Trematoda Flashcards

1
Q

Which were the first real multicellular organisms

A

Phylum radiata

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2
Q

Which are the most primitive members of the of the kingdom animalia

A

phylum porifera- sea sponges

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3
Q

How does sea sponges catch food

A

by phagocytosis and then intracellular digestion

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4
Q

What were the first organs to appear in animal evolution

A

reproductive organs

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5
Q

What are some features of phylum radiata
(jellyfish)

A

Has radial symmetry- no left/right or dorsa/ventral
Diploblastic; 2 layers (endo& ecto)
No head=no brain
gastrovascular cavity: 1 opening
sexual and asexual repo
tentacles
PRIMITIVE nervous system

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6
Q

Difference between organsisms with bilateral symmetry and organisms with radial symmetry?

A

bilateral symmetry has a head which moves forward first. Radial body reacts in same way in same direction
The head has sensory organs and brain in bilateral
more motile that radial organisms

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7
Q

first organisms with bilateral symmetry

A

flatworms

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8
Q

Life cycle of Obelia geniculata

A

*Immobile polyp colonies containing digestive hydranth+reproductive gonganium units

*gonganium reproduce asexually releasing medusa by budding

*Medusa/jellyfish swim freely and reproduce sexually releasing eggs+sperm into water

*Fertilised eggs develop into larvae that attatches to ocean floor as new polyps

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9
Q

Features of Phylum Platyhelminthes (flatworms)

A

Bilateral symmetry
Tripoblastic (endo,ecto,meso)
Flat body no body cavity (acoelomate)
First organism where tissues organised in organs
No specialised exchange system
no/incomplete aoilmentary canal
mostly hermaphrodites

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10
Q

Parasitic flatworms (platyhelminthes) belong to which classes?

A

Class trematoda (flukes)
Class cestoda (tapeworms)

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11
Q

Features of class trematoda?

A

Oral sucker
ventral sucker- supports body to attach to other host
simple digestive system
hermaphrodites except shistomes
incomplete ailmentary canal (no anus)

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12
Q

Name 3 trematoda parasites

A

Fasciola hepatica-big liver fluke

Dicrocoelium dentricum -liver fluke

Opisthorchis felineus - cat liver fluke

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13
Q

Fasciola hepatica defintive host and intermediate host?

A

Def: cows and sheep

Int: freshwater snail

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14
Q

Life cycle of Fasciola hepatica

A

*IMMATURE eggs released through bile ducts then faeces

  • eggs release miracidia in water. These invade snail and multiply asexually

*eggs develop in cercariae in snail

*Snail releases cercairae. This excysts as
metacercariae on aquatic plants

*humans eat plants with cysts

*Goes to intestine and cysts release larave and eventually infects bile duct

*develops into adult flukes + produce eggs

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15
Q

Dicrocoelium dentricum definitive and intermediate host

A

Def: Cows and sheep

Int: snail
int:ant

humans accidental host

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16
Q

Life cycle of Dicrocoelium dentricum

A
  • embryoned eggs with miracidia shed in faeces in def host

*snail eats faeces and miracidium hatches -becomes sporocysts in connective tissue. Then in digestive gland they form cercariae

*In their slime balls is cercariae. Ant second intermediate host. They injest the cercariae in slime

*metacariae develop in ant and ant gets eaten by cow

*Metacariae excysts in small intestine

*worms migrate to bile ducts and turns to adults

17
Q

Why cant humans get infected if we eat infected cow liver (dicrocoelium dentricum)

A

Because only METACARAIAE can infect us (mature )

18
Q

How does the cercariae affect ants

A

Cercariae goes to ganglia in brain and changes behaviour
Ant hangs on grass/leaves so easier to eat by cow and baso infect the cow

19
Q

Which area of the world does Opisthorcis felinbeus mainly infect

A

Asisa as raw fish in sushi eaten there

(fish int host)

20
Q

Genus opisthorchis definitive and intermediate host

A

def: human

Int: snail

second int host: fish

21
Q

Life cycle of Genus Opisthorchis

A

*Adult flukes deposit eggs thats passed through faeces

  • injested by int host snail and eggs release miracidia

*cercariae reelased from snail and invade fish encysting as metacariae in muscles/scales

*Def hosts infected after eating undercooked fish with metacariae

22
Q

3 types of genus Schistosoma

A

S. hematobium
S. mansoni
S.Japonicum

23
Q

Genus Schistosoma (blood flukes) definitive and intermediate hosts

A

Def: human

Int: snail

24
Q

What is the differences between the sexes of schistosoma

A

male: body split, wide and short

female: thin, long and cylinderical (to lay eggs in small capillaries on surface of urinary bladder)

25
Q

Life cycle of Genus Schistosoma

CERCARIAE IS THE INFECTIVE STAGE!!!

A

*Miracidia hatch from eggs

*infect snails and multiply making cercariae

*cercariae released in water and DIRECTLY penetrates human skin

*they transform into larvae called Schistosomulae. They mature into worms in blood supply of liver, bladder, intestines

*worms lay many eggs and damage tissue. Eggs released into water through urine/faeces

26
Q

how to distinguish eggs of S.hematobium, mansoni and japonicum

A

mansoni: ova has lateral spine (from stool)

hematobium: ova has terminal spine (from urine)

japonicum: ova with lateral knob (from stool)

27
Q

what is the name of the land snail host in dicrocoelium dendriticum

A

Zebrina detrita