Global Information Lookup Global Information

Fasciolosis information


Fasciolosis
Other namesFascioliasis, fasciolasis, distomatosis, liver rot
Fasciola hepatica
SpecialtyInfectious disease, hepatology
SymptomsAbdominal pain, nausea, yellow skin
ComplicationsPancreatitis, anemia[1]
CausesFasciola flatworms
Risk factorsEating raw watercress
Diagnostic methodStool sample[2]
PreventionProper food preparation
MedicationTriclabendazole[1]
Frequency2 millions[1]

Fasciolosis is a parasitic worm infection caused by the common liver fluke Fasciola hepatica as well as by Fasciola gigantica. The disease is a plant-borne trematode zoonosis,[3] and is classified as a neglected tropical disease (NTD).[4][5] It affects humans, but its main host is ruminants such as cattle and sheep.[4] The disease progresses through four distinct phases; an initial incubation phase of between a few days up to three months with little or no symptoms; an invasive or acute phase which may manifest with: fever, malaise, abdominal pain, gastrointestinal symptoms, urticaria, anemia, jaundice, and respiratory symptoms.[6] The disease later progresses to a latent phase with less symptoms and ultimately into a chronic or obstructive phase months to years later.[7][8] In the chronic state the disease causes inflammation of the bile ducts, gall bladder and may cause gall stones as well as fibrosis.[4] While chronic inflammation is connected to increased cancer rates, it is unclear whether fasciolosis is associated with increased cancer risk.[9]

Up to half of those infected display no symptoms,[4] and diagnosis is difficult because the worm eggs are often missed in fecal examination.[4] The methods of detection are through fecal examination, parasite-specific antibody detection, or radiological diagnosis, as well as laparotomy. In case of a suspected outbreak it may be useful to keep track of dietary history, which is also useful for exclusion of differential diagnoses.[4] Fecal examination is generally not helpful because the worm eggs can seldom be detected in the chronic phase of the infection. Eggs appear in the feces first between 9–11 weeks post-infection. The cause of this is unknown, and it is also difficult to distinguish between the different species of fasciola as well distinguishing them from echinostomes and Fasciolopsis.[4] Most immunodiagnostic tests detect infection with very high sensitivity, and as concentration drops after treatment, it is a very good diagnostic method.[4] Clinically it is not possible to differentiate from other liver and bile diseases. Radiological methods can detect lesions in both acute and chronic infection, while laparotomy will detect lesions and also occasionally eggs and live worms.[4]

Because of the size of the parasite, as adult F. hepatica: 20–30 × 13 mm (0.79–1.18 × 0.51 inches) or adult F. gigantica: 25–75 × 12 mm (0.98–2.95 × 0.47 inches), fasciolosis is a big concern.[4] The amount of symptoms depend on how many worms and what stage the infection is in. The death rate is significant in both cattle (67.55%) and goats (24.61%),[10] but generally low among humans.[citation needed] Treatment with triclabendazole has been highly effective against the adult worms as well as various developing stages.[4][6] Praziquantel is not effective, and older drugs such as bithionol are moderately effective but also cause more side effects. Secondary bacterial infection causing cholangitis has also been a concern and can be treated with antibiotics, and toxaemia may be treated with prednisolone.[4]

Humans are infected by eating watergrown plants, primarily wild-grown watercress in Europe or morning glory in Asia. Infection may also occur by drinking contaminated water with floating young fasciola or when using utensils washed with contaminated water.[4] Cultivated plants do not spread the disease in the same capacity. Human infection is rare, even if the infection rate is high among animals. Especially high rates of human infection have been found in Bolivia, Peru and Egypt, and this may be due to consumption of certain foods.[4] No vaccine is available to protect people against Fasciola infection.[11] Preventative measures are primarily treating and immunization of the livestock, which are required to host the live cycle of the worms. Veterinary vaccines are in development, and their use is being considered by a number of countries on account of the risk to human health and economic losses resulting from livestock infection.[4] Other methods include using molluscicides to decrease the number of snails that act as vectors, but it is not practical.[4] Educational methods to decrease consumption of wild watercress and other waterplants has been shown to work in areas with a high disease burden.[4]

Fascioliasis occurs in Europe, Africa, the Americas as well as Oceania.[4] Recently, worldwide losses in animal productivity due to fasciolosis were conservatively estimated at over US$3.2 billion per annum.[12] Fasciolosis is now recognized as an emerging human disease: the World Health Organization (WHO) has estimated that 2.4 million people are infected with Fasciola, and a further 180 million are at risk of infection.[13]

  1. ^ a b c "CDC - Fasciola". Retrieved December 31, 2018.
  2. ^ "Fascioliasis - Infectious Diseases - MSD Manual Professional Edition". Richard D. Pearson. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
  3. ^ Mas-Coma S, Bargues MD, Valero MA (October 2005). "Fascioliasis and other plant-borne trematode zoonoses". Int. J. Parasitol. 35 (11–12): 1255–78. doi:10.1016/j.ijpara.2005.07.010. PMID 16150452.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Farrar J, Hotez P, Junghanss T, Kang G, Lalloo D, White NJ (2013-10-26). Manson's Tropical Diseases. Elsevier Health Sciences. ISBN 9780702053061.
  5. ^ "Neglected Tropical Diseases". cdc.gov. June 6, 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  6. ^ a b "CDC - Fasciola - Treatment". www.cdc.gov. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  7. ^ Mas-Coma S, Bargues MD, Esteban JG (1999). "Human fasciolosis.". In Dalton, JP (ed.). Fasciolosis. Wallingford, Oxon, UK: CABI Pub. pp. 411–34. ISBN 0-85199-260-9.
  8. ^ Esteban J, Bargues M, Mas-Coma S (1998). "Geographical distribution, diagnosis and treatment of human fascioliasis: a review". Res. Rev. Parasitol. 58: 13–42.
  9. ^ "Fasciolosis and tumour growth" (PDF). Göteborgs universitetsbibliotek: Logga in via proxy. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  10. ^ Rahman AK, Islam SK, Talukder MH, Hassan MK, Dhand NK, Ward MP (8 May 2017). "Fascioliasis risk factors and space-time clusters in domestic ruminants in Bangladesh". Parasit Vectors. 10 (1): 228. doi:10.1186/s13071-017-2168-7. PMC 5422951. PMID 28482863.
  11. ^ "CDC - Fasciola - Prevention & Control". www.cdc.gov. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  12. ^ Spithill TW, Smooker PM, Copeman DB (1999). "Fasciola gigantica: epidemiology, control, immunology and molecular biology". In Dalton, JP (ed.). Fasciolosis. Wallingford, Oxon, UK: CABI Pub. pp. 465–525. ISBN 0-85199-260-9.
  13. ^ Anonymus (1995). Control of Foodborne Trematode Infections. WHO Technical Series No. 849. WHO, Geneva, 157 pp.

and 28 Related for: Fasciolosis information

Request time (Page generated in 0.5586 seconds.)

Fasciolosis

Last Update:

in animal productivity due to fasciolosis were conservatively estimated at over US$3.2 billion per annum. Fasciolosis is now recognized as an emerging...

Word Count : 5883

Fasciola hepatica

Last Update:

is called fasciolosis or fascioliasis, which is a type of helminthiasis and has been classified as a neglected tropical disease. Fasciolosis is currently...

Word Count : 4416

Liver fluke

Last Update:

veterinary diseases. Fasciolosis of sheep, goats and cattle, is the major cause of economic losses in dairy and meat industry. Fasciolosis of humans produces...

Word Count : 916

Fasciola gigantica

Last Update:

infections of ruminants in Asia and Africa. The infection is commonly called fasciolosis. The prevalence of F. gigantica often overlaps with that of Fasciola...

Word Count : 1213

Trematoda

Last Update:

are responsible for causing liver fluke disease which is also known as fasciolosis. They are hermaphroditic internal parasites. They are caused by the migration...

Word Count : 2755

Hepatosplenomegaly

Last Update:

Rubella Brucella infection Hyper active malaria syndrome Leishmaniasis Fasciolosis Typhoid fever Schistosomiasis or filariasis importants Septicemic plague...

Word Count : 222

List of parasites of humans

Last Update:

"Hymenolepiasis". Medscape. Yılmaz H, Gödekmerdan A (2004), "Human fasciolosis in Van province, Turkey", Acta Tropica, 92 (2): 161–2, doi:10.1016/j...

Word Count : 651

Praziquantel

Last Update:

cysticercosis, echinococcosis, paragonimiasis, fasciolopsiasis, and fasciolosis. It should not be used for worm infections of the eye. It is taken by...

Word Count : 2578

Abdominal distension

Last Update:

Coccidiosis Cystic fibrosis Diverticulitis Eosinophilic gastroenteritis Fasciolosis Gastroparesis Giardiasis Hookworm disease Inflammatory bowel disease...

Word Count : 1219

Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography

Last Update:

flukes from the biliary system (e.g., opisthorchiasis, clonorchiasis, fasciolosis) Acute pancreatitis (unless persistently elevated or rising bilirubin...

Word Count : 2485

Fasciolidae

Last Update:

involved in the veterinary and medical sciences, which cause the disease Fasciolosis. Fasciolidae is divided into five genera by Olson et al. 2003. The family's...

Word Count : 208

Fasciola

Last Update:

gov. Retrieved 2019-11-14. Dalton, J. P. (John Pius), 1958- (1999). Fasciolosis. CABI Pub. ISBN 0851992609. OCLC 39728053.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple...

Word Count : 1007

Schistosomiasis

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 10040

Cestoda

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 3739

Ascaris lumbricoides

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 1877

Taenia saginata

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 2204

List of infectious diseases

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 1751

Pinworm infection

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 3599

Dracunculus medinensis

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 2181

Strongyloides stercoralis

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 3014

Infestation

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 267

Nematode

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 7446

Taenia solium

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 4331

Echinococcosis

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 5834

Wuchereria bancrofti

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 1640

Ancylostoma caninum

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 2773

Parasitic worm

Last Update:

dendriticum / D. hospes Dicrocoeliasis Fasciola hepatica / F. gigantica Fasciolosis Opisthorchis viverrini / O. felineus Opisthorchiasis Lung fluke Paragonimus...

Word Count : 3713

Cattle drenching

Last Update:

failure. The diseases caused by liver fluke include acute fasciolosis (short term), chronic fasciolosis (long term) and Black disease (Clostridium novyi). The...

Word Count : 2662

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net