helminths. kingdom animalia sub-kingdom invertebrata i. phylum platyhelminthes - flatworms ii....

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Page 1: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

HelminthsHelminths

Page 2: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented
Page 3: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Kingdom AnimaliaSub-kingdom Invertebrata

• I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms

• II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms

• III. Phylum Annelida - segmented worms

• IV. Phylum Arthropoda

Page 4: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Phylum Platyhelminthes flatworms

A. Class Cestoda -tapeworms

 1. Taenia pisiformis. - head (scolex) and segments (proglottids) may be on;

separate slides. Label: scolex, suckers, hooks if present, proglottid, testes,

ovaries

B. Class Trematoda - Flukes

2. Clonorchis sinensis - liver fluke; Label: oral sucker, pharynx, intestines

(cecum), uterus, testes

3. Fasciolopsis buski - giant intestinal fluke

Label: mouth, ventral sucker, intestines (cecum), testes

4. Schistosoma mansoni female blood fluke; ventral sucker, ovary, mouth

C. Class Turbellaria - free-living flatworms, ie. not parasitic

5. Planaria spp. Label: pharynx, eyespots, gastrovascular cavity

Page 5: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

. Phylum Nematoda roundworms

6. Enterobius vermicularis female – pinworm; Label: mouth, pharynx

7. Ascaris lumbricoides - intestinal round worm- plastimount; Label: male, female

8.Necator americanus- American hookworm; Label: teeth, muscular pharynx, posterior bursa and rays (male)

9. Trichinella spiralis- threadworm encysted in muscle; Label: cyst, muscle, larva

Page 6: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Phylum Annelidasegmented worms

Class Hirudinea

10. Leech; Label: anterior sucker, mouth,

intestine, posterior sucker

Page 7: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Phylum Arthropoda

• Class Arachnia

• Class Insecta

Page 8: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Class Arachnia

11. Dermacentor spp.- tick; Label: head, thorax, abdomen, legs

12.Sarcoptes scabiei - itch mite; Label: mouth, legs, bristles on rear

legs, bristles on abdomen

13.Dermatophagoides spp.- dust mite; Label: thorax, legs,

abdomen

Page 9: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Class Insecta

14. Flea; Label: head, thorax, abdomen, legs

15.Pediculus humanis corporus - human body louse; Label:

abdomen, thorax, head, antennae, eyes, plates, legs

16.Pthirus pubis- crab louse; Label: thorax, abdominal segments,

eyes, legs, antennae

Page 10: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

TaxonomyTaxonomy

Phylum: Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)Phylum: Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)• Class: Cestodes (tapeworms)Class: Cestodes (tapeworms)

Pork tapeworm (Pork tapeworm (Taenia soliumTaenia solium)) Beef tapeworm (Beef tapeworm (Taenia saginataTaenia saginata) ) Fish tapeworm (Fish tapeworm (Diphyllobothrium latumDiphyllobothrium latum) )

Page 11: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Characteristics of Tapeworms

• Monoecious

• Missing an entire system

• Scolex: suckers, hooks, or grooves

• Segmented– proglottids

• Gravid proglottids• Strobilia• Uterine branches

Page 12: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Beef Tapeworm Scolex

Page 13: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pork Tapeworm Scolex

Page 14: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pork Tapeworm Scolex

Page 15: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pork Tapeworm Scolex

Page 16: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pork Tapeworm

• Uterine branches in proglottid

Page 17: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Beef Tapeworm

• Uterine branches in proglottid

Page 18: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pork and Beef Tapeworm Diseases

• 1. TAENIASIS (Pork and Beef)

• 2. CYSTICERCOSIS (Pork only)

Page 19: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                                  

Taenia

Page 20: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Tapeworms inside intestines

Page 21: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Taenia Egg

Page 22: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Taenia Egg

Page 23: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

CYSTICERCOSIS

Page 24: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Broadfish Tapeworm

• Operculated eggs contain ciliated coracidium.

• Copepods eat the coracidium.– They become procerocoid larvae

• Minnows eat the copepod.

• Predator fish eat the minnows.

• Humans eat the predator fish. – The infective stage is in the fish.

Page 25: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Broadfish Tapeworm

• The larvae are released from the cysts.

• They invade the intestines and mature.

• They attach by bilateral grooves called brothria.

• The proglottids are passed in the feces, and return to the water.

• They become embryonated and become operculated eggs.

Page 26: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Fish Tapeworm

Bilateral grooves

Page 27: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Fish Tapeworm

• Proglottids

Page 28: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Operculated Broadfish Tapeworm (Diphyllobothrium) egg.

Has a ciliated coracidium inside

Operculum

Knob

Page 29: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Diphyllobothrium Egg

KnobOperculum

Page 30: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Diphyllobothrium Egg

Operculum Knob

Page 31: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Diphyllobothrium Egg

Page 32: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Copepod

Page 33: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Walleye Pike

Page 34: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented
Page 35: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

TaxonomyTaxonomy

Phylum: Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)Phylum: Platyhelminthes (Flatworms)• Class: Trematodes (flukes)Class: Trematodes (flukes)

SchistosomesSchistosomes• S. japonicumS. japonicum• S. mansoniS. mansoni• S. haematobiumS. haematobium

Page 36: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma spp.

• Schistosomiasis

Page 37: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma spp.

• Eggs are eliminated with feces or urine.  • The eggs hatch and release miracidia, which

swim and penetrate specific snail intermediate hosts. 

• The stages in the snail include 2 generations of sporocysts and the production of cercariae (which have a forked tail). Upon release from the snail, the infective cercariae swim, penetrate the skin of the human host, and shed their forked tail, becoming schistosomulae. 

Page 38: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosomal miracidum

Page 39: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma cercariae

Page 40: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma spp.

• The schistosomulae migrate to the veins:– S. japonicum and S. mansoni inhabit the

mesenteric veins draining the intestines.– S. haematobium inhabit the urinary bladder

venous plexus.– The females are smaller and live inside the

male. They deposit eggs in the small venules. The eggs are moved progressively toward the lumen of the intestine and are eliminated with feces or urine.

Page 41: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma

Page 42: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma

Male

Female

Page 43: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma spp.

• Human contact with water is thus necessary for infection by schistosomes.  Skin penetration is required.

• Various animals, such as dogs, cats, rodents, pigs, horse and goats, serve as reservoirs, but skin penetration is still required.

• Geographic Distribution: Schistosoma mansoni is found in parts of South America and the Caribbean, Africa, and the Middle East; S. haematobium in Africa and the Middle East; and S. japonicum in the Far East.  Schistosoma mekongi and S. intercalatum are found focally in Southeast Asia and central West Africa, respectively.

Page 44: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma spp.

– Symptoms include: Katayama fever, granulomas (occasionally in brain or spinal cord). 

– S. haematobium schistosomiasis also includes: hematuria, and bladder cancer.

Page 45: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                              

Page 46: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Types of Schistosoma eggs

S. mansoni S. haematobium S. japonicum

Page 47: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma haematobium egg

Page 48: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma haematobium egg

Page 49: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosoma mansoni egg

Page 50: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosomiais

Page 51: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Swimmer’s Itch

Page 52: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Schistosomiais: Swimmer’s Itch

Page 53: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

TaxonomyTaxonomy

Phylum: Nematodes (roundworms)Phylum: Nematodes (roundworms) PinwormPinworm WhipwormWhipworm HookwormHookworm Intestinal RoundwormIntestinal Roundworm Pork RoundwormPork Roundworm

Page 54: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm

• Enterobius vermicularis

Page 55: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                 

Page 56: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm• Eggs are deposited on perianal folds.  Self-infection

occurs by transferring infective eggs to the mouth with hands that have scratched the perianal area.  Person-to-person transmission can also occur through handling of contaminated clothes or bed linens or contact with contaminated curtains, carpeting, etc.

• Some small number of eggs may become airborne and inhaled.  These would be swallowed and follow the same development as ingested eggs. 

• Following ingestion of infective eggs, the larvae hatch in the small intestine and the adults establish themselves in the colon. 

• Gravid females migrate nocturnally outside the anus and deposit their eggs while crawling on the skin of the perianal area. 

Page 57: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm

Geographic Distribution:Worldwide, with infections more frequent in school- or preschool- children and in crowded conditions.  Enterobiasis appears to be more common in temperate than tropical countries.  The most common helminthic infection in the United States (an estimated 40 million persons infected).

Page 58: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm

Female

Page 59: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Enterobius vermicularis egg

Page 60: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm

Page 61: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm

Alae

Esophagus

Esophageal bulb

Page 62: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm adultAlaeEsophagus

Esophageal bulb

Eggs

Page 63: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Pinworm

Page 64: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Whipworm

• Trichuris trichiura

Page 65: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                 

Page 66: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Trichuris trichiura

• The unembryonated eggs are passed with the stool.  In the soil, the eggs become infective.  

• After ingestion (soil-contaminated hands or food), the eggs hatch in the small intestine, and release larvae that mature and establish themselves as adults in the colon.  

• Female worms in the cecum shed up to 20,000 eggs per day.  The life span of the adults is about 1 year.

• Geographic Distribution:The third most common round worm of humans worldwide, with infections more frequent in tropical areas and poor sanitation practices, and among children.  It is estimated that 800 million people are infected worldwide.  Trichuriasis occurs in the southern United States.

Page 67: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Whipworm

Page 68: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Prolapsed Rectum from whipworm

Page 69: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Prolapsed Rectum from whipworm

Page 70: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Whipworm egg

Page 71: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Whipworm egg

Page 72: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Whipworm, female and male

Page 73: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm

• Ancyclostoma duodenale

• Necator americanus

Page 74: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                                      

Page 75: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm

• Eggs are passed in the stool. The released rhabditiform larvae grow in the feces and/or the soil, and after 5 to 10 days they become filariform larvae that are infective.

• These infective larvae contact the human host, penetrate the skin and are carried through the veins to the heart and then to the lungs.  They penetrate into the pulmonary alveoli, ascend the bronchial tree to the pharynx, and are swallowed.

• The larvae reach the small intestine, where they reside and mature into adults.  Adult worms attach to the intestinal wall with resultant blood loss by the host. 

Page 76: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm

• Geographic Distribution:The second most common human helminthic infection (after ascariasis).  Worldwide distribution, mostly in areas with moist, warm climate.  Both N. americanus and A. duodenale are found in Africa, Asia and the Americas.  Necator americanus predominates in the Americas and Australia, while only A. duodenale is found in the Middle East, North Africa and southern Europe.

Page 77: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Male hookworm

Page 78: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Copulatory Bursa of Male Hookworm

Page 79: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Copulatory Bursa of Male Hookworm

Page 80: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm cutting plates

Necator americanus

Page 81: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm teeth

•Ancyclostoma duodenale

Page 82: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm teeth

•Ancyclostoma duodenale

Page 83: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm egg

Page 84: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm egg

Page 85: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Hookworm: creeping eruption

Page 86: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascariasis

• Ascaris lumbricoides

Page 87: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                 

Page 88: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascariasis

• Adult worms live in the lumen of the small intestine.  A female may produce approximately 200,000 eggs per day, which are passed with the feces

• After infective eggs are swallowed, the larvae hatch, invade the intestinal mucosa, and are carried to the lungs.  The larvae penetrate the alveolar walls, ascend the bronchial tree to the throat, and are swallowed.  

• Upon reaching the small intestine, they develop into adult worms.  

Page 89: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascariasis

Geographic Distribution:The most common human helminthic infection.  Worldwide distribution.  Highest prevalence in tropical and subtropical regions, and areas with inadequate sanitation.  Occurs in rural areas of the southeastern United States.

Page 90: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascariasis

Page 91: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascariasis

Page 92: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascaris Adult

Page 93: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Ascaris egg

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Ascaris egg

Page 95: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Trichinellosis

• Trichinella spiralis

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Life Cycle:

                                                                 

Page 97: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Trichinellosis

• Trichinellosis is acquired by ingesting meat containing cysts (encysted larvae) of Trichinella.  After exposure to gastric acid, the larvae are released from the cysts and invade the small bowel mucosa where they develop into adult worms.

• The females release larvae that migrate to the striated muscles where they encyst.  Ingestion of the encysted larvae perpetuates the cycle. 

• Rats and rodents are primarily responsible for maintaining the endemicity of this infection.  Pigs or bears feed on infected rodents. 

• Humans are accidentally infected when eating improperly processed meat of these carnivorous animals (or eating food contaminated with such meat).

• Geographic Distribution:Worldwide.  Most common in parts of Europe; in the United States, it is most common in Alaska from eating infected bear meat.

Page 98: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Trichinellosis

• Eosinophilia develops in response to the presence of the worm. Patients who develop neurologic and cardiac dysfunctions have marked hypereosinophilia associated with arteriolar microthrombi leading to areas of cerebral and myocardial infarction. Immunologic reactions also are deemed responsible for one of the hallmark clinical findings—palpebral edema.

• The direct trauma of the larva encysting in muscle cells, coupled with the immunologic response, is responsible for other clinical features (eg, fever, myalgias). Ultimately, the intramuscular cysts typically calcify.

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Trichinella cyst

Page 100: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Trichinella cysts

Page 101: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Filariasis

• Caused by nematodes that produce a thread-like larvae called microfilariae.

• They inhabit the lymphatic system of humans.

• They require the bite of a mosquito.

Page 102: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Elephantitis

• Wuchereria bancrofti

• Mosquito: anopheles or Culex (Asia)

• Blocks lymph drainage

Page 103: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle of Wuchereria bancrofti:

                                                                            

Page 104: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Elephantitis

• During a blood meal, an infected mosquito introduces filarial larvae onto the skin of the human host, where they penetrate into the bite wound. 

• They develop in adults that commonly reside in the lymphatics. 

• The microfilariae migrate into lymph and blood channels moving actively through lymph and blood. 

• Another mosquito ingests the microfilariae during a blood meal and work their way to the mosquito's midgut and develop into infective larvae. 

• The infective larvae migrate through to the mosquito's prosbocis and can infect another human when the mosquito takes a blood meal.

Page 105: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Elephantiasis

Page 106: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

River Blindness

• Onchocerca volvulus

• Requires bite of Black Fly (Simulium)

• Itchy nodules under skin and head

• Treatment is Ivermectin

Page 107: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle of Onchocerca volvulus:

                                                                              

Page 108: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

River Blindness

• During a blood meal, an infected blackfly (genus Simulium) introduces filarial larvae onto the skin of the human host, where they penetrate into the bite wound.  

• In subcutaneous tissues the larvae develop into adult filariae, which commonly reside in nodules in subcutaneous connective tissues.  Adults can live in the nodules for approximately 15 years.  Some nodules may contain numerous male and female worms.  Some of them get into the bloodsteam.

• Another blackfly ingests the microfilariae during a blood meal and migrate to the thoracic muscles.  There they develop into infective larvae and migrate to the blackfly's proboscis and can infect another human when the fly takes a blood meal.

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River Blindness

Page 110: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

River Blindness

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River Blindness

Page 112: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Guinea Worm

• Dracunculus medinensis

• Geographic Distribution:Restricted to rural, isolated areas in a narrow belt of African countries.

Page 113: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle:

                                                                                        

Page 114: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Guinea Worm• Humans become infected by drinking unfiltered water containing

copepods (small crustaceans) which are infected with larvae of D. medinensis.

• Following ingestion, the copepods die and release the larvae, which penetrate the host stomach and intestinal wall and enter the abdominal cavity and retroperitoneal space. 

• After maturation into adults and copulation, the male worms die and the females migrate in the subcutaneous tissues. 

• Approximately one year after infection, the female worm induces a blister on the skin, generally on the distal lower extremity, which ruptures.  When this lesion comes into contact with water, the female worm emerges and releases larvae. 

• The larvae are ingested by a copepod and develop into infective larvae. 

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Guinea Worm

Page 116: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Loa loa

• The “eye worm”

Page 117: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Life Cycle of Loa loa:

                                                                       

Page 118: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Loa loa• The vector for Loa loa filariasis are flies from two species of the

genus Chrysops, C. silacea and C. dimidiata.  • During a blood meal, an infected fly (genus Chrysops, day-biting

flies) introduces filarial larvae onto the skin of the human host, where they penetrate into the bite wound. 

• The larvae develop into adults that commonly reside in subcutaneous tissue but can migrate into spinal fluids, urine, and sputum. During the day they are found in peripheral blood, but during the noncirculation phase, they are found in the lungs. 

• The fly ingests microfilariae during a blood meal, which migrate to the thoracic muscles and develop into infective larvae.  They migrate to the fly's proboscis and can infect another human when the fly takes a blood meal.

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Loa loa

Page 120: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

Loa loa

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Loa loa

Page 122: Helminths. Kingdom Animalia Sub-kingdom Invertebrata I. Phylum Platyhelminthes - flatworms II. Phylum Nematoda - roundworms III. Phylum Annelida - segmented

“My worm collection”