endemic
in the tropics.
Pathogenesis:
• Little effect in immunocompetent persons.
• In immunocompromised persons, massive superinfection
can occur accompanied by secondary bacterial infections.
Laboratory Diagnosis: Larvae visible in stool. Eosinophilia
occurs.
Treatment: Thiabendazole.
Prevention: Proper disposal of human waste. Use of
footwear
Memory Tool
• The strongman (Strongyloides) is brought
down by a larvae penetrating his skin causing
pulmonary distress and superinfection. Poor
strongman!
ANCYLOSTOMA BRAZILIENSE
ANCYLOSTOMA CANINUM
• DOG and CAT Hook worm
• Forms/ Transmission.
• Filariform larvae penetrate intact skin but cannot
mature in humans
• Disease/organ most affected
• Cutaneous larvae migrans: intense itching
• Tunnels through tissue
• Diagnosis: clinical signs
• Treatment- ivermectin