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HELMINTHS

HELMINTHS. Doç.Dr.Hrisi BAHAR. HELMINTHS. ● The helminths are worm-like parasites. ● Helminths are separated according to their general external shape and the host organ they inhabit. ● The definitive classification is based on the external and internal

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HELMINTHS

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  1. HELMINTHS Doç.Dr.Hrisi BAHAR

  2. HELMINTHS ●The helminths are worm-like parasites. ● Helminths are separated according to their general external shape and the host organ they inhabit. ● The definitive classification is based on the external and internal morphology of egg, larval, and adult stages ●Helminths are multicellular eukaryotes.

  3. There are three classes of helminths • Nematodes – "roundworms" • Adult and larval roundworms are bisexual, cylindrical worms. • They inhabit intestinal and extraintestinal sites. • The nematodes include Trichinella, Ascaris, and Enterobius.

  4. There are three classes of helminths ● Trematodes – "flukes" ● Adult flukes are leaf-shaped flatworms. Prominent oral and ventral suckers help maintain position. ● The life cycle includes an intermediate host. ● An example is the organism that causesschistosomiasis.

  5. There are three classes of helminths Cestodes –pig and cattle "tapeworms" ●Adult tapeworms are elongated, segmented, hermaphroditic flatworms that inhabit the intestinal lumen. ●Larval forms, which are cystic or solid, inhabit extraintestinal tissues

  6. NEMATODES • Some species require an intermediate host to complete development. • Intestinal nematodes all mature into adults within the human intestinal tract.

  7. NEMATODES • The nematodes (nema: thread) are threadlike, nonsegmented parasites., • A few mm to 1m in length, with separated sexes. • They possess a complex tegument and a digestive tract.

  8. NEMATODES • The males are usually smaller than the females and are equipped with copulatory organs that often show features specific to each species.

  9. NEMATODES ●Development from the egg includes four larval stages andv four moltings before the adult stage is reached. ●The larval forms of many of these roundworms may be distributed widely throughout the body

  10. NEMATODES • Three of the intestinal nematodes are acquired by the ingestion of nematode eggs: ● Trichuris trichiura ("whipworm") ● Ascaris lumbricoides ● Enterobius vermicularis ("pinworm")

  11. NEMATODES • Two worms are acquired when their larvae penetrate through the skin, usually of the foot: ● Necator americanus ("hookworm") ● Strongyloides stercoralis

  12. NEMATODES • One is acquired by the ingestion of the encysted larvae in muscle (pork meat): Trichinella spiralis

  13. NEMATODES Ascaris lumbricoides (Large Roundworm) Causative agent of “ascariosis”

  14. Ascaris lumbricoides Occurrence ● The human large roundworm occurs worldwide. ● The main endemic regions, with prevalence rates of approx. 10–90%, include countries in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America. ● Autochthonous infections are rare in central Europe.

  15. Ascaris lumbricoides Parasite and Lıfe Cycle ● The adult ascarids living in the small intestine are 15–40cm in length, about as thick as a pencil and of a yellowish pink color.

  16. Enterobius vermicularis(Pinworm) Causative agent of enterobiosis (oxyuriosis) Occurrence. The pinworm occurs in all parts of the world and is also a frequent parasite in temperate climate zones and developed countries. The age groups most frequently infected are five- to nine-year-old children and adults

  17. Enterobius vermicularis Parasite and Lıfe Cycle Enterobius vermicularis which belongs to the Oxyurida has a conspicuous white color. The males are 2–5mm long, The females 8–13 mm. The long, pointed tail of the female gives the pinworm its name.

  18. Enterobius vermicularis

  19. Class Trematoda(Flukes) • General characteristics Most of the trematode species that parasitize humans are dorsoventrally flattened with an oval to lancet shape, although others have different shapes such as the threadlike schistosomes.

  20. Class Trematoda • Most species are hermaphroditic. • Snails are the first intermediate hosts;some species require arthropods or fish as second intermediate hosts

  21. Class Trematoda Schistosoma (Blood Flukes) Causative agents of schistosomosis or bilharziosis. Schistosomosis (bilharziosis) is one of the most frequent tropical diseases with about 200 million infected persons. The occurrence of schistosomosis depends on the presence of suitable intermediate hosts (freshwater snails).

  22. Schistosoma (Blood Flukes) • Schistosomosis is also known as bilharziosis after the German physician Th. Bilharz, who discovered Schistosoma hematobium in human blood vessels in 1851. • Schistosomosis occurs endemically in 74 tropical and subtropical countries of Africa, South America, and Asia .The number of persons infected with schistosomes is estimated at 200 million(WHO 2008)

  23. Schistosoma (Blood Flukes) • Human infections result from contact with standing or slow-moving bodies of water (freshwater) when Schistosoma cercariaepenetrate the skin. • Schistosoma hematobium causes urinary schistosomosis. S. mansoni, S. japonicum,S. intercalatum, and S. mekongi are the causative agents of intestinal schistosomosis and other forms of the disease.

  24. Trematodes Fasciola hepatica Dicrocoelium dendriticum Clonorchis spp Paragonimus spp

  25. Fasciola hepatica F. hepatica is a flattened, leaf-shaped parasite about 2–5 cm long and at most 1 cm wide. Dicrocoelium dendriticum The lancet liver fluke (0.5–1.0 ! 0.2 cm) Fasciola hepatica and F. gigantica are bile duct parasites of domestic ruminants.In their life cycle freshwater snails act as intermediate host Humans become accidentally infected when they eat plants to which infectious parasite stages (metacercariae) adhereDicrocoelium dendriticum is abile duct parasite in sheep,cattle, and other herbivores, Its life cycle includes two intermediate hosts (terrestrial snails and ants). Humans become infected accidentally when they ingest ants containing infective metacercariae of the lancet liver fluke.

  26. Dicrocoelium dendriticum egg Fasciola hepatica egg

  27. Cestoda (Tapeworms) Taenia saginata Taenia solium Echinococcus granulosus

  28. Cestoda (Tapeworms) • General characteristics *Parasitize in the small intestine of humans. *They are hermaphrodites and consist of the head (scolex), followed by an unsegmented germinative section (neck) and a posterior chain of segments (proglottids). *There are no digestive organs, so nutrients are taken up through the absorptive integument.

  29. Cestoda (Tapeworms) *The life cycle of cestodes include one or two intermediate hosts. *Humans can also be infected by larval stages of various tapeworm species (cysticerci, metacestodes). *These stages develop in body tissues and generally cause considerably greater pathological damage than the intestinal cestode stages.

  30. Taenia speciesCausative agents of taeniosis and cysticercosis *Taeniosis is a small intestine infection of humans caused by Taenia species. *In T. saginata, the intermediate hosts are cattle. *In the musculature of the cattle cysticerci develop and can be ingested by humans who eat raw beef. * The cysticerci of T. solium develop in the musculature of pigs.

  31. Taenia saginata (Beef Tapeworm)Causative agent ofT. saginata taeniosis • Occurrence. This species occurs worldwide the number of infected humans is estimated to be between 40 and 60 million. The parasite • *T.saginata grows as long as 10m and has a scolex with four suckers. • *Proglottids at the posterior end of the chain are longer than wide and each contains a treelike branched uterus containing 80 000–100 000 eggs.

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