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Parasitic worm

Parasitic worms, also known as helminths,[1] are large macroparasites; adults can generally be seen with the naked eye. Many are intestinal worms that are soil-transmitted and infect the gastrointestinal tract. Other parasitic worms such as schistosomes reside in blood vessels.

Eggs of different species of parasitic worm.

Some parasitic worms, including leeches and monogeneans, are ectoparasites – thus, they are not classified as helminths, which are endoparasites.

Parasitic worms live in and feed in living hosts. They receive nourishment and protection while disrupting their hosts' ability to absorb nutrients. This can cause weakness and disease in the host, and poses a global health and economic problem.[2] Parasitic worms cannot reproduce entirely within their host's body; they have a life cycle that includes some stages that need to take place outside of the host.[3] Helminths are able to survive in their mammalian hosts for many years due to their ability to manipulate the host's immune response by secreting immunomodulatory products.[4] All parasitic worms produce eggs during reproduction. These eggs have a strong shell that protects them against a range of environmental conditions. The eggs can therefore survive in the environment for many months or years.

Many of the worms referred to as helminths are intestinal parasites. An infection by a helminth is known as helminthiasis, helminth infection, or intestinal worm infection. There is a naming convention which applies to all helminths: the ending "-asis" (or in veterinary science: "-osis") is added at the end of the name of the worm to denote the infection with that particular worm.[citation needed] For example, Ascaris is the name of a type of helminth, and ascariasis is the name of the infection caused by that helminth.

Taxonomy

 
Hookworms attached to the intestinal mucosa
 
 
Image showing life cycle inside and outside of the human body of one fairly typical and well described helminth: Ascaris lumbricoides

Helminths are a group of organisms which share a similar form but are not necessarily related as part of evolution. The term "helminth" is an artificial term.[5][6] There is no real consensus on the taxonomy (or groupings) of the helminths, particularly within the nematodes.[7] The term "helminth" contains a number of phyla, many of which are completely unrelated. However, for practical considerations the term is currently used to describe four phyla with superficial similarities: Annelida (ringed or segmented worms), Platyhelminthes (flatworms), Nematoda (roundworms), and Acanthocephala (thorny-headed worms).[7] The phylum Platyhelminthes includes two classes of worms of particular medical significance: the cestodes (tapeworms) and the trematodes (flukes and blood flukes), depending on whether or not they have segmented bodies.[1][8]

There may be as many as 300,000 species of parasites affecting vertebrates,[9] and as many as 300 affecting humans alone.[10]

Helminths of importance in the sanitation field are the human parasites, and are classified as Nemathelminthes (nematodes) and Platyhelminthes, depending on whether they possess a round or flattened body, respectively.[8]

Ringworm (dermatophytosis) is actually caused by various fungi and not by a parasitic worm.[11][12]

Reproduction and life cycle

The lifetime of adult worms varies tremendously from one species to another but is generally in the range of 1 to 8 years (see following table). This lifetime of several years is a result of their ability to manipulate the immune response of their hosts by secreting immunomodulatory products.[4]

Helminths can be either hermaphroditic (having the sex organs of both sexes), like tapeworms and flukes (not including the blood fluke), or have their sexes differentiated, like the roundworms.[citation needed]

All helminths produce eggs (also called ova) for reproduction.[citation needed]

Eggs

 
Analysing for helminth eggs in samples of feces from a dry toilet in Kenya
 
Processed helminth eggs samples from a dry toilet in Kenya

Generally, thousands or even hundreds of thousands of eggs are produced each time the female worm deposits its eggs - a process called oviposition. There is a large variation in the number of eggs produced by different species of worm at one time; it varies in the range of 3,000 to 700,000. The frequency of egg deposition from an adult helminth is generally daily, and can occur up to six times per day for some Taenia species. Adult trematodes lay smaller numbers of eggs compared to cestodes or nematodes. However, the egg develops into a miracidia from which thousands of cercariae, or swimming larvae, develop. This means that one egg may produce thousands of adult worms.[13] Helminth eggs remain viable for 1–2 months in crops and for many months in soil, fresh water, and sewage, or even for several years in feces, fecal sludge (historically called night soil), and sewage sludge – a period that is much longer compared to other microorganisms.[14][15]

Eggs can reach the soil when polluted wastewater, sewage sludge or human waste are used as fertilizer. Such soil is often characterized by moist and warm conditions. Therefore, the risk of using contaminated wastewater and sludge in agricultural fields is a real problem, especially in poor countries, where this practice is prevalent.[16][17] Helminth eggs are regarded as the main biological health risk when applying sewage sludge, fecal sludge or fecal matter on agricultural soils.[14] The eggs are the infective stage of the helminths’ life cycle for causing the disease helminthiasis.[citation needed]

Helminth eggs are resistant to various environmental conditions due to the composition of the egg shell. Each helminth egg species has 3 to 4 layers with different physical and chemical characteristics:[citation needed]

  1. the 1 to 2 outer layers are formed of mucopolysaccharides and proteins,
  2. the middle layers consist of chitinous material and serve to give structure and mechanical resistance to the eggs, and
  3. the inner layer is composed of lipids and proteins and is useful to protect eggs from desiccation, strong acid and bases, oxidants and reductive agents as well as detergent and proteolytic compounds.[16][18][19][20]

Due to this strong shell, helminth eggs or ova remain viable in soil, fresh water and sewage for many months. In feces, fecal sludge and sewage sludge they can even remain viable for several years.[14][15] Helminth eggs of concern in wastewater used for irrigation have a size between 20 and 90 μm and a relative density of 1.06–1.23.[16] It is very difficult to inactivate helminth eggs, unless temperature is increased above 40 °C or moisture is reduced to less than 5%.[16] Eggs that are no longer viable do not produce any larvae. In the case of Ascaris lumbricoides (giant roundworm), which has been considered the most resistant and common helminth type, fertilized eggs deposited in soil are resistant to desiccation but are, at this stage of development, very sensitive to environmental temperatures: The reproduction of a fertilized egg within the eggshell develops at an environmental soil temperature about 25 °C which is lower than the body temperature of the host (i.e., 37 °C for humans).[21] However, development of the larvae in the egg stops at temperatures below 15.5 °C, and eggs cannot survive temperatures much above 38 °C. If the temperature is around 25 °C, the infectiousness occurs after nearly 10 days of incubation.[8][22][23]

Larvae

Larvae hatch from eggs, either inside or outside the host, depending on the type of helminth. For eggs in moist soil at optimal temperature and oxygen levels, the embryo develops into an infective larva after 2 to 4 weeks, named "second-stage larva". Once ingested by a host, this larva has the ability to get out of the egg, hatch in the small intestine and migrate to different organs. These infective larvae (or "infective eggs") may remain viable in soil for two years or longer.[21]

The process of larval maturation in the host can take from about two weeks up to four months, depending on the helminth species.[citation needed]

The following table shows the principal morphological and reproductive distinctions for three helminth groups:

Tapeworms
(Cestodes)
Flukes
(Trematodes)
Roundworms
(Nematodes)
Examples Taenia solium, Taenia saginata, Hymenolepis spp., Echinococcus granulosus, Echinococcus multilocularis, Multiceps multiceps Schistosoma mansoni, Schistosoma japonicum,

Fasciola hepatica

Ascaris spp., Enterobius, Filarioidea, Onchocerca spp., Rhabditis spp., Trichuris spp., Necator americanus, Ancylostoma spp.
Pathological conditions caused in humans Tapeworm infection, echinococcosis, alveolar echinococcosis Schistosomiasis, swimmer's itch Ascariasis, enterobiasis (pinworm infection, oxyuriasis), filariasis, dracunculiasis (guinea worm), elephantiasis, enterobiasis (pinworm), filariasis, hookworm infection (includes Necatoriasis and Ancylostoma duodenale infection), onchocerciasis, trichinosis, trichuriasis (whipworm)
Shape Segmented plane Unsegmented plane Cylindrical
Body cavity None None Present
Body covering Tegument Tegument Cuticle
Digestive tube None Ends in cecum Ends in anus
Sex Hermaphroditic Hermaphroditic, except schistosomes which are dioecious Dioecious
Attachment organs Sucker or bothridia, and rostellum with hooks Oral sucker and ventral sucker or acetabulum Lips, teeth, filariform extremities, and dentary plates

Number of species

6000[24] Estimated > 15,000[25] Registered > 9,000[26] Estimated > 800,000 to 1,000,000

Registered > 25,000[25]

Number of species known to infect humans 40[24] 16[25] > 12,000[25]
Species

Hymenolepis nana

Taenia solium /Taenia saginata

Fasciola hepatica

Ascaris lumbricoides

Hookworm

Trichuris trichiura

Toxocara spp.
Timeline of lifecycle stages Larval formation

Some days (eggs can survive for months)[27]

9–15 days[24]

18 days to several weeks[28]

1–2 days[29]

15–30 days[30]

Larval growth

After hatching, the larvae develop into cysticercoid, which can survive for years in an animal[27]

5–7 weeks as cercariae in snails and longer periods in wet environments as encysted metacercariae[13]

10–14 days[28]

5–10 days (after maturing can survive for weeks outside the host)[29]

60–70 days (from hatching to mature state)[30]

5–6 days[24]

Maturation to adult

2 months (from cysticercoid to adult)[27]

3–4 months[13]

2–3 months[28]

2–8 weeks[24] (can become dormant for months)

Lifespan of adult worm

4–6 weeks

Several years[27]

8–10 years[24]

1–2 years[28]

Several years[29]

1 year[30]

Eggs laid per day 250,000[3] to 700,000[24] 3,000 to 25,000[25] 3,000[3] to 250,000[24]
Egg deposition Frequency

up to 6 times a day[27]

daily[28]

daily[29]

daily[30]

Number of eggs per event

50,000-100,000[27]

200,000[28][21] to 250,000 or more[24]

5,000-10,000[24]

3,000-20,000[30]

Larvae per egg 1 1 300 cercariae (Schistosoma), 250,000 metacercariae (Fasciola)[25] 1 1 1 1

Draft genomes for all categories of helminth have been sequenced in recent years and are available through the ParaSite sub-portal of WormBase.[31]

Use in medicine

Parasitic worms have been used as a medical treatment for various diseases, particularly those involving an overactive immune response.[32] As humans have evolved with parasitic worms, proponents argue they are needed for a healthy immune system.[32] Scientists are looking for a connection between the prevention and control of parasitic worms and the increase in allergies such as hay-fever in developed countries.[32] Removal of parasitic worms from areas is correlated with an increase in autoimmune disorders in those areas.[33] Parasitic worms may be able to damp down the immune system of their host, making it easier for them to live in the intestine without coming under attack.[32] This may be one mechanism for their proposed medicinal effect.[citation needed]

One study suggests a link between the rising rates of metabolic syndrome in the developed worlds and the largely successful efforts of Westerners to eliminate intestinal parasites. The work suggests eosinophils (a type of white blood cell) in fat tissue play an important role in preventing insulin resistance by secreting interleukin 4, which in turn switches macrophages into "alternative activation". Alternatively-activated macrophages are important to maintaining glucose homeostasis (i.e., blood sugar regulation). Helminth infection causes an increase in eosinophils. In the study, the authors fed rodents a high-fat diet to induce metabolic syndrome, and then injected them with helminths. Helminth infestation improved the rodents' metabolism.[34] The authors concluded:

Although sparse in blood of persons in developed countries, eosinophils are often elevated in individuals in rural developing countries where intestinal parasitism is prevalent and metabolic syndrome rare. We speculate that eosinophils may have evolved to optimize metabolic homeostasis during chronic infections by ubiquitous intestinal parasites….[34]

Levels of infectiousness

Helminth eggs contained in wastewater, sewage sludge or human excreta are not always infectious, i.e. able to cause the disease helminthiasis. Fertilized eggs and unfertilized eggs can exist side by side. Unfertilized eggs are identifiable under the microscope by their elongated shape. No larvae can hatch from these kinds of eggs. Therefore, unfertilized eggs do not pose a danger to human health.[citation needed]

Sanitation

Removal versus inactivation in wastewater and sludge treatment

In order to physically remove (but not inactivate) helminth eggs from wastewater, processes that remove particles, such as sedimentation, filtration or coagulation-flocculation are employed.[35][36] Therefore, waste stabilization ponds (lagoons), storage basins, constructed wetlands, rapid filtration or upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) reactors can be used.

Helminth ova cannot be inactivated with chlorine, UV light or ozone (in the latter case at least not with economical doses because >36 mg/L ozone are needed with 1 hour contact time).[citation needed]

Inactivation of helminth ova can be achieved in sewage sludge treatment where the temperature is increased over 40 °C or moisture is reduced to less than 5%.[16] Best results can be obtained when both of these conditions are combined for an extended period of time.[37] Details about the contact time under these conditions and other related environmental factors are generally not well-defined for every type of helminth egg species.[8] Helminth eggs are considered highly resistant biological structures.[16]

Indicator organism

Helminth eggs (or ova) are a good indicator organism to assess the safety of sanitation and reuse systems because they are the most environmentally resistant of all pathogens (viruses, bacteria, protozoa and helminths) and can in extreme cases survive for several years in soil.[14] Therefore, the presence or absence of viable helminth eggs ("viable" meaning that a larva would be able to hatch from the egg) in a sample of dried fecal matter, compost or fecal sludge is often used to assess the efficiency of diverse wastewater and sludge treatment processes in terms of pathogen removal. In particular, the number of viable Ascaris eggs is often taken as an indicator for all helminth eggs in treatment processes as they are very common in many parts of the world and relatively easy to identify under the microscope. However, the exact inactivation characteristics may vary for different types of helminth eggs.[8]

Diagnosis

Environmental samples

For the purpose of setting treatment standards and reuse legislation, it is important to be able to determine the amount of helminth eggs in an environmental sample with some accuracy. The detection of viable helminth eggs in samples of wastewater, sludge or fresh feces (as a diagnostic tool for the infection helminthiasis) is not straight forward. In fact, many laboratories in developing countries lack the right equipment or skilled staff required to do so. An important step in the analytical methods is usually the concentration of the eggs in the sample, especially in the case of wastewater samples. A concentration step may not be required in samples of dried feces, e.g. samples collected from urine-diverting dry toilets.[citation needed]

Human stool samples

For medical purposes, the exact number of helminth eggs is less important and therefore most diagnoses are made simply by identifying the appearance of the worm or eggs in feces. Due to the large quantity of eggs laid, physicians can diagnose using as few as one or two fecal smears.[citation needed] The Kato technique (also called the Kato-Katz technique) is a laboratory method for preparing human stool samples prior to searching for parasite eggs. Eggs per gram is a laboratory test that determines the number of eggs per gram of feces in patients suspected of having a parasitological infection, such as schistosomiasis.[citation needed]

See also

References

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  2. ^ Hildersley, Katie A.; McNeilly, Tom N.; Gillan, Victoria; Otto, Thomas D.; Löser, Stephan; Gerbe, François; Jay, Philippe; Maizels, Rick M.; Devaney, Eileen; Britton, Collette (2021). "Tuft Cells Increase Following Ovine Intestinal Parasite Infections and Define Evolutionarily Conserved and Divergent Responses". Frontiers in Immunology. 12: 781108. doi:10.3389/fimmu.2021.781108. PMC 8646091. PMID 34880874.
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Further reading

External links

  • World Health Organisation (WHO) topic page on Intestinal worms

parasitic, worm, this, article, about, organism, infection, caused, this, organism, helminthiasis, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, helminths, large, macroparasites, adults, generally, seen, with, naked, many, intestinal, worms, that, soil, transmitte. This article is about the organism For the infection caused by this organism see Helminthiasis For other uses see Parasitic worm disambiguation Parasitic worms also known as helminths 1 are large macroparasites adults can generally be seen with the naked eye Many are intestinal worms that are soil transmitted and infect the gastrointestinal tract Other parasitic worms such as schistosomes reside in blood vessels Eggs of different species of parasitic worm Some parasitic worms including leeches and monogeneans are ectoparasites thus they are not classified as helminths which are endoparasites Parasitic worms live in and feed in living hosts They receive nourishment and protection while disrupting their hosts ability to absorb nutrients This can cause weakness and disease in the host and poses a global health and economic problem 2 Parasitic worms cannot reproduce entirely within their host s body they have a life cycle that includes some stages that need to take place outside of the host 3 Helminths are able to survive in their mammalian hosts for many years due to their ability to manipulate the host s immune response by secreting immunomodulatory products 4 All parasitic worms produce eggs during reproduction These eggs have a strong shell that protects them against a range of environmental conditions The eggs can therefore survive in the environment for many months or years Many of the worms referred to as helminths are intestinal parasites An infection by a helminth is known as helminthiasis helminth infection or intestinal worm infection There is a naming convention which applies to all helminths the ending asis or in veterinary science osis is added at the end of the name of the worm to denote the infection with that particular worm citation needed For example Ascaris is the name of a type of helminth and ascariasis is the name of the infection caused by that helminth Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Reproduction and life cycle 2 1 Eggs 2 2 Larvae 3 Use in medicine 3 1 Levels of infectiousness 3 2 Sanitation 3 2 1 Removal versus inactivation in wastewater and sludge treatment 3 2 2 Indicator organism 3 3 Diagnosis 3 3 1 Environmental samples 3 3 2 Human stool samples 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksTaxonomy Edit Hookworms attached to the intestinal mucosa Two pinworms Image showing life cycle inside and outside of the human body of one fairly typical and well described helminth Ascaris lumbricoides Helminths are a group of organisms which share a similar form but are not necessarily related as part of evolution The term helminth is an artificial term 5 6 There is no real consensus on the taxonomy or groupings of the helminths particularly within the nematodes 7 The term helminth contains a number of phyla many of which are completely unrelated However for practical considerations the term is currently used to describe four phyla with superficial similarities Annelida ringed or segmented worms Platyhelminthes flatworms Nematoda roundworms and Acanthocephala thorny headed worms 7 The phylum Platyhelminthes includes two classes of worms of particular medical significance the cestodes tapeworms and the trematodes flukes and blood flukes depending on whether or not they have segmented bodies 1 8 There may be as many as 300 000 species of parasites affecting vertebrates 9 and as many as 300 affecting humans alone 10 Helminths of importance in the sanitation field are the human parasites and are classified as Nemathelminthes nematodes and Platyhelminthes depending on whether they possess a round or flattened body respectively 8 Ringworm dermatophytosis is actually caused by various fungi and not by a parasitic worm 11 12 Reproduction and life cycle EditThe lifetime of adult worms varies tremendously from one species to another but is generally in the range of 1 to 8 years see following table This lifetime of several years is a result of their ability to manipulate the immune response of their hosts by secreting immunomodulatory products 4 Helminths can be either hermaphroditic having the sex organs of both sexes like tapeworms and flukes not including the blood fluke or have their sexes differentiated like the roundworms citation needed All helminths produce eggs also called ova for reproduction citation needed Eggs Edit Analysing for helminth eggs in samples of feces from a dry toilet in Kenya Processed helminth eggs samples from a dry toilet in Kenya Generally thousands or even hundreds of thousands of eggs are produced each time the female worm deposits its eggs a process called oviposition There is a large variation in the number of eggs produced by different species of worm at one time it varies in the range of 3 000 to 700 000 The frequency of egg deposition from an adult helminth is generally daily and can occur up to six times per day for some Taenia species Adult trematodes lay smaller numbers of eggs compared to cestodes or nematodes However the egg develops into a miracidia from which thousands of cercariae or swimming larvae develop This means that one egg may produce thousands of adult worms 13 Helminth eggs remain viable for 1 2 months in crops and for many months in soil fresh water and sewage or even for several years in feces fecal sludge historically called night soil and sewage sludge a period that is much longer compared to other microorganisms 14 15 Eggs can reach the soil when polluted wastewater sewage sludge or human waste are used as fertilizer Such soil is often characterized by moist and warm conditions Therefore the risk of using contaminated wastewater and sludge in agricultural fields is a real problem especially in poor countries where this practice is prevalent 16 17 Helminth eggs are regarded as the main biological health risk when applying sewage sludge fecal sludge or fecal matter on agricultural soils 14 The eggs are the infective stage of the helminths life cycle for causing the disease helminthiasis citation needed Helminth eggs are resistant to various environmental conditions due to the composition of the egg shell Each helminth egg species has 3 to 4 layers with different physical and chemical characteristics citation needed the 1 to 2 outer layers are formed of mucopolysaccharides and proteins the middle layers consist of chitinous material and serve to give structure and mechanical resistance to the eggs andthe inner layer is composed of lipids and proteins and is useful to protect eggs from desiccation strong acid and bases oxidants and reductive agents as well as detergent and proteolytic compounds 16 18 19 20 Due to this strong shell helminth eggs or ova remain viable in soil fresh water and sewage for many months In feces fecal sludge and sewage sludge they can even remain viable for several years 14 15 Helminth eggs of concern in wastewater used for irrigation have a size between 20 and 90 mm and a relative density of 1 06 1 23 16 It is very difficult to inactivate helminth eggs unless temperature is increased above 40 C or moisture is reduced to less than 5 16 Eggs that are no longer viable do not produce any larvae In the case of Ascaris lumbricoides giant roundworm which has been considered the most resistant and common helminth type fertilized eggs deposited in soil are resistant to desiccation but are at this stage of development very sensitive to environmental temperatures The reproduction of a fertilized egg within the eggshell develops at an environmental soil temperature about 25 C which is lower than the body temperature of the host i e 37 C for humans 21 However development of the larvae in the egg stops at temperatures below 15 5 C and eggs cannot survive temperatures much above 38 C If the temperature is around 25 C the infectiousness occurs after nearly 10 days of incubation 8 22 23 Larvae Edit Larvae hatch from eggs either inside or outside the host depending on the type of helminth For eggs in moist soil at optimal temperature and oxygen levels the embryo develops into an infective larva after 2 to 4 weeks named second stage larva Once ingested by a host this larva has the ability to get out of the egg hatch in the small intestine and migrate to different organs These infective larvae or infective eggs may remain viable in soil for two years or longer 21 The process of larval maturation in the host can take from about two weeks up to four months depending on the helminth species citation needed The following table shows the principal morphological and reproductive distinctions for three helminth groups Tapeworms Cestodes Flukes Trematodes Roundworms Nematodes Examples Taenia solium Taenia saginata Hymenolepis spp Echinococcus granulosus Echinococcus multilocularis Multiceps multiceps Schistosoma mansoni Schistosoma japonicum Fasciola hepatica Ascaris spp Enterobius Filarioidea Onchocerca spp Rhabditis spp Trichuris spp Necator americanus Ancylostoma spp Pathological conditions caused in humans Tapeworm infection echinococcosis alveolar echinococcosis Schistosomiasis swimmer s itch Ascariasis enterobiasis pinworm infection oxyuriasis filariasis dracunculiasis guinea worm elephantiasis enterobiasis pinworm filariasis hookworm infection includes Necatoriasis and Ancylostoma duodenale infection onchocerciasis trichinosis trichuriasis whipworm Shape Segmented plane Unsegmented plane CylindricalBody cavity None None PresentBody covering Tegument Tegument CuticleDigestive tube None Ends in cecum Ends in anusSex Hermaphroditic Hermaphroditic except schistosomes which are dioecious DioeciousAttachment organs Sucker or bothridia and rostellum with hooks Oral sucker and ventral sucker or acetabulum Lips teeth filariform extremities and dentary platesNumber of species 6000 24 Estimated gt 15 000 25 Registered gt 9 000 26 Estimated gt 800 000 to 1 000 000 Registered gt 25 000 25 Number of species known to infect humans 40 24 16 25 gt 12 000 25 Species Hymenolepis nana Taenia solium Taenia saginata Fasciola hepatica Ascaris lumbricoides Hookworm Trichuris trichiura Toxocara spp Timeline of lifecycle stages Larval formation Some days eggs can survive for months 27 9 15 days 24 18 days to several weeks 28 1 2 days 29 15 30 days 30 Larval growth After hatching the larvae develop into cysticercoid which can survive for years in an animal 27 5 7 weeks as cercariae in snails and longer periods in wet environments as encysted metacercariae 13 10 14 days 28 5 10 days after maturing can survive for weeks outside the host 29 60 70 days from hatching to mature state 30 5 6 days 24 Maturation to adult 2 months from cysticercoid to adult 27 3 4 months 13 2 3 months 28 2 8 weeks 24 can become dormant for months Lifespan of adult worm 4 6 weeks Several years 27 8 10 years 24 1 2 years 28 Several years 29 1 year 30 Eggs laid per day 250 000 3 to 700 000 24 3 000 to 25 000 25 3 000 3 to 250 000 24 Egg deposition Frequency up to 6 times a day 27 daily 28 daily 29 daily 30 Number of eggs per event 50 000 100 000 27 200 000 28 21 to 250 000 or more 24 5 000 10 000 24 3 000 20 000 30 Larvae per egg 1 1 300 cercariae Schistosoma 250 000 metacercariae Fasciola 25 1 1 1 1Draft genomes for all categories of helminth have been sequenced in recent years and are available through the ParaSite sub portal of WormBase 31 Use in medicine EditMain article Helminthic therapy Parasitic worms have been used as a medical treatment for various diseases particularly those involving an overactive immune response 32 As humans have evolved with parasitic worms proponents argue they are needed for a healthy immune system 32 Scientists are looking for a connection between the prevention and control of parasitic worms and the increase in allergies such as hay fever in developed countries 32 Removal of parasitic worms from areas is correlated with an increase in autoimmune disorders in those areas 33 Parasitic worms may be able to damp down the immune system of their host making it easier for them to live in the intestine without coming under attack 32 This may be one mechanism for their proposed medicinal effect citation needed One study suggests a link between the rising rates of metabolic syndrome in the developed worlds and the largely successful efforts of Westerners to eliminate intestinal parasites The work suggests eosinophils a type of white blood cell in fat tissue play an important role in preventing insulin resistance by secreting interleukin 4 which in turn switches macrophages into alternative activation Alternatively activated macrophages are important to maintaining glucose homeostasis i e blood sugar regulation Helminth infection causes an increase in eosinophils In the study the authors fed rodents a high fat diet to induce metabolic syndrome and then injected them with helminths Helminth infestation improved the rodents metabolism 34 The authors concluded Although sparse in blood of persons in developed countries eosinophils are often elevated in individuals in rural developing countries where intestinal parasitism is prevalent and metabolic syndrome rare We speculate that eosinophils may have evolved to optimize metabolic homeostasis during chronic infections by ubiquitous intestinal parasites 34 Levels of infectiousness Edit Helminth eggs contained in wastewater sewage sludge or human excreta are not always infectious i e able to cause the disease helminthiasis Fertilized eggs and unfertilized eggs can exist side by side Unfertilized eggs are identifiable under the microscope by their elongated shape No larvae can hatch from these kinds of eggs Therefore unfertilized eggs do not pose a danger to human health citation needed Sanitation Edit Removal versus inactivation in wastewater and sludge treatment Edit In order to physically remove but not inactivate helminth eggs from wastewater processes that remove particles such as sedimentation filtration or coagulation flocculation are employed 35 36 Therefore waste stabilization ponds lagoons storage basins constructed wetlands rapid filtration or upflow anaerobic sludge blanket UASB reactors can be used Helminth ova cannot be inactivated with chlorine UV light or ozone in the latter case at least not with economical doses because gt 36 mg L ozone are needed with 1 hour contact time citation needed Inactivation of helminth ova can be achieved in sewage sludge treatment where the temperature is increased over 40 C or moisture is reduced to less than 5 16 Best results can be obtained when both of these conditions are combined for an extended period of time 37 Details about the contact time under these conditions and other related environmental factors are generally not well defined for every type of helminth egg species 8 Helminth eggs are considered highly resistant biological structures 16 Indicator organism Edit Helminth eggs or ova are a good indicator organism to assess the safety of sanitation and reuse systems because they are the most environmentally resistant of all pathogens viruses bacteria protozoa and helminths and can in extreme cases survive for several years in soil 14 Therefore the presence or absence of viable helminth eggs viable meaning that a larva would be able to hatch from the egg in a sample of dried fecal matter compost or fecal sludge is often used to assess the efficiency of diverse wastewater and sludge treatment processes in terms of pathogen removal In particular the number of viable Ascaris eggs is often taken as an indicator for all helminth eggs in treatment processes as they are very common in many parts of the world and relatively easy to identify under the microscope However the exact inactivation characteristics may vary for different types of helminth eggs 8 Diagnosis Edit Environmental samples Edit For the purpose of setting treatment standards and reuse legislation it is important to be able to determine the amount of helminth eggs in an environmental sample with some accuracy The detection of viable helminth eggs in samples of wastewater sludge or fresh feces as a diagnostic tool for the infection helminthiasis is not straight forward In fact many laboratories in developing countries lack the right equipment or skilled staff required to do so An important step in the analytical methods is usually the concentration of the eggs in the sample especially in the case of wastewater samples A concentration step may not be required in samples of dried feces e g samples collected from urine diverting dry toilets citation needed Human stool samples Edit For medical purposes the exact number of helminth eggs is less important and therefore most diagnoses are made simply by identifying the appearance of the worm or eggs in feces Due to the large quantity of eggs laid physicians can diagnose using as few as one or two fecal smears citation needed The Kato technique also called the Kato Katz technique is a laboratory method for preparing human stool samples prior to searching for parasite eggs Eggs per gram is a laboratory test that determines the number of eggs per gram of feces in patients suspected of having a parasitological infection such as schistosomiasis citation needed See also Edit Biology portal Medicine portalHelminthology the study of parasitic worms and their effects on their hostsReferences Edit a b CDC Parasites About Parasites www cdc gov 20 April 2018 Hildersley Katie A McNeilly Tom N Gillan Victoria Otto Thomas D Loser Stephan Gerbe Francois Jay Philippe Maizels Rick M Devaney Eileen Britton Collette 2021 Tuft Cells Increase Following Ovine Intestinal Parasite Infections and Define Evolutionarily Conserved and Divergent Responses Frontiers in Immunology 12 781108 doi 10 3389 fimmu 2021 781108 PMC 8646091 PMID 34880874 a b c CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about parasites CDC Retrieved 28 November 2014 a b Jirillo E Magrone T Miragliotta G 2014 Immunomodulation by Parasitic Helminths and its Therapeutic Exploitation In Pineda M A Harnett W eds Immune Response to Parasitic Infections Vol 2 pp 175 212 Bentham eBooks doi 10 2174 97816080598501140201 ISBN 978 1 60805 985 0 Navigating the Phylogeny Wing University of Berkeley USA Retrieved 19 December 2014 Tree of Life web project Retrieved 19 December 2014 a b Schistosomiasis Research Group University of Cambridge UK Archived from the original on 13 October 2014 Retrieved 19 December 2014 a b c d e Maya C Torner Morales F J Lucario E S Hernandez E Jimenez B 2012 Viability of six species of larval and non larval helminth eggs for different conditions of temperature pH and dryness Water Research 46 15 4770 4782 doi 10 1016 j watres 2012 06 014 PMID 22794801 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dobson A Lafferty K D Kuris A M Hechinger R F Jetz W 2008 Homage to Linnaeus How many parasites How many hosts PNAS 105 Suppl 1 11482 11489 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10511482D doi 10 1073 pnas 0803232105 PMC 2556407 PMID 18695218 Cox F E G 2002 History of Human Parasitology Clinical Microbiology Reviews 15 4 595 612 doi 10 1128 CMR 15 4 595 612 2002 PMC 126866 PMID 12364371 Mayo Clinic Staff Ringworm body Symptoms and causes Mayo Clinic Retrieved 4 July 2018 Ringworm American Academy of Dermatology Retrieved 4 July 2018 a b c Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Parasites Fascioliasis Fasciola Infection Retrieved 13 January 2015 a b c d WHO 2006 Guidelines for the Safe Use of Wastewater Excreta and Greywater Volume 4 Excreta and Greywater Use in Agriculture third ed Geneva World Health Organization ISBN 978 9241546850 a b Feachem R Bradley D Garelick H Mara D 1983 Sanitation and Disease Health Aspects of Excreta and Wastewater Management John Wiley and Sons New York NY a b c d e f Jimenez B 2007 Helminth ova removal from wastewater for agriculture and aquaculture reuse Water Science amp Technology 55 1 2 485 493 doi 10 2166 wst 2007 046 PMID 17305174 Keraita B Jimenez B Drechsel P 2008 Extent and Implications of Agricultural Reuse of Untreated partly Treated and Diluted Wastewater in Developing Countries CAB Reviews Perspectives in Agriculture Veterinary Science Nutrition and Natural Resources Vol 3 No 58 pp 1 15 Fairweather I Threadgold L T 1981 Hymenolepis nana the fine structure of the embryonic envelopes Parasitology 82 3 429 443 doi 10 1017 s0031182000066968 PMID 7243350 S2CID 222626 Lysek H Malinsky J Janisch R 1985 Ultrastructure of eggs of Ascaris lumbricoides Linnaeus 1758 I Egg shells PDF Folia Parasitologica 32 4 381 384 PMID 4085927 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Quiles F Balandier J Y Capizzi Banas S 2006 In situ characterisation of a microorganism surface by Raman microspectroscopy the shell of Ascaris eggs Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 386 2 249 255 doi 10 1007 s00216 006 0638 4 PMID 16900382 S2CID 39350893 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c Bogitsh Burton J Carter Clint E Oeltmann Thomas N 2012 General Characteristics of the Nematoda Chapter 15 Intestinal Nematodes Chapter 16 Human Parasitology UK Academic Press pp 269 345 ISBN 978 0 12 415915 0 Alouini Z Jemli M 2001 Destruction of helminth eggs by photosensitized porphyrin Journal of Environmental Monitoring 3 5 548 551 doi 10 1039 b103471p PMID 11695127 Capizzi Banas S Deloge M Remy M Schwartzbrod J 2004 Liming as an advanced treatment for sludge sanitisation helminth eggs elimination Ascaris eggs as model Water Research 38 14 15 3251 3258 doi 10 1016 j watres 2004 04 015 PMID 15276741 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d e f g h i j Lamonthe Argumedo R Garcia Prieto L 1988 Human helminthiasis in Mexico Treatment and prophylaxis Archived 2014 12 29 at the Wayback Machine A G T Editor S A 1st edition Mexico ISBN 9684630514 a b c d e f Pumarola A Rodriguez Torres A Garcia R J A Piedrola A G 1987 Medical Microbiology and Parasitology in Spanish Ediciones Cientificas y Tecnicas S A Barcelona Spain pp 850 880 Animal diversity web September 2001 Retrieved 17 December 2014 a b c d e f Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Parasites Taeniasis Biology Retrieved 22 January 2015 a b c d e f Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Parasites Ascariasis Retrieved 13 January 2015 a b c d Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Parasites Hookworm Retrieved 13 January 2015 a b c d e Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Parasites Trichuriasis also known as Whipworm Infection Retrieved 13 January 2015 WormBase ParaSite Retrieved 15 April 2016 a b c d Eat worms feel better BBC News 3 December 2003 Retrieved 13 July 2011 Weinstock Joel October 2015 Do We Need Worms to Promote Immune Health Clinical Reviews in Allergy amp Immunology 49 2 227 231 doi 10 1007 s12016 014 8458 3 PMID 25326880 S2CID 22950215 Retrieved 25 October 2020 a b Wu Davina et al 8 April 2011 Eosinophils Sustain Adipose Alternatively Activated Macrophages Associated with Glucose Homeostasis PDF Science 332 6026 243 247 Bibcode 2011Sci 332 243W doi 10 1126 science 1201475 PMC 3144160 PMID 21436399 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 04 18 Retrieved 18 April 2011 Jimenez B Chavez Mejia A 1997 Treatment of Mexico City Wastewater for Irrigation Purposes Environmental Technology Vol 18 pp 721 730 Jimenez B Maya C Salgado G 2001 The Elimination of Helminth Ova Fecal Coliforms Salmonella and Protozoan Cysts by Various Physicochemical Processes in Wastewater and Sludge Water Science and Technology Vol 43 No 12 pp 179 182 DOI 10 2166 wst 2001 0733 Schmidt G D Roberts L S 1981 Foundations of Parasitology second ed C V Mosby Company 795 ppFurther reading EditDickson Despommier People Parasites and Plowshares Learning from Our Body s Most Terrifying Invaders Columbia University Press 2016 ISBN 978 0231161954 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Helminths Parasitic Roundworm Diseases World Health Organisation WHO topic page on Intestinal worms Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parasitic worm amp oldid 1125794041, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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