Title: Taenia
1Taenia
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3Cestodes (Tape Worms)
- Taenia solium (pork tapeworm) - Cysticercus
- Taenia saginata (beef tapeworm)
- Diphyllobothrium latum (fish tapeworm)
- Echinococcus granulosus (unilocular hydatid)
- Echinococcus multilocularis (alveolar hydatid)
- Hymenolepis nana (dwarf tapeworm)
- Hymenolepis diminutia
- Dipylidium caninum
4General Structure of Tapewormv
- Head region (scolex) contains suckers and hooks
used to attach to a host organism. - Proglottids square body segments used for
reproduction.
5Tapeworm Structure
- Scolex - Attachment organ
- Zone of Proliferation - Undifferentiated area
behind the scolex (neck region) - Strobilia - Chain of segments (proglottids)
- Immature proglottids - developing reproductive
- Mature proglottids mature reproductive organs.
- Gravid proglottids contain eggs in the uterus.
6Immature Segment
- note that the reproductive organs are just
beginning to differentiate. - (Carmine stained)
Developing reproductive organs
7Mature Segments (Proglottids)
- Tapeworms are Hermaphroditic
8TaeniasisGeographic Distribution
- Worldwide, depending on dietary habits, and
quality of cattle and pork farming.
9Taenia saginata and T. soliumScolex And
Proglottids
10Taenia saginata The beef tapeworm
11Cysticerci - heart of cow Veterinary
Pathology Laboratory, Univ. Penn
12T. saginata
- Definitive Host Human
- Intermediate Host Cow
13Adult Taenia saginata
- Scolex
- Immature proglottids
- Mature proglottids
- Gravid proglottids
14Taenia saginata scolex
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16Gravid Proglottid of Taenia saginata
Uterine branches
Uterus
The central uterus of T. saginata has more than
12 branches on a side
17Embryonated, infectious taeniid eggs
- Cannot distinguish species of Taenia tapeworms
- based on morphology of eggs
Hexacanth larva Hooklets
18- Pathogenesis None
- Clinical Disease None in humans
19Diagnosis
- 1. Find eggs or proglottids in stool
- 2. Identify species based on
- proglottid morphology, after
- formalin and India Ink
- 3. Identify scolex
20Drug of Choice
- Praziquantel
- Mode of Action
- Increases permeability of flatworm tegument to Ca
2 ions, - Causing muscle tetany and worm detachment.
21Prevention and Control
- 1. Sanitary disposal of human feces
22- 2. Prevent cows from coming into contact with
human feces, ie good sanitation and physical
restraints. - 3. Freeze and/or cook all beef until well-done
- 4. Federal meat inspection programs (muscle exam
or serum ELISA specific to larval stage).
23Taenia soliumThe Pork Tapeworm
24Taenia solium scolex
Hooks
Suckers
25Taenia solium (Pork Tapeworm) Morphology
- Adult Worm
- 2-4 m long,
- 700-1000
- segments
- Scolex
- Neck
- Immature segment
- Mature segment
- Gravid segment
-
26Gravid proglottid Taenia solium
- Uterine branches number less than 10 per side
27Cystcercus cellulosae in Muscles of Pigs
28Cysticercus cellulosae
- It is soybean-like in shape, with the
small scolex invaginated into the translucent
cyst (left). - The scolex evaginated from the cyst (right).
Cysticercius cellulosae
29Taenia eggs
- The eggs of Taenia saginata and T. Solium are
morphologically indistinguishable.
30Teania solium
- Two different forms in humans
- Human taeniases
- Human cysticercosis
31Taeniasis life cycle
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33Life Cycle
34Basics (1)
- Complex two-host life cycle
- Human beings are the only definitive host (small
intestines - 2-4 meters long -800-1000 segments) - Both humans and pigs can act as intermediate
hosts (larvae or cysticerci) - Most common in Latin America, Africa and India -
400,000 people have symptomatic
neurocysticercosis in Latin America
35Basics of the infection cycle
- Faecal-borne infection
- Tapeworm larval cyst (cysticercus) is ingested
with poorly infected meat - Larva escapes the cyst and attaches to the mucosa
by the scolex - Feces are contaminated with eggs (persist for
several days in the environment) - consumed by
pigs (eggs are hatched and form cysticerci
36- Humans are the only definitive host
- Pigs - intermediate host (cysticercal stage)
- However Humans - also can be the intermediate
host - causing cysticercosis (neurocysticercosis)
if they ingest eggs
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38Human infection - taeniasis
- The scolex attaches to the mucosa and begins
forming segments (proglotids) - After two months of infection, gravid proglotids
begin to detach from the distal end - excreted in
the feces - Each segment contains 60,000 eggs
- Worm causes only minor inflammation to the
intestine (mild symptoms - abdominal pain,
distension, diarrhea and nausea - or none at all)
39 Taeniasis Diagnosis
- Symptoms
- History of eating undercooked beef or pork
- Recovery of proglottids and/or eggs in the stool
40TaeniasisTreatment and Prevention
- Treatment
- Praziquantel scolex expulsion is essential
- Prevention
- Adequate cooking of meat
- Freezing meat below 10ยบ C
41Human infection - cysticercosis
- Faecal-oral contamination with T. solium eggs
from tapeworm carriers - Internal autoinfection is also possible
- The invasive oncosphere (embryos) in the eggs are
liberated by the action of gastric acid and cross
the bowel wall (remember - cysticerci are too big
to cross the bowel wall) - They establish at small terminal vessels
(muscles, brain, eye) where they grow to about
the size of 1 cm in 2-3 months
42Human cysticercosis
- Muscle - small, palpable, movable nodules -
chests and arms - mild or no symptoms - Ophthalmic cysticercosis - intraocular cysts
floating freely in the vitreous humor - decreased
visual acuity - Neurocysticercosis - most symptoms are because of
the inflammatory reaction associated with cyst
degeneration (that may take years to happen) -
epilepsy, hydrocephalus, encephalitis, meningitis
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44 CysticercosisDisease
Cerebral cysticercosis
45 Cysticercosis Disease
Ocular cysticercosis
46Pathogenesis
- Space-Occupying lesion
- Local Immunologic Reaction
47Diagnosis
- Must differentiate between cysticercosis and
other possible lesions (benign cysts, solid
tumors, etc.) - 1. Biopsy whenever possible
- 2. Physical (palpation) and radiological evidence
- 3. Enzyme-linked immunoblot serological test,
- can be as high as 98 sensitive, 100 specific.
- 4. MRI
48Treatments
- 1. Surgical removal of cysticercus when
appropriate - 2. Steroids (e.g., dexamethazone) during time of
- neurological symptoms
- 3. Anticonvulsants (e.g. Dilantin)
- 4. Antiparasitic antibiotics Praziquantel or
albendazole - steroids anticonvulsants
- if multiple symptomatic cysticerci or inoperable
- (still being studied)
49Epidemiology
- Affect millions of individuals - 2.5 million
people worldwide carry the T. solium and 20
million are infected with the cysticerci - Endemic villages - up to 25 are seropositive and
10-18 have neurocysticercosis
50Methods for controlling
- taeniasis/cysticercosis
- Pig vaccination
- Pig treatment
- Human carriers mass treatment
- Health education
51Economic factors - domestic pig raising
- Domestic pig raising, taeniasis and human
cysticercosis are intimately related - pigs are
cheap and easily marketable - convenient source
of meat or money - Pigs also eat pasture and garbage
- Endemic regions - 30-60 of pigs are infected
- Pig production has doubled in the last 20 years
in Africa - Owners usually detect infection in vivo and them
sell these cheaper pigs to unofficial slaughter
houses or kill them at home
52Health education
- Association of cysticercosis prevalence and
unsanitary rearing of pigs, inability to
recognize infected pigs and insufficient
knowledge of transmission - Education hand washing, defecating in fields,
corralling of pigs - Ex. Community in Mexico - although almost
everybody could identify cysticercosis in pigs,
only 0.7 knew how pigs were infected
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54Eradication
- Pros human is the only carrier, there a
relatively simple treatment - Other issues
- 1) Technical - lack of a simple diagnosis, lack
of an easily available treatment (costs) - 2) Societal poor community cooperation and
sanitary education - 3) Political low priorities and debatable
strategy - CDC - eradication cannot be achieved in the near
future - only regional elimination
55Difficulties to implement control programs
- (ii) Taeniasis is also a mild infection, which
does not prompt the carrier to get rid of a
tapeworm even when it is diagnosed. - (iii) Traditional laboratory diagnosis of
tapeworm infection in humans has poor accuracy
and other modern coproantigen tests have not been
introduced to the market and are expensive - (iv) Treatment rates are frequently low
-appropriate medicines are not available in many
endemic areas - (v) Several human behavioral factors -
traditional preferences for raw pork consumption
and indiscriminate, unsanitary defecation, - (vi) Inadequate local levels of information on
taeniasis/cysticercosis - (vii) There is clear economic motivation for
small scale pork producers to minimize commercial
losses associated with infected carcass
condemnation at official slaughter
56Political will
- The public health impact of human cysticercosis
in some regions is serious (significant social
and financial costs) - Neurocysticercosis can potentially affect any
person (rural or urban area) - Contamination with eggs can also be common in
urban centers - Control measures can be implemented regionally
- Efficacy of schemes can be measured in sentinel
or slaughtered pigs
57Is this disease only a consequence of poverty?
- Eradication of extreme poverty - would reduce
subsistence pig rearing - Achievement of universal primary school education
- increase knowledge about risky behaviors in
relation to T. solium transmission - Gender equality and empowering women - decrease
risk of taenia infection at home - reducing
consumption of contaminated meat and personal
hygiene - Combating major infection diseases
- Improvement of sanitation
58thanks for your attention