CESTODE - PPT Major
CESTODE - PPT Major
CESTODE - PPT Major
Cestoda
-Tapeworms
2. Trematodes
CESTODES
GENERAL STUFF.
General Characteristics of tapeworms:
These worms parasitize the digestive tracts and
associated ducts of all classes of vertebrates.
Cestodes differ from trematodes by the absence of a
digestive system: no mouth, no gut and no
anus.
Adult worms
Cestodes (Flatworms-) Tapeworms:
They are exclusively parasitic
Adults are hermaphroditic covered with none ciliated
integument
They may have oncospheres (embryos) hatched from eggs
They have scolex (head) provided with suckers and
frequently hooks for attachment to host tissue
They have no digestive tract
Body in most species divide transversely into proglottids
Tapeworm features:
Adult worms: Consist of a chain of many egg
producing units called PROGLOTTIDS which develop
from the distal end of the SCOLEX (head), the region
of growth or NECK which is located immediately
behind the head (immature proglottids).
The entire chain of proglottids is STROBILA
Spps differentiating characteristics are mainly based on
these features
Cestodes (Flatworms-) Tapeworms
Important tapeworms to man are:
Order- Pseudophyllidean
tapeworms
Characteristics:
Scolex is a more or less distended
muscular organ,
unarmed and
has dorsal ventral sucking organs
(bothrium) without hooklets for
attachments and never has four suckers
Eggs are operculate and immature when
oviposited
Example-
Diphyllobotrium latum- the fish tape worm
Order Cyclophyllidean
Characteristics
-Scolex with four depressed cups or saucer
shaped suckers.
-Has rostellum armed with spines or hooks
(type, number and arrangement are
specifically characteristics)
-Has sex pores
Eggs are essentially spherical, none
operculate and almost fully embryonated
when they escape fro the mothe
proglottid.
Examples: Tenia saginata- The Beef
Tapeworm, Taenia solium- the Pork
Tapeworm
Muticeps multiceps
D
A B C
A The egg of the pseudophyllidean tapeworm has a thin shell wall (A), and an
operculum, which on hatching opens to release the free swimming larvae:
coracidium
Procercoid
Immature eggs are discharged from the proglottids
(up to 1,000,000 eggs per day per worm) (9) and
are passed in the feces to start the cycle in the
fresh water copepods (1).
Eggs appear in the feces 5 to 6 weeks after
infection.
In addition to humans, many other mammals can
also serve as definitive hosts for D. latum.
Morphology.
The adult worm reaches up to 10 m with 3,000
proglottids. The scolex is elongated and spoon shaped
with two long sucking grooves. It measures 1 mm in
width by 2.5 mm in length.
The mature and gravid proglottids are broader than
long, with the typical rosette-shaped uterus. They
measure up to 2 cm in width.
Diphyllobotrium latum-
Pathology and clinical symptoms.
Symptoms depend on the
1) Mass of the worm,
2) Amount of its by-products absorbed by the host,
3) The host's susceptibility to the foreign substances.
Some infected people show no symptoms
Main symptoms include
1)intestinal obstruction,
2)diarrhea,
3)abdominal pain,
4) anemia.
Diagnosis.
Diagnosis is based on the recovery of the characteristic eggs or
proglottids in the faeces
Proglottids are often passed in chains of a few cm or longer.
Rosette-shaped uterus in the proglottid morphology confirms the
species
Geographic distribution.
The distribution of this worm is worldwide, especially in
northern Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Baltic countries,
Finland, Sweden, central Siberia, North America,northern
Manchuria, Japan, Korea, and Chile.
Prevention.
Avoid ingestion of raw or undercooked salmon, trout, perch,
and pike
Cyclophyllidean worms
Tenia saginata,
The Beef Tapeworm
Tenia saginata, The Beef Tapeworm
Adults are ribbon-like, flattened, segmented,
hermaphroditic flatworms that could reach up to 5 to
10 m long, consisting of scolex, neck, and immature,
mature, and ripe segments in linear
sequence.
The adult tapeworm live in the intestine of the host
with it head embedded in the mucosa
The head has four hemispherical suckers serving as
organ for attachment
It has no rosteller (beak like) and hooks.
The terminal one-third to one-half of the worm's
length consists of gravid (egg-filled) segments.
These segments are muscular and can crawl
caterpillar-fashion through the anal sphincter to the
outside environment making them available to their
herbivore intermediate hosts.
Multiplication and Life Cycle..3
Gravid segments break off from the worm and are
carried with feces or by their own crawling activity
to the soil (1).
The segments adhere to grass. If ingested by a
bovine intermediate host (2), the segments are
digested open in the animal’s gut, each releasing
50,000 to 100,000 eggs.
The eggs hatch, releasing a six hooked larva, the
oncosphere (also called the hexacanth), (3) which
penetrates the gut wall and reaches the muscles via
the circulation.
Multiplication and Life Cycle ..4
The oncosphere fills with fluid and develops into
the 8-mm cysticercus.
If a human eats raw or undercooked infected beef
(4), the cysticercus and the scolex is made free
The scolex attaches to the wall of the small
intestine and begins to bud off the long chain of
segments.
In about 3 months the worm reaches 4-5 m in
length and gravid segments begin to pass through
the anus.
The worm can live for 5 to 20 years or more
Clinical Manifestations
The clinical effects of adult T. solium infection are
similar to those caused by T. saginata.
Pathogenesis
The hooked scolex of T. solium may cause greater
intestinal disturbance, pain, and inflammatory
response than that caused by T. saginata, but
symptoms are still generally mild and pathology is
minor.
Clinical Manifestations
The clinical manifestations of infection with adult
T. saginata tapeworms are confined to occasional
1)nausea or vomiting,
2)appetite loss
3)epigastric or umbilical pain,
4)weight loss.
5)Moderate Eosinophilia may develop.
A disturbing manifestation of T. saginata infection is
the active crawling of the muscular segments out
of the anus.
Rarely, intestinal perforation may occur from the
scolex of Taenia, or proglottides may be vomited
and then aspirated.
Pathogenesis
Rare intestinal blockage or penetration have been
reported, but pathology is usually inconsequential.
Host Defenses
Because of its limited contact with the epithelial
lining, the gut-dwelling adult tapeworm induces
little host inflammatory, allergic, cell-mediated, or
humoral response
The sucking action of the scolex appears to have
relatively limited immunogenic effect.
Epidemiology
Taenia saginata, the commonest large tapeworm of
humans, is transmitted as cysticerci in beef ("measly
beef").
Partially cooked, smoked, or pickled beef can be
infective, although raw beef is the commonest bearer
of infection
Taeniasis in countries such as Ethiopia and Argentina
where raw or undercooked beef is often eaten is
common.
Epidemiology…2
Large worms may grow by 15 to 30 cm a day in the
human gut, passing 10 segments daily, which may
convey up to a million eggs a day into the environment
throughout the long life span of the worm.
Eggs may also be found in pastures flooded by human
sewage or on which human sewage is used as fertilizer.
Taenia solium
(Pork Tapeworm)
Taenia solium, (Pork Tapeworm)
The Structure
The scolex of T. solium (Figure)
differs from that of T. saginata in
possessing an anterior circle of
sharply spined hooks arranged in a
double row.
These are under muscular control
and work with the four suckers to
adhere to the gut wall.
.
Gravid segments of T. solium can be distinguished
from those of T. saginata by the number of out-
pocketing branches of the uterus.
Computed tomography
radiologic,
serologic,
clinical assessment.
sampled by biopsy
Control
The control of infection of humans as definitive
hosts is the same as that for T. saginata, except
that the control measures apply to pork not beef.
The eggs are highly resistant and can withstand
many months of environmental exposure over a
broad temperature range.
Treatment for adult T.solium is the same as for T.
saginata.
Cysticercosis may require surgery for ophthalmic
or brain involvement, but chemotherapy should
precede surgery when possible.
.
Diagnosis
Adult infections can be diagnosed by identifying
segments in the feces. The species of Taenia can be
identified only by the segments, because their eggs are
identical
Pseudophyllidean proglotid.
Note the Uterine pore .
Cyclophyllidean proglotid. Note
the absence of an uterine pore.
Control/Treatment
Inspection of beef/pork for cysticerci is the best
preventive measure.
Beef/pork must be thoroughly cooked in endemic
areas to at least 56°C throughout the meat, which
may be difficult to accomplish with large cuts of
fatty meat, particularly pork.
Freezing at -10°C for 10 days usually is lethal to
Taenia cysticerci, but they can withstand 70 days at
0°C.
Treatment: This is readily available for the intestinal
adult worms. Niclosamide, is a nonabsorbed
oxidative phosphorylation inhibitor that kills the
scolex and anterior segments on contact, after
which the worm is expelled.
Praziquantel is an equally effective and relatively
nontoxic compound.
Scolex may not always be destroyed, and a new
worm can regenerate if the scolex and a minute
portion of the neck survive
The patient should be observed for several months,
as egg-bearing segments can reappear in 10-12
weeks.
Echinococcus granulosus and
Echinococcus multilocularis
Echinococcus granulosus and Echinococcus
multilocularis (hydatid disease)
Human echinococcosis (hydatidosis, or hydatid
disease) is caused by the larval stages of
tapeworms of the genus Echinococcus.
1) Echinococcus granulosus causes cystic
echinococcosis, the form most frequently
encountered;
2) Echinococcus . multilocularis causes alveolar
echinococcosis.
Infection flow: 1.Man