Nematodes: Difference between revisions
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!Notes |
!Notes |
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! colspan="4" |[[Lymphatic |
! colspan="4" |[[Lymphatic filariasis]] |
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|[[Wuchereria bancrofti]] |
|[[Wuchereria bancrofti]] |
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! colspan="4" |Other |
! colspan="4" |Other filarial roundworms |
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|[[Loa loa]] |
|[[Loa loa]] |
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=== Identification === |
=== Identification === |
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*[[Wuchereria]] and [[Brugia]] (and [[Loa loa]]) all have a sheath. [[Onchocerca]] is only pathogenic nematode that doesn't have a sheath. |
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====Lymphatic filariasis==== |
====Lymphatic filariasis==== |
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*Pattern of nuclei in the tail ([[Loa loa]] goes all the way to the tail, others don't). Draw blood at midnight for lymphatic filariasis (elephants come out at night). Can also give small dose of DEC and then sample a few hours. |
*Pattern of nuclei in the tail ([[Loa loa]] goes all the way to the tail, others don't). Draw blood at midnight for lymphatic filariasis (elephants come out at night). Can also give small dose of DEC and then sample a few hours. |
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*Stain blood with Giemsa for microfilaria. Treated with DEC +/- albendazole. |
*Stain blood with Giemsa for microfilaria. Treated with DEC +/- [[albendazole]]. |
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====''Onchocerca''==== |
====''Onchocerca''==== |
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*[[Onchocerca]] transmitted by black fly |
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*Subcut lumps and bumps, skin thickening and hyperpigmentation, eye involvement with dense cataract. Ivermectin every 6 months for 10 years, but rule out Loa first. |
*Subcut lumps and bumps, skin thickening and hyperpigmentation, eye involvement with dense cataract. Ivermectin every 6 months for 10 years, but rule out Loa first. |
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===Guinea worm=== |
===Guinea worm=== |
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*[[Dracunculis medinensis]] |
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*Spread through water, needs to life cycle through water borne Cyclops copapods? Now only present in small number of areas, down to very few cases, through clean water control. |
*Spread through water, needs to life cycle through water borne Cyclops copapods? Now only present in small number of areas, down to very few cases, through clean water control. |
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*May also be maintained in dogs, which may make eradication more difficult. |
*May also be maintained in dogs, which may make eradication more difficult. |
Latest revision as of 19:03, 26 October 2023
Filarial Roundworms
Organism | Vector | Distribution | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Lymphatic filariasis | |||
Wuchereria bancrofti | Culex and other species mosquitoes | ||
Brugia malayi | |||
Brugia timori | |||
Other filarial roundworms | |||
Loa loa | Chrysops flies | ||
Mansonella perstans | |||
Mansonella streptocerca | |||
Mansonella ozzardi | |||
Onchocerca volvulus | Simulium black flies |
Identification
- Wuchereria and Brugia (and Loa loa) all have a sheath. Onchocerca is only pathogenic nematode that doesn't have a sheath.
Lymphatic filariasis
- Pattern of nuclei in the tail (Loa loa goes all the way to the tail, others don't). Draw blood at midnight for lymphatic filariasis (elephants come out at night). Can also give small dose of DEC and then sample a few hours.
- Stain blood with Giemsa for microfilaria. Treated with DEC +/- albendazole.
Onchocerca
- Onchocerca transmitted by black fly
- Subcut lumps and bumps, skin thickening and hyperpigmentation, eye involvement with dense cataract. Ivermectin every 6 months for 10 years, but rule out Loa first.
Loa loa
- Crysops? transmits it. Eyeball with worm is almost always Loa. Calabar lump sp? In West Africa, after Crysops bite. May be on and off for years. If going to treat Onchocerca with ivermectin, need to rule out Loa, which can cause fatal encephalitis.
Intestinal Roundworms
Organism | Distribution | Treatment |
---|---|---|
Ascaris lumbricoides | albendazole or mebendazole or ivermectin | |
Necator americanus | albendazole or mebendazole or pyrantel pamoate | |
Ancylostoma duodenale | albendazole or mebendazole or pyrantel pamoate | |
Strongyloides stercoralis | ivermectin ± albendazole | |
Trichuris trichiura | albendazole | |
Enterobius vermicularis | albendazole or mebendazole or pyrantel pamoate | |
Capillaria | mebendazole | |
Trichostrongylus | pyrantel pamoate | |
Anisakis | endoscopic removal | |
Gongylonema | surgical removal or albendazole |
Tissue-Invasive Roundworms
Organism | Distribution | Treatment |
---|---|---|
Trichinella spiralis | albendazole plus steroids | |
Anyclostoma braziliense | albendazole or ivermectin | |
Ancylostoma caninum | albendazole or mebendazole or endoscopic removal | |
Dracunculus medinensis | none | |
Toxocara canis | albendazole or mebendazole | |
Toxocara cati | albendazole or mebendazole | |
Angiostrongylus cantonensis | controversial | |
Gnathostoma | albendazole or ivermectin ± surgical removal | |
Baylisascaris procyonis | albendazole + steroids | |
Dioctophyme renale |
Guinea worm
- Dracunculis medinensis
- Spread through water, needs to life cycle through water borne Cyclops copapods? Now only present in small number of areas, down to very few cases, through clean water control.
- May also be maintained in dogs, which may make eradication more difficult.