Fasciola hepatica (1) Flashcards

1
Q

What is the common name?

A

Liver Fluke

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2
Q

What are the final hosts?

A

Cattle

Sheep

Goats

Horses

Deer

Man

Other mammals

Humans

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3
Q

What are the intermediate hosts?

A

Snail

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4
Q

Describe adults

A

2.5-8.5 cm long

In bile ducts

Leaf shaped

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5
Q

Describe eggs

A

Up to 130 micro m long

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6
Q

Explain life cycle

A

Immature eggs in feces, embryonated in H2O

Eggs release miracidia, invade suitable snail

Parasites undergo several developmental stages
- Sporocysts -> Rediae -> Cercariae

Cercariae released, encyst as metacercariae on aquatic vegetation

Herbivores acquire infection ingesting vegetation

Humans infected ingesting plants or metacercariae

Metacercariae encyst in duodenum

Migrate through intestinal wall, peritoneal cavity, and liver parenchyma into biliary ducts to develop into adults

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7
Q

What is the site of infection?

A

Bile ducts of liver

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8
Q

Describe the Pathogenesis

A

Immature flukes migrate, feed on liver, rupture liver parenchyma and blood vessels

Fibrosis replaces necrotic tracts

Adults suck blood

Spiny teguments irritate, disrupt mucosa

 - Mucosa becomes thickened, dilated, fibrosed
 - In cattle calcifies

Fluke liberates toxins (contributes to anemia and hyperplasia)

Protein leaks, hypoproteinemia

Acute fasciolosis uncommon in cattle

Chronic fasciolosis - associated with mature flukes

Light infections - growth rate may be impaired

Acquired by grazing on contaminated pastures

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9
Q

Describe heavy infections

A

Anemia

Pale mucous membranes

Weakness

Weight loss

Submandibular edema (bottle jaw)

Ascites

Anorexia

At necropsy - calcified fibrotic bile ducts (branching network of clay
pipes) “Pipestem” liver

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10
Q

Describe the epidemiology

A

Several states

Great Britain

France

Algeria

Caribbean

Central America

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11
Q

How do you diagnose?

A

Eggs in fecal sedimentation

Antibody and excretion/secretion product ELISAs

Necropsy - Adults in liver ducts and gall bladder, black iron-porphyrin
compound in migratory pathways

Quantitative sedimentation

ELISA bulk milk

Elevated:

 - Globulin
 - Albumin
 - GT
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12
Q

How do you treat and prevent?

A

Clorsulon - effective against immature/adult flukes
- Cattle must not be treated within 8 days of slaughter

Albendazole (Benzimidazole) - removal of adult liver fluke

Neither drug approved for dairy cattle of breeding age

Flukocides available

Resistance reported

Snail control and management

Triclabendazole

Avoid contaminated pastures

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13
Q

What is important about Fasciola hepatica?

A

It is ZOONOTIC

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