Parasitology 8: Platyhelminthes 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Tapeworm use their suckers for feeding?

A

FALSE
no suckers

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2
Q

What’s the general name used for the cestode larval stages?

A

Metestode

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3
Q

Where will you find the metacestodes?

A

Intermediate

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4
Q

The metacestode of Echinococcus is cysticerus

A

False

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5
Q

The IH of Taenia pisiform

A

Rabbit and Dog

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6
Q

Non-taeniid common tapewroms what are we focusing on?

A

Dipylidiidae

Anoplocephalidae

-arthropod as intermediate host
-Metacestode stage called cysticercoid: small cyst with invaginated single scolex, no fluid filled bladder

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7
Q

Dipylidium caninum
where?
size?
common?

A
  • Parasite of dogs and cats worldwide
  • 15-70 cm
  • Most common tapeworm of dogs and cats in the US
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8
Q

Dipylidium canium- Life cycle

A

Gravid segments released containing egg packets

INDIRECT life cycle, IH: fleas. Lice an uncommon IH

Flea larvae ingest egg packets, cysticercoid
develop before flea become adult

Infection of DH follows ingestion of flea

PPP: 2-3 weeks

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9
Q

How do yo diagnosis Dipylidium caninum?

A

Tape worm segments in perianal area or around feces, where animal sleep

Egg packets usually NOT seen in fecal exams UNLESS segment broken up in sample (like taenia spp.)

Egg packet around 200um. BIGGER
do NOT confused with hook worms eggs that are smaller 60-80um

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10
Q

Do dogs like the taste of dipylidium canium eggs/larvae?

A

Yes!

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11
Q

What is the Clinical importance of Dipylidium canium?

A

Infection generally subclinical

ZOONOTIC, young children most likely to be infected, but very uncommon

Flea control CRITICAL to prevent reinfection

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12
Q

What are the common ruminant and equine tapeworms

A

A. perfoliata
MOST IMPORTANT IN HORSE
-short

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13
Q

Ruminant and equine tapeworms
Life cycle?

A

Gravid segments released containing eggs

eggs are ingested by the IH: orbatid mites in pasture (coprophages)

Cysticercoid in mites

DH infected when ingest infected mites while grazing

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14
Q

Anoplocephala perfoliata affect what species?
how does it work

A

HORSES

IMPORATNT becasue of location

-VERY common
-short at ileocecal junction
-Asymptomatic
-occasionally causes inflammation & ulceration
-MOST several cases associated with perforation, intussusception

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15
Q

Clinical importance of Anoplocephala?

A

*Difficult to diagnose

*Surprisingly, segments not seen in manure

*Eggs usually not present on fecal exam

*Because diagnosis is difficult, horses routinely treated at least once/year

*Infection can’t practically be prevented

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16
Q

Ruminant tape worm 2 species?

A

Moniezia benedeni= Cattle

Moniezia expansa = small ruminants

Moniezia are DRAMATIC

-very common infection

17
Q

How do you diagnosis ruminant tapeworms?

A

Frequently see segments in manure, especially young animals

Eggs in fecal exams: shape square
* M. benedeni: square
* M. expansa: triangular

18
Q

Trematoda - flukes
shaped?
segmentation?
suckers?
eggs?
what intermediate host? ALWAYS

A

Leaf shaped

unsegmented

1-2 suckers

Operculated (lid like of egg) eggs passed in feces: usually diagnosed with fecal exam

Usually 2 IH–1st is ALWAYS SNAIL

19
Q

What is the life cycle of Trematode?

A

*Most fluke eggs must hatch in water

Larvae (miracidium*) swim to specific snail host

*Some flukes use land snails, egg ingested by snail

Asexual development in SNAIL (sporocysts* and redias)

  • Next larval stage produced by snail (cercaria)
  • Usually swims to pasture
  • Become the infective stage (metacercaria) – sometimes in
    environment, sometimes in second IH
  • Metacercaria can be ingested by a paratenic host
  • DH is infected when ingests metacercaria
20
Q

What is the infection stage of Trematode?

A

Metacercaria

needs to be ingested by DH

21
Q

What are the flukes in the US that are important in ruminants and small animals?

A

Ruminants
*Liver flukes
–>Fasciola hepatica: Gulf coast, Midwest, west
–>Fascioloides magna: north, Midwest, north east

Small animals
*Nanophyetus salmincola: Pacific northwest

22
Q

Fasciola hepatica and Fascioloides magna
where?
fasciola?
fascioloides?

A

*Adults in liver and bile ducts of host

*Fasciola: ruminants, rabbits, humans, dogs, others

*Fascioloides: white-tailed deer

23
Q

What it the life cycle of Fasciola hepatica?

A

Adults release eggs that hatch in water

First IH: Lymnaeid snails (asexual reproduction)

Cercariae encyst on vegetation and become in
metacercaria

Ingested by DH

After ingestion by DH

  • Larval fluke migrate to liver
  • After several weeks enter bile and mature

PPP: 3-4 months

24
Q

What is the clinical importance of Fasciola hepatica?

where

A

*In ruminants can cause chronic poor doing

*May have acute disease (especially small
ruminants) associated with liver migration

*Diagnosis by egg detection—sedimentation
technique

*Control difficult because hard to eradicate snails

Where: gulf coast states, Pacific NW, and Hawaii

25
Q

Fascioloides magna
whre?
larvae?
abnomal hosts?
control?

A

*Important in Midwest and Northeast

*Larvae cause serious disease in sheep and goats because keep migrating around liver until animal dies

*Sheep and goats are abnormal hosts

*Hard to control

26
Q

Flukes in small animals
importance?
cats?

A

*None of national importance

*Liver fluke in cats (Platynosomum fastosum) from ingesting lizards in southeast and Hawaii

27
Q

What disease do flukes work as a vector for?

A

Rickettsial disease

Nanophyetus salmincola
*Intestinal fluke of carnivores in Northwest
*Second IH: fish
*Fluke carries rickettsia (bacterial) organism that causes “salmon poisoning” in dogs (Neorickettsia helminthoeca)

28
Q

What are other fluke-transmitted disease?

A

Fluke of bats (Acanthatrium
oregonense*) and
insectivorous birds serves as
vector of Ehrlichia risticii
(Potomac Horse Fever)

*Horses just innocent bystanders in cycle